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2 yrs ago
Build a fort with the blankets and pillows.
7 likes
2 yrs ago
Today is my 15th wedding anniversary đź’•.
23 likes
2 yrs ago
Legit watching how long that 1v1 interest check stays on the front page. I'll never quit this site.
4 likes
2 yrs ago
Discipline a heretic and he'll be loyal for a moment, put him to the flame and he'll be loyal the rest of his life.
2 likes
2 yrs ago
Sometimes the heresy purges itself.
2 likes

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Uptown vs Southside

And Joel may have got sped past lol
@Pilatus


Snooty uptowners don't know how to drive.
We're going to be naming our bridges here in Sol-City along with assigning numbers to the major interstates. I went ahead and named the southernmost bridge in the downtown area that connects Riverside/Corona Park to Central Point (I'll be marking it on the map this week) in my post just now.

Open to suggestions on the other ones especially the big one at the southern edge of the map. I already suggested Bridgey McBridgeface but Alexus would have none of it.
In his younger years Joel had dated a girl whose father ran a small heating and air conditioning company. The man had really liked Joel, but his daughter had other plans and her and his insistence that his daughter’s current catch was a “good guy” with a “future” probably didn’t help Joel or her for that matter. At any rate, over ten years later she was long gone from Sol City while Joel was not. Whenever he was in a bind, usually with the worst possible problems at the worst possible times, he tended to turn up. Tonight was no different.

Joel, only a few hours out of the sack, was putting the wheels on the S13 when the rollback rounded the corner with a Chevy work-truck onboard. He glanced up and shook his head as the truck approached in the evening din of Southside. You gotta be fucking kidding me… He thought. For the last couple of years Joel had contemplated getting out of the repair business completely and only being a speed shop, he knew he had the clientele for it but the money was so easy, particularly when he could screen his work. He accepted the keys paying no mind to the grizzled rollback driver’s opinions on what had caused the breakdown.

A few quick tests confirmed the driver’s guess: Bad starter. Not that it was a hard diagnosis or a hard fix either. He only needed the part and it could be done in less than an hour. Joel checked his phone for the time and as always was his habit, looked up at the sky to confirm to himself that it was correct. It was a behavior many people found amusing. He made a quick call to his closest supplier: No dice. The part was at the downtown warehouse near Riverside. If he was swift he could make it over there before they closed up for the night. Ugh… He thought. Crossing the river was a pain in the ass, but the joy he would feel about taking that worrisome old man’s money in the morning won out.

Somewhere around the Costa Bridge he began to observe the evening traffic to be noticeably heavier than usual. His boot had touched the ground numerous times leaving the side of the Harley Davidson on which he rode. The pipes cracked and popped bouncing their loud broadcasts off the sides of cars and trucks alike to the point of annoyance to many drivers. The lowered Harley Dyna was his second-oldest mode of transportation. Diamond-Ice Pearl with blacked out trim and exhaust. He had bought it off an old biker from the 501 Club who considered himself “retired” from the scene. It still had relatively low miles and with a carburetor was easy to tune.

Joel never wore a helmet and as he lightly coasted down the exit ramp and passed under the shadow of downtown skyscrapers, felt a chill of the Fall evening down through his leather jacket and jeans. He suddenly remembered, observing the foot traffic, it was first Monday and that meant Riverside Blues and Jazz. His lips pursed briefly at the thought. He hated blues and jazz almost as much as he hated traffic. The thought clashed with a quick self-examination that had popped up in his subconscious: His current nocturnal trend was pushing him over line from just being known as an eccentric to an eccentric hermit. The only human being he’d interacted with in the last twenty-four hours was that tow-truck driver. He grumbled to himself as he thundered past the record shop. The warehouse was only a block away.

The part was waiting at the front desk and Joel stuffed it into his twenty-dollar backpack that he’d bought new off Craigslist. He briefly engaged in the customary chit-chat with the counter guys and turned to leave before a familiar poster hanging by the door stopped him in his tracks:

COME SEE!
Sol-City’s own Joel Nicolosi & Tommy Lomax
AND
The #75 Footsteps Sports Bar / Apex Designs 300ZX


The date at the footer was set for near the end of the month, three days before the final Formula GT race of the season to be held in Sol-City. “Really?” He said glancing back with feigned surprise. “That’s a really bad picture.” He lied. He actually liked it quite a bit compared to most of the media they’d done. Tommy, ever the sportsman accustomed to the limelight, stood with arms crossed while Joel leaned on the car to his right looking away from the camera. The #75 on the side of the car was between them along with their names. Looking like a couple of tough guys. He thought with a smirk.

“This one’s your year, Joel” One of the clerks commented.

“That’s what they keep saying.” Joel replied casually with a nod out the door. They were fierce rivals with the factory Nissan Motorsports team and thanks to Tommy’s monetary connections, had secured two of the same highly tuned V8 engines the factory GT-R’s were running- A great point of contention among the Nissan brass. So much so, that Tommy had flown them to Tokyo just to negotiate in person. The Japanese were hands-on people and they liked data and they especially liked competition. Sol-City was one race out the entire season and unlike the factory sponsored cars, Joel and Tommy only drove the one race. They were no threat in the grand scheme of the regular season, but the #75 had hounded them doggedly with the older, twin-turbo setup. The big bosses at Nissan wanted to see what the 300ZX would do with a proper engine and last year it’d nearly won.

Joel took a hot Americano off of a close by coffee truck as a band was warming up near the record shop. He took a few sips and tried to wake up. He’d been working for days straight on end and with that poster in mind, knew he’d have his work cut out for him for many more in a row: They had testing out at the old airport coming up this weekend. He sat on an open bench outside of the gathering and tried to simply enjoy the outdoors for a while.

@RawrEspada4
@Desparadina

You're certainly not holding anything up. We are glad to have you. If you feel like you need to take some time though, no worries. Stay if you can.
Time skip dropping tonight. Stay tuned.

Good time for any of you lurkers to join in. :-)
@Robo27

Same as current day
@Voltus_Ventus

No worries, that's why we ask.
@Voltus_Ventus, @RawrEspada4, @alexfangtalon, @aladdin_sane

Opinions on time skip? We're going to pull the trigger pretty soon if most everyone is in agreement.
Map is up at the top of this thread with all currently submitted locations. It's still basic, I know, but it gets the job done. I never claimed to be a paint/photo-shop pro.

I also added one new place which will play a small part in Joel's history:



501 Club

Are you having a bad day? Would you like to make it worse? Has your band ever played behind chicken wire? We didn’t think so. Ever seen a pool table with no sticks? We didn’t think so either. The Fight-or-Run…err or rather the prestigious 501 Club is located in Southside right on county Route 501. The loyal clientele here, at least those that are not locked up or dead would love to welcome you to an evening of physical contest! There will probably be more of them than you so be ready for a hearty welcome.

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