Trinity
[So I figure you guys can intro your characters and then I can jump in with the NPCs when appropriate. :) ]
SerafíneAwareness!
Dice: 7 d10 TN5 (1, 1, 3, 5, 6, 7, 8, 10) ( success x 5 ) Re-rolls: 1
Kiara[Oh I should roll some stuff too.]
Dice: 5 d10 TN6 (3, 4, 6, 7, 8) ( success x 3 )
SerafíneA
week or more since she was last here but: a certain chilly Tuesday
night, the skies studded with clouds that open up now and then to the
brilliance of the ate night stars has her back. The van, up the gravel
drive. Dan in the driver's seat, Sera somewhat moody on the passenger's
side, knees drawn up, chin resting on the apex of the left. It's Fat
Tuesday, Mardi Gras, Carnival, and she's kinda sober (kinda, and doesn't
plan to remain thus for long) and headed up to the oft-empty chantry.
There's something new in the air, though.
A
helluva lot of somethings, and as they drive Sera murmurs her
impressions to Dan, and when the van pulls up outside the garage, she
gives him this spare little kiss on the apex of his cheek and unbuckles
her seatbelt and sliiiiiiides right out, following that certain feeling
through the chilly night.
Well, to be far, she does stop and grab a beer and a bottle of whiskey along the way.
But then, provisions secured, Sera goes seeking.
KiaraWhen
Dan and Serafine roll up in their van they spy a now-familiar car
parked not too far off; fresh tracks in the dirt and the quiet ticking
of the engine as it rapidly cools suggesting its owner had not long
beaten them to the Chantry.
Kiara's been here on and off of
course - tending to a small patch out near the Node she's attempting to
invoke premature growth in for the season; cleaning surfaces; cooking
food and storing it; bringing flowers in when she comes; settling and
arranging them in vases to brighten rooms - but it's been a week, at
least, since her last and there have been changes, to say the least.
New
arrivals; new presences. The Verbena is outside in the fading light;
all wrapped up in layers of earthy brown and grey; a scarf gifted to her
at Christmas by Kalen tied loose around her neck; the ends hanging free
over her shoulders; dancing as they're pushed to and fro by a breeze.
It rustles the trees; what little are near and sets the brunette's hair
shifting over her shoulders as she crouches; bag still slung over a
shoulder to fuss with the edge of earth near the old, moss-covered
fountain. There's shoots peeking out of the hard ground and there's a
smile just edging into existence; curling up the edge of her mouth as
she pushes to her feet again.
Sniffs against the chill and turns her body a little as if unerringly drawn to the sensation drawing near.
Perhaps she is.
"If we keep meeting like this, whatever will the neighbors say?"
TrinityWhoever
had cast the new defensive barrier around the property hadn't bothered
wasting effort on trying to hide it. Sera and Kiara both felt the
residue of the caster's unfamiliar resonance when they passed through
it. The barrier slid over them like a ghost, illusive and whispering as
it traced over their thoughts. But whatever it was looking for (whatever
condition the caster had set,) it was a test that they easily passed.
Sera, with her knowledge of the spheres involved, knew what the effect
was - and what it was trying to prevent.
The question was: who had cast it?
When
Sera and Dan arrived at the end of the driveway, they found Kiara
already there. There were no other cars within eyeline, but there was a
closed garage behind her and the lights in the Chantry were on.
Someone was there.
Serafíne"We don't have
any neighbors," Sera corrects Kiara, unerringly, as the latter rises.
There's an edge to her mouth that is also the leading signal of a
curling sort of smile. Sera in her heels and cocktail dress, her
thigh-high black lace stockings and her battered leather jacket, which
goes with nothing else that she wears and smells - divinely - like a
dive bar. Waits until Kiara is fully upright before she adds, " - and
neither of us would give a fuck what they think, anyway."
Over Sera's head: Dan gives Kiara a faint little wave and a welcoming smirk.
He's wary, though. That's evident, beneath everything.
"You
just got here." Dan noticed the ticking engine, the recent arrival.
