The rain was torrential, dowsing the entire city with sheets of continuous water. The sky was an odd shade, somewhere between the purple of a bruise and the blackness of the night. The wind was whipping up, strong and unrelenting as it battered the sprawling city. For summer in New York, it was unusually cold. Gone was the suffocating heavy air, the traffic fumes and the humidity and in its place was now a gale that was splashing up water from the broken roads.
Farley sprinted down the street, the rubber soles of her boots splattering the water that had filled up in the cracks of the pavement as she leaped across a steam grate. She wasn't a native New Yorker by any means. It was a hundred miles away from the dinky little beach town she'd always called home but since relocating to London, she was hoping she could handle it. Sort of. Farley needed a break. She was making mistakes at work, she ran into her boyfriend's new girlfriend, she was making a moron out of herself when she was around Harlan and she'd had enough. Of everything in that stupid dirty town.
Around her, people's umbrellas were turning inside out as the wind dragged them down the street. Car horns blared as people began to get stressed by the downright apocalyptic nature of today's weather. The sky was turning steadily darker as the petite girl made her way down the street, the collar of her leather
jacket turned up against the cold as she discarded her now soggy newspaper that she'd been covering her hair with into a nearby bin with a dull
clang!"Jesus," Farley gasped with wide eyes as she gave the heavy door to a record store a shove and stumbled through it. She panted as she stared out of the window, her pale fingers attempting to wring out the water from her hair as she turned and squelched her way down the rows of music. Inside was warm and quiet, the only sound she could hear was the soft strains of an unfamiliar song playing through the speaker system.
Out of sight of the owner, Farley gingerly peeled off her soaking wet leather jacket as her pretty face contorted in distaste. Once sure she was alone, she hastily cast a drying charm on her jacket and herself as goosebumps rose on her skin at the change in temperatures. The storm wasn't forecast and it was gathering strength in a frightening way.
The secretary idly thumbed through the rows of music, flicking back and forth over familiar and unfamiliar covers. She'd come all this way to find her father a birthday gift but she'd been unsuccessful. What did you get a man who had everything anyway? Something caught her eye swiftly and she stepped over, plucking out a record and she found herself smiling. Bob Dylan. Not her favourite but her dad was a big fan. Like most dads, he enjoyed tinkering around with things and he'd managed to put together some sort of record player.
On she walked. Her big blue eyes cast a dubious glance at the lights over head as they flickered worryingly. Out of habit, Farley's fingers curled around the vinyl as she hugged it to her chest in the same way a child would with a teddy bear. She was being stupid. She was twenty three now and twenty three was too old to be scared of a thunderstorm. Around her, she could hear a clock ticking at a steady pace as her fingers twitched, trying to force herself to relax. Just relax. It wasn't that bad. It was just a bit of wind and a bit of rain and --
Crack!The store descended into darkness and Farley let out a squeak of horror. The music stopped as a rumble of thunder sounded like it was ripping the sky apart at the seams. There was muffled shouting around her but she stayed frozen to the spot, her heart hammering in her ears. The door was slammed shut, the electric mechanism short-circuiting as the streetlamps outside went off all at once. Everything was gloomy suddenly. Farley took short little breaths too quickly, her chest rising and falling as she felt the panic spreading across her body like a rash. A blackout, her brain realised, too late. Farley swallowed as she squinted, trying her hardest to adjust to the change in light as the slow realisation dawned on her that she was effectively trapped. "…oh shit."
@Ashley Morigan