Marshal Cobb Vanth (
heypartner) wrote in
revivalproject2021-05-04 12:39 pm
Front Page News
WHO: Cobb Vanth & Others
WHERE: The newspaper offices
WHAT: General work day activities and banter.
WHEN: One day.
WARNINGS: Possible swears.
Every day, almost without fail, Cobb made it to the office at 8:30 am.
"Morning Charlie," he said to the security guard as he walked through the lobby, the sound of his cane echoing off the marble floors and slate ceilings. There were a few others around, judging by the echoing footsteps. The building was never quiet but it wasn't a madhouse just yet.
He could smell some fresh flowers and a vanilla chia latte with two shots of expresso as he passed the reception desk which told him who was manning the phones this early. "Morning Jo."
"Morning Mr. Vanth," answered the young African-American woman. He couldn't see her. He couldn't see anything but she had told him once when he commented on how it sounded like she had beads in her hair. She wore her hair in dreadlocks with beads. Cobb 'saw' the world through sound and sense most of the time.
"You're gonna call me Cobb one of these days," he teased playfully on his way to the elevators.
"Of course I will, Mr. Vanth," she replied dryly without looking his way.
He chuckled, cane still leading the way. When it bumped the wall for the elevator bank he reached his hand forward, running his fingers along it until it went from wood paneling to metal. A little swipe of his fingers and he found the buttons to call the elevator. Luckily, those buttons never changed. And this early there was no one offering to get the buttons for him either.
They meant well but he was perfectly capable of handling elevator buttons by himself.
The elevator pinged and he stepped in. Another search with his fingers reading the braille off to the side of the buttons he found the right floor, pushed, and then waited for the familiar sensation of the elevator moving. He went over a few story ideas in his head while the elevator went up. When it stopped and the door opened he stepped off.
He walked into the office, enveloped in familiar scents and sensations. He could walk around the desks here without needing his cane. The layout was imprinted into his mind. It blazed in his senses as well but he didn't rely on that when he was in a familiar place. He could go to his desk but he went to the little breakroom and made coffee first.
With his heightened sense of smell he could brew it without burning the grounds. Unlike some of the people in this newsroom who always, always burned it without fail whenever they made a pot.
With fresh coffee he made his way to his desk and settled in. Time to start the work day.
WHERE: The newspaper offices
WHAT: General work day activities and banter.
WHEN: One day.
WARNINGS: Possible swears.
Every day, almost without fail, Cobb made it to the office at 8:30 am.
"Morning Charlie," he said to the security guard as he walked through the lobby, the sound of his cane echoing off the marble floors and slate ceilings. There were a few others around, judging by the echoing footsteps. The building was never quiet but it wasn't a madhouse just yet.
He could smell some fresh flowers and a vanilla chia latte with two shots of expresso as he passed the reception desk which told him who was manning the phones this early. "Morning Jo."
"Morning Mr. Vanth," answered the young African-American woman. He couldn't see her. He couldn't see anything but she had told him once when he commented on how it sounded like she had beads in her hair. She wore her hair in dreadlocks with beads. Cobb 'saw' the world through sound and sense most of the time.
"You're gonna call me Cobb one of these days," he teased playfully on his way to the elevators.
"Of course I will, Mr. Vanth," she replied dryly without looking his way.
He chuckled, cane still leading the way. When it bumped the wall for the elevator bank he reached his hand forward, running his fingers along it until it went from wood paneling to metal. A little swipe of his fingers and he found the buttons to call the elevator. Luckily, those buttons never changed. And this early there was no one offering to get the buttons for him either.
They meant well but he was perfectly capable of handling elevator buttons by himself.
The elevator pinged and he stepped in. Another search with his fingers reading the braille off to the side of the buttons he found the right floor, pushed, and then waited for the familiar sensation of the elevator moving. He went over a few story ideas in his head while the elevator went up. When it stopped and the door opened he stepped off.
He walked into the office, enveloped in familiar scents and sensations. He could walk around the desks here without needing his cane. The layout was imprinted into his mind. It blazed in his senses as well but he didn't rely on that when he was in a familiar place. He could go to his desk but he went to the little breakroom and made coffee first.
With his heightened sense of smell he could brew it without burning the grounds. Unlike some of the people in this newsroom who always, always burned it without fail whenever they made a pot.
With fresh coffee he made his way to his desk and settled in. Time to start the work day.

no subject
At least this time he didn't choke as Cobb got right back to things, but by that point it was anticipated, if not so direct. That directness was why Cal had to smile a little, even as he shook his head.
"I... Yeah, I guess I do. But I don't want to complicate things, and if how things are right now between us are comfortable, then that's fine."
no subject
"That's your choice. You can always take the risk," he offered with a little shrug. He wasn't going to reveal his daughter's crush. He was a good dad, kept her secrets, but he might try to nudge Cal a little.
"Sometimes, the only way to find out the answer is to ask."
no subject
"I know," he said, smiling a faint, lopsided smile. He took another sip from his drink, arching a brow. "I'm kind of surprised you're the one telling me these things."
no subject
He'd take care of Merrin if she ended up heartbroken. But it didn't even seem like they'd get that far.
"Would you like me to be threatening?" He shook his finger in the general direction of Cal's face based on the sound of his voice. "Don't you touch my daughter now or I'll get a shotgun. Pretty sure someone will sell a blind man a gun. This is America."
no subject
But he took the man's words to heart. Take a little risk. That applied as much to getting a lead on a big story as it did potentially asking someone out on a date.
no subject
Merrin would absolutely destroy this kid if Cal broke her heart. So, Cobb wasn't panicked about it.
"I encouraged her independence. Stuff like that matters when you're raised by someone with a disability." After all, Cobb spent most of his life with people telling him he couldn't do something because he was blind. Of course, he raised his girl not to listen to that bullshit.
no subject
"Should we start heading back? Not that I'm not enjoying being out of the office, but I think senior reporters have more leeway than interns do." Coming back without an interview was one thing, but he didn't think going for coffee would fly as an excuse for him.
no subject
Because being blind meant he'd be a bad parent or some nonsense. Cobb had a hard fight but it was well worth all the legal fees. Merrin was the best thing to happen in his life.
"Yeah, we probably should. If we take too long the boss will figure out I don't do anything but cause problems." He started making his way towards the door.
no subject
He started after Cobb as they decided to take their leave then. "You? Cause problems?" he grinned.
no subject
Once they were outside the coffee shop Cobb once again went to flag down a cab. He hoped next time they went out it would be better. There's nothing that replaces good, old fashioned, experience.
"If anyone asks, I had an interview lined up that Stark canceled at the last minute." Because otherwise, it looked like they had wasted a lot of time for nothing. Cobb wasn't sure he could get in trouble for this one but better to be safe than sorry.
no subject
"Got it," he said. Given how busy Stark sounded it was entirely plausible, and it wasn't like they hadn't tried.