Glances at Kiara's car and then back to Kiara. "I take it the new
arrivals aren't friends of yours?"
KiaraThere's
a noise that crawls up the brunette's throat at that, Serafine's
correction - her awareness that if anything, neither of them would
really give a fuck - and Kiara's dark eyes shift from Sera to Dan when he comments -
"No. I don't recognize them." Them.
The feeling. The unspoken as she glances rather sharply at the house;
dragging her eyes over the lit windows; the flood of warmth at once
inviting and ominous. "I got here and I was contemplating going in to
say hello, but - " There's a real hesitation, then. A particular
uncertainty that creeps over Kiara's delicate features. It doesn't twist
them, per say, but the sense of unease seems to be with her as well.
Perhaps
there's reasons for it, the sense of trepidation of the unknown; the
potency of magic hanging in the air casting the Verbena's expression
into distrust.
She'd come upon a house once before, lit up,
the residue of casting in the air - still - her mouth flexes with a
warmer smile. " - three seems better odds than one."
SerafíneThis
moment where Sera's eyes (which are dark and sometimes - as tonight -
strangely still, perfectly aware) snag on Kiara's profile. The smallest
threads of microexpression slipping across Kiara's features. The
hesitation. The sense of trepidation. The awareness: all these things
Sera absorbs with a care of her own that inflects her own mouth with a
tenderness both transient and rooted.
"Three's much better
odds than one," Dan echoes, coming up behind Sera and squeezing her
shoulders - affectionate, familiar - as Sera bites her inner cheek hard
enough that the bright bite of pain explodes in these tiny sunburst
somewhere inside her skull.
Just enough.
Dan's
opening the door for them, then, and Sera gives Kiara this brazen,
lovely smile. The hint of blood at the corner of her mouth.
"C'mon.
We'll say hi and maybe welcome and maybe what the fuck do you think
you're doing here, depending on how things go. It's all good."
And she ducks beneath Dan's arm, heading inside, following the complex of resonances in the air.
SerafínePrime 1: watch ze weaving. Dif 4 -1 (focus)
Dice: 3 d10 TN3 (4, 8, 10) ( success x 3 )
TrinityThere
was a chance that whoever was inside already knew that they had
visitors. Maybe the delay in greeting was intentional, or maybe they
just had their hands full. The first and most obvious resonance - the
one they'd all felt when driving up the road to the house - was
unfamiliar to them both. But the other two?
Wild and
unbreakable (Pan used to compare it in his head to a mustang.) Sera felt
it brush up against her senses as she stood speaking to Kiara. Maybe
she recognized it, maybe she didn't. It had been... a long time.
And
there was something about the third one that was both familiar and new.
This underlying note of cyclical energy, coupled with scorching heat
and regeneration. Like fiery rebirth.
"Sera!"
They
opened the door just in time to catch sight of the girl as she bounded
down the steps into the foyer. She was tall and lanky (taller than she'd
been at 16,) with dark hair spilling over her shoulders. And young. Too
young, really, to feel as powerful as she did. But then, that wasn't
altogether unheard of.
Leah.
Her expression was a
thing of tentative warmth. Hesitant of strangers, but clearly happy to
see Sera. She jogged toward them, but stopped before she invaded their
space, glancing toward Dan and Kiara. There was a pause... maybe a
second or two. Her fingers fidgeted with the edge of her shirt. Then she
stepped forward to put her arms around Sera's light frame (if she
allowed it.) It wasn't an exuberant hug (Leah had always been very
sensitive of her physical space,) but it was a heartfelt gesture
nonetheless.
"I didn't know if you'd still be here."
KiaraThere's a moment where Dan's pulling open the door and Serafine's smiling her bloody smile - c'mon
- that it almost seems as if the Verbena will refuse. That she'll
remain outside with cheeks tinged pink and dark eyes full of unrevealed
hesitations; ghosts swimming in the expression that knits her face
somewhere between fragile and furious. Kiara does linger for a moment,
does catch Dan's eye and keep it and there's a hitch somewhere; a
snagged breath she catches and holds for a beat before she nods.
