Disclaimer: In street
capture-the-flag, you hide the flag in plain sight somewhere public. The
challenge is the amount of territory involved and the effort to keep other
people from knowing what you're doing.
Follow
by Starhawk
"Obviously, we have to keep them under
surveillance,"
"And maybe they'll lead us to their
flag!" Shane was clearly ready to embrace this plan, but their third
teammate did not look enthused.
"Maybe,"
Hunter snorted, making his lack of
participation all the more obvious. He was lounging against the base of a tree
some distance away, only nominally a part of the group, and Shane finally
seemed to notice his surly attitude. "You have something to say,
Hunter?"
"Yeah," the Crimson Ranger sneered.
He was talking to Shane, but his gaze was fixed on
"As a matter of fact, I do." Hunter
put his hands behind his head, not even bothering to sit up. "I say we go
find their flag and get this stupid drill over with."
"The point of the drill isn't to
win,"
"Oh, very insightful." Hunter's mouth twisted in a condescending smirk.
"Your dad teach you that?"
"As a matter of fact, he did,"
"If you'd ever been on your own,"
Hunter said, narrowing his eyes, "maybe you wouldn't have to hold your
daddy's hand all the time."
"Whoa..." The tension must have
gotten high enough that even Shane noticed it, because he tried to interject.
"Guys--"
As one, they snapped, "Shut up, Shane."
He put up his hands and turned away, but the
situation had been defused.
"There's a surprise,"
Hunter's head whipped around. "Why
Tori?" he demanded suspiciously.
"Because I'm not following Dustin all
over town while he tries to remember what he's doing,"
Shane was already heading for the sidewalk.
"Yes Mother!" he shouted over his shoulder. "We'll be home
before dark!"
Hunter snickered, unfolding himself from the
base of the tree as
"What would you know about it?"
"What's that supposed to mean?"
Hunter demanded.
"Figure it out yourself."
"What?" Hunter stopped in his
tracks, forcing
Hunter's expression looked torn between
confusion and belligerence. "Why don't you use your own?"
Hunter glared at him, but he unfastened his morpher and handed it over without further complaint. His
was close enough to the wind morphers that
"Hey," he said after a moment, as
though it had just occurred to him. "Isn't that kind of... I don't
know--cheating?"
"My father knows I can do this. And he
didn't say not to,"
He could practically hear Hunter smirk, but
no other reply was forthcoming. Instead, the next thing he wanted to know was,
"Why didn't you tell Shane?"
"Just thought of it now,"
"You can tell people apart on that
thing?" Hunter sounded surprised. "How many times have you done
this?"
Hunter chuckled. "Looks like you weren't
the only one to think of following the other team." The words were more
admiring than mocking, as though he had forgotten what he thought of this plan.
"Uh huh." Hunter peered over his shoulder again, showing no
inclination to leave.
"Are you listening to me?"
"What, I'm just supposed to let you walk
away with my morpher?" Hunter snorted.
"Like that's going to happen."
Tori finally showed up, clear at the other
end of
He broke the network connection and snapped
Hunter's morpher free, looking down the street as
though he could see his target from here. "There you go," he said
brusquely. "Go follow your brother."
He headed down the sidewalk, and for one
brief moment, he dared to hope that Hunter had followed his instructions. Then
footsteps behind him proved him wrong, and he sighed. "Is there a reason
you're still here?" he asked, sliding his phone back into his pocket.
"I don't want you stalking my brother's
girlfriend without supervision?" Hunter had folded his arms across his
chest, and his gaze was scanning the street ahead as though he expected the
flag to appear in front of them at any moment. The words came out as more of a
question than a declaration, though, and he must have known it.
When the silence grew, his gaze flicked
toward