Chapter II
Work was just peachy. Phoenix’s poker table was collecting dust, as almost nobody had challenged him since the whole “Shadi getting brained” thing. Almost nobody came into the frigid restaurant to eat cold soup anymore after the whole “Russian waitress who wasn’t really Russian trying to frame him getting juice’d upside the head” thing. Oh, and Welch’s had gone out of business.
He didn’t even know why he bothered showing up to work anymore. At least not this early. I mean, come on! Who comes to a Russian restaurant to listen to shoddy piano at 8am, anyways?
But today Mr. Wright had gotten one request, a rarity for the hoodie-garbed musician A family who came to the restaurant to celebrate some little kid’s sixth birthday was his first customer in a while. He didn’t even get to the “Dear *insert name here*” part in “Happy Birthday” when the brat started crying. He had gotten off the bench to go over and comfort the guy when the very angry father kicked him in the groin so hard the person charting the Wright family tree never again had to add another branch.
So now the ex-Ace rode curled up in the fetal position on the bus seat like some homeless person. “Sir?” asked a frail looking old lady with a handbag and a sack of groceries, there’s always one. “Are you quite alright? Do you need anything?” her trembling old voice was concerned.
“Y-yes…” squeaked the shivering lump “Can you tell me who the hell wears steel-toed boots to a restaurant?”
The old lady did an old lady nose-upturned “Hrmph!” and got off the bus huffily muttering something about urban folk and their language and the nerve of young people like an old person with no character depth would. Phoenix mustered the strength to struggle into an upright seated position. He hated doing this, but it was the only way. He needed to regain his composure if he wanted this to work. Letting out a wavery sigh, he watched the houses zip by
Klavier Gavin rolled off his couch and into a wriggling mass of swearing, hung-over, purple-suited drill-hair. Huh. He didn’t remember falling asleep. He did, however remember the night before he had decided to play a street corner. He hadn’t been sure, even then, why he decided to lug his guitar out in the cold autumn night and play. He didn’t need money. Was he craving attention again? The feel of his fingers plucking hard, metal strings? Or of how he would lose himself entirely to the music, the sound of the guitar dancing with his voice through the alleyways in the dark? He needed that; it was like air to him.
It had ended when some fangirl asked for an autograph and said something about how he used to be her favorite guitarist and that she wanted to have his babies. The past-tense made him go home to cry his eyes out like a little kid. A little kid with booze.
Klavier had closed his eyes to better wallow in self pity when the doorbell rang. It startled him so badly he jumped to his feet and was instantly hit with vertigo wooziness like a ton of bricks and fell back, breaking a coffee table.
He opened the door with a bit too much force before leaning heavily on it, obviously the only think keeping him upright. “Huh-Hallo?” he stammered gruffly at the figure on his porch. He couldn’t tell who it was; it was just a silhouette against the bright afternoon sun that was causing his head to scream in agony. He tried to squint a little to block out the sun and get a better look, but his uselessly dilated pupils would have none of it. The bastards…
“Eh, hi.” Said the figure meekly “I know this is… This is sudden. I mean, I hardly know you, but…” he trailed off a bit before turning his head to Klavi again “I need a favor.”
“Keh?” muttered Klavier, now recognizing the figure as Phoenix Wright. What could he want? “Was d’you want?”
“Well, um, I need to be somewhere by tomorrow, but it’s a really long trip and I don’t exactly have a car. You’re the only guy I sorta know that has one, and since I hear noodle stands get awful gas mileage…” he explained, forcing a nervous chuckle at the end.
“So,” Klavier was kind of lost, he raised an eyebrow. “You need my car?”
“No, no…” said Phoenix, who was getting more and more uncomfortable. “I… I can’t drive.”
“You want me to drive you? Like your, ach…” He stopped and put his hand over his eyes, rubbing at his temples with his thumb and middle finger. When totally awake, he could speak perfect English with an awesome adorable accent. Why was he tripping over words so much now? It was getting really old really fast. Dammit, no matter how many years he didn’t use it, German was still the language his train of thought used as fuel. “Treiber! No, wait. Chauffer! Like that!” he said, pointing to Phoenix when he got it right. Victory!
“Yeah…” Phoenix muttered warily, pushing the finger away. “I mean, if you can drive. Are you okay? You seem… Off.”
Klavier raised his hand to shush the man in the doorway. “Ja, no worries. Just need a coffa cuppee, I’ll be okay.” Was it possible to wash puke out of a doormat? He didn’t want to find out.
“Uh-“
“I will pick you up at six, then! ‘Bye!”
“Wait!”
Mr. Gavin slammed the door on Wright and ran to the nearest sink.