Before
she steps inside in Serafine's wake; the house draping over her with
warmth; with presence. The Disciple already searching for the source of
potential casting and then - oh. Kiara draws back a step; draws
to one side as a young girl bounds toward the Cultist. The uncertainty
melts, though. The tension in the Verbena's frame easing as it becomes
clear -
"Friend of yours?"
- Kiara's voice warming
to relief. She unwinds the scarf from around her neck; her mouth
suggestive of mirth; at their hesitation; at her own. Dark eyes observe
the girl and she tilts her head just so, curious now that the potential
threat seems - less.
Now that she can breathe out.
Serafíne"Christ."
Sera mutters beneath her breath, the crawling half-smile carved across
her mouth growing wider by the minute. By the moment, by the breath.
There's Leah - taller now, changed but - oh, Sera shivers from the
sensation and opens her arms to the younger girl and pulls her in, one
hand cupping the back of Leah's head, mouth seeking the girl's temple,
where her pulse beats, and for a thoughtful, lingering moment - Sera
just inhales.
There's so much in that gesture. So much
that she pulls inside of her, so much that she lets go of altogether,
all at once, each piece framed by the other one to create this moment.
When they pull apart, Sera's eyes are... damp, shining in the ambient light.
"Leah.
I didn't - " and Sera's half-smile spreads wider then, "I didn't
really think I'd see you again, you know? It's good to see you. You
remember Dan, right?"
This glance toward the tall guitarist.
Maybe Leah does and maybe she doesn't. Dan was mostly the designated
driver back then. Around, in the background.
"And this is Kiara. Kiara, this is Leah. And yeah, you could say we're friends. It's a long fucking story."
Haven't seen each other since a funeral, but isn't that how some things go?
TrinityThere
were sounds coming from the kitchen. Shifting pans and the high,
digital beep of a timer. Someone was cooking dinner. It smelled
absolutely delicious and more than likely Mexican (corn tortillas and a
spicy tomato sauce, with hints of citrus and jicama.) Leah, who had
barely been able to stand being touched (let alone hugged) the last time
Sera had seen her, closed her eyes and leaned into the embrace. Let out
this soft breath when Sera kissed her. For a moment, her expression
betrayed the weight of the memories they shared.
The last time they'd seen each other had been at a funeral.
When
she pulled back, she nodded to Dan, who she did vaguely remember
(though not nearly so clear as she did Sera.) When her attention shifted
to Kiara, she offered a tentative smile. After a beat, she seemed to
remember her manners and held out a hand. "Nice to meet you."
That
was when Annie finally appeared from the dining room, wiping water from
her hands with a fresh towel. She stopped when she got to the foyer and
saw the three visitors. And here too, there was a second's pause for
the recollection of memory while she watched Leah interact with their
guests.
"It's good to see you again, Sera."
Annie
was older than Leah, though not by enough of a margin to be her mother.
(Older sister maybe? But they didn't look alike.) Annie's hair was
strawberry blond, verging slightly into the reddish hue. Her skin was
lightly tanned despite it being winter, with visible freckles on the
bridge of her nose. She was average in height, shorter than Leah by
about two inches, and muscular in the way people who do a lot of manual
labor.
Once she had her hands dried, she draped the towel over
her shoulder and reached out to offer her hand to Kiara. "Annie Pierce.
I own the house. Leah and I are with the Verbena."
KiaraIt's a long fucking story.
Kiara's
generous mouth curves into a fuller smile at that. "Isn't it always?"
She offers in easy agreement and loosens the ties on her coat; shucking
it and folding it over an arm along with her scarf. Beneath she's in
dove grey on brown, some soft knitted cardigan that folds and tucks
around the hip of her jeans. There's boots on her feet that give her
height but she is still, by all true accounts, a slender figure. A
little wilder perhaps for the way her hair falls in heavy waves around
her face; bangs cut low over expressive eyes.
There's a
familiar (to some) jumble of necklaces around her neck tonight; silver
and stone and crystal; hoops in her ears; her wrists are bare, though.
There's nothing but a blue stone ring on her index finger when she takes
Leah's hand; closes her fingers around it; keeps it; just for the
barest moment.
