He finally felt (more or less) recovered from his boring, literally nauseating oceanic voyage. He was rehydrated (as much as someone literally made of water in their base form can ever be dehydrated), he was going to class again, he had adjusted to at least the most immediate oddities of his new city -
and he had just seen the most gorgeous car OH GOD YES!
He couldn't just run up to it and adore it, though. No, he knew the game. If he wanted to go cruising, he had to not get yelled at until he was at least rolling. And in an amazing, beautiful roadster like the classic british racing green beauty like he was eyeing, he didn't want to be rushed. It was old, and though it seemed to be mostly maintained old cars always ran better with a little internal shimmying. Clear out the debris and gunk and all that, realign everything that had shifted or shrunk or stretched with time.
Mason Rhodes might have been addicted to driving cars he didn't own (or even had a license for, given the whole bit where he couldn't really be in a vehicle without possessing it and until recently he'd been in a place that did not recognize vehicular possession as a valid method of driving), but he was very, very careful with the cars he used. He might not fill them up with gas (or diesel, or electricity, depending on the car) but he did leave them in much better running condition than when he found them.
And now, since it had rained earlier, no one noticed the large puddle slowly easing across the road. A car occasionally drove through him, but hey, he was water. All he had to do was gather himself together again and keep moving. He collected himself beneath the car for a moment, resting and watching to be sure he wasn't being watched, and then touched the nearest tire. The puddle vanished, and the mga slowly rumbled to life. It was a roadster, not a muscle car, and it wasn't loud, but it definitely needed some tuning. Mason took a few minutes at idle, shifting and stretching and sorting himself out, and then on went the lights and into the flow of traffic he went.
and he had just seen the most gorgeous car OH GOD YES!
He couldn't just run up to it and adore it, though. No, he knew the game. If he wanted to go cruising, he had to not get yelled at until he was at least rolling. And in an amazing, beautiful roadster like the classic british racing green beauty like he was eyeing, he didn't want to be rushed. It was old, and though it seemed to be mostly maintained old cars always ran better with a little internal shimmying. Clear out the debris and gunk and all that, realign everything that had shifted or shrunk or stretched with time.
Mason Rhodes might have been addicted to driving cars he didn't own (or even had a license for, given the whole bit where he couldn't really be in a vehicle without possessing it and until recently he'd been in a place that did not recognize vehicular possession as a valid method of driving), but he was very, very careful with the cars he used. He might not fill them up with gas (or diesel, or electricity, depending on the car) but he did leave them in much better running condition than when he found them.
And now, since it had rained earlier, no one noticed the large puddle slowly easing across the road. A car occasionally drove through him, but hey, he was water. All he had to do was gather himself together again and keep moving. He collected himself beneath the car for a moment, resting and watching to be sure he wasn't being watched, and then touched the nearest tire. The puddle vanished, and the mga slowly rumbled to life. It was a roadster, not a muscle car, and it wasn't loud, but it definitely needed some tuning. Mason took a few minutes at idle, shifting and stretching and sorting himself out, and then on went the lights and into the flow of traffic he went.