[color=333333]Max needed clothes. Badly.
At the moment, a too-big straight jacket flopped unsteadily around on his tall frame, sleeves reaching almost down to the ground. The bottoms of the matching white pants were completely covering his yellow sneakers, slowly gathering dirt from the piles of slush that slumped here and there on the sidewalk. They'd taken all his clothes, the only set he had after the fire, and he hadn't a need for street clothes inside his room.
To their defense, they hadn't expected he'd be going anywhere for a long time. Max knew that in their line of work the people who went in rarely ever came out, and he had to admit they all gathered around to see him off, waved and shouted good lucks and well wishes. They'd even given him an outfit to wear, until he could use the inheritance money his older sister had shared with him to buy real clothes.
But people were staring, thinking he was a runaway, clearing the streets when he walked past. He knew he should care, but for some reason he couldn't muster anything more unpleasant then a joyous smile. He was just to happy to be free of all that, happy to make his own decisions for once. He ducked into a clothing store, randomly pulling things off the racks and holding them up to see if they were his size.
When he felt he had enough to last him a week or two, he ambled over to the cash register, winking in what he hoped looked like an insane way at the girl in line behind him and pulling the money from the buckle at his waist where he'd stuffed it earlier. [/color]
At the moment, a too-big straight jacket flopped unsteadily around on his tall frame, sleeves reaching almost down to the ground. The bottoms of the matching white pants were completely covering his yellow sneakers, slowly gathering dirt from the piles of slush that slumped here and there on the sidewalk. They'd taken all his clothes, the only set he had after the fire, and he hadn't a need for street clothes inside his room.
To their defense, they hadn't expected he'd be going anywhere for a long time. Max knew that in their line of work the people who went in rarely ever came out, and he had to admit they all gathered around to see him off, waved and shouted good lucks and well wishes. They'd even given him an outfit to wear, until he could use the inheritance money his older sister had shared with him to buy real clothes.
But people were staring, thinking he was a runaway, clearing the streets when he walked past. He knew he should care, but for some reason he couldn't muster anything more unpleasant then a joyous smile. He was just to happy to be free of all that, happy to make his own decisions for once. He ducked into a clothing store, randomly pulling things off the racks and holding them up to see if they were his size.
When he felt he had enough to last him a week or two, he ambled over to the cash register, winking in what he hoped looked like an insane way at the girl in line behind him and pulling the money from the buckle at his waist where he'd stuffed it earlier. [/color]