"Likewise. It's been so quiet here, we were - "
The smells and sounds from the kitchen overtake Kiara for a beat; Annie
does, too. Then: "Kiara Woolfe. It's nice to meet family. It's been a
while." Another press of hands together; Kiara's eyes drop to where
she's touching Annie's hand before she withdraws her own with this
slight; suggestive give to her mouth.
"If the wildflowers didn't give me away - I'm with the Verbena too."
Serafíne"Hey."
This is how Sera greets Annie: less enthusiasm, perhaps even a touch of
strange self-conscious that slides off her shoulders as easily as it
slides over them. "You cooking dinner?" Lilting inquiry, the cut of
Sera's dark eyes past Annie's shoulder. Pan spent far more time with
the Verbena than Sera ever did, and she is conscious of his absence,
suddenly. Conscious of Jim's absence. Conscious - suddenly,
breathtakingly conscious - of all the absences in her life.
"Uhm,"
and well, she was about to introduce Kiara again but Kiara introduces
herself and Sera - who looks like she is about to paint the town crimson
and then burn it the fuck down kinda shivers because it is COLD, segues into, "Let's get inside, it is fucking freezing - "
before she slips off, away, within.
"I gotta pee," Sera announces, sotto voce, to Dan not longer after. He makes her excuses as she slides off toward the bathroom.
Later
Sera will tell Annie and Leah who is left (no one) and who is gone
(everyone) and whom she saw last and when and where, if they want to
know. Later Sera might even tell Kiara the story of it all, though
probably not in Leah's hearing.
Serafíne(got to sleep, lovelies. nini!)
Trinity"Oh,
those were you? Glad to see someone was looking after the place." Annie
favored all three of them with her smile, giving a light nod to Sera
that seemed to imply gratitude (for the ward, more than likely.) She
seemed softer than she had the last time the two of them had spoken.
Less of those sharp edges and brittle anger. (She'd been mourning the
death of her brother then.)
When Sera asked if she was making
dinner, Annie grinned. "Yeah. Huevos rancheros and jicama salad. There's
plenty of food if you guys want to join us. I've got beer, too."
"I'll take one," Leah interjected. Annie fixed her with a raised brow.
"You can have half of one."
Leah rolled her eyes.
Sera
had to pee, and by the time she got the bathroom (did she pick the
upstairs one or the downstairs one?) it would be vacant. If she picked
the upstairs bathroom, she'd find it full of steam from a recent shower
and humming with the sound of the ventilation fan. Someone was inside
one of the bedrooms up there, getting dressed more than likely. It
didn't take long for her to appear, treading quietly down the hall to
the stairs. Annie was already leading the others toward the dining room
when Sasha descended the steps, her dark hair still damp where it lay
against the soft grey hoodie she had on over her t-shirt.
Her feet were bare. She moved very quietly.
"I
see we have guests." She eyed Kiara and Dan curiously before stepping
forward to greet them. (More nods. More hand-shaking.) "Sasha Black,
bani Euthanatos."
KiaraSerafine slips off and
Kiara - who was, if nothing else - accustomed to the Cultist's tendency
to give her attention freely and easily to any diversion - cants her a
tiny, curling smile as she goes. Folding her belongings neatly over one
of the sofas as they navigate through to the dining room, the brunette's
boots keeping count of their progress against the wooden floor.
When
the Euthanatos appears, Kiara watches her with no little interest;
shaking her hand and offering her a brief measure of a look; another
smile; offers back her own affiliation with a glance at Annie and Leah.
She can't help but be drawn, of course. Perhaps it was the knowledge of
what they were; the reminder of a home long gone; the tug; deep down; of
like minds.
She observes them at some points from beneath dark lashes; others in her peripheral vision.
Wraps
long fingers around the back of a dining chair and asks, finally --
"What brought you back?" -- as if there must be some easily quantifiable
reason. She's careful not to pose it as a challenge, Kiara, it's a
curiosity she can't contain; avid; keen interest to know, because -- "I
was beginning to think Denver was entirely void of any of us, my sister
and I aside."
TrinityWith Sera's departure,
Leah escaped into the kitchen to grab her half-a-beer (more than likely a
full beer that she would nurse slowly until Annie remembered to take it
from her.) Sasha's gaze lingered on Kiara (interested, curious.) Kiara
was something of an embodiment of all three of them, if her resonance
was to be believed. Cycles of life and death and rebirth. Surely this
was something that the Verbena and the Euthanatos could understand in
equal measure. There were dishes already set out on the long dining room
table, but Annie set about adding a few more place settings for the
guests, moving about the house with the kind of casual familiarity one
would expect from someone who'd grown up there.
Kiara asked
what brought them back. Annie was on her way out of the kitchen with an
armful of dishes at that point, and she let her eyes focus on the table
as she set them out. Let the weight of Kiara's question settle in the
room. Sasha glanced at Annie. There was something unreadable in her
gaze.
"There was a guy named Justin last time I was here,"
Annie finally responded. "When I called, he told me he'd moved. Sad to
hear if you're the only one left." And she did sound it, for a moment.
Sad. "We had a falling out with the rest of our cabal and had to leave
Texas. So, here we are." Annie looked up and smiled a little, but the
expression felt strained. Sasha slid in beside her for a moment and set
her hand on Annie's shoulder. The gesture was simple and comforting. A
familiar thing that spoke of intimacy.
None of them had Texan
accents, though Annie's voice tended to dip into a slight drawl now and
then (learned rather than inborn.)
"You should bring your sister by. We'd like to meet her," Sasha offered with a smile.
Kiara"I'm
sorry." She seems it, the way her eyes follow Annie's progress; watch
the interplay between the women from her vantage point behind that
chair; gripping it as if it were some lifeline she was yet to feel
confident letting go of.
There's a touch of empathy; some
shared fragment; some prior awareness. "I had a coven back in New York.
There were a lot of us. We had to leave, too." A pause; Kiara's throat
works; she swallows and smiles and diverts her attention to Sasha at the
offer to bring her room mate out. Doesn't go on to explain; tease out
the reasoning. The why and when of their severing from the other
Verbena.
"Sadie - my sister - she's - " Kiara pauses; her
fingers curling a little more decisively around the back of the chair.
There's some flicker of emotion there; it lingers in the corners of her
mouth as it tips up; hides in the tiny flex of muscles around her eyes.
They dip; lashes fanning out over her cheeks before she finishes with a
tiny flourish where she uncurls her fingers from around the back of the
chair; gives, finally; lets go of that tension.
" - not always great with people but I'll tell her. Maybe I can coax her out of hiding."
She
pulls the chair out, then. Settles into it and casts her focus between
the trio. "I've been coming out to stay here a little now and then. I
don't want to intrude, though if you guys would rather privacy."
Trinity"Annie's
not always great with people either. She'll be in good company." Annie
shot Sasha an annoyed glance, but there wasn't much bite to it.
Affection, if anything. She grunted lightly, which might have been
reluctant agreement or maybe just a half-hearted grumble. Sasha laughed
silently. The expression made her dark eyes grow warmer. (Hardly the
chill, austere image one tended to expect of the death mages.) "I'll go
get the food."
"No, sit down. You worked 12 hours today."
Annie batted Sasha in the arm and shoved her toward a chair before
heading off into the kitchen to collect Leah and their dinner. Sasha put
her hands up and plopped into the chair as though in surrender.
Amusement itched at the corners of her mouth. When Annie had left, she
slid her gaze to Dan (whether he too decided to take a seat or leave
them in search of Sera) and then Kiara.
"See? Like I said."
(She didn't seem to mind.)
But
there was that lingering emotion in Kiara's eyes. In her hesitance to
join them - to insinuate herself into their space. (A space that until
very recently had belonged to all of them. Did it not still?) Something
that may have spoken to memories. And Sasha was nothing if not
observant. (It was, after all, in her job description.)
"You
aren't intruding. I think Annie meant this place to be shared. It's too
big for just us. And besides, you've had it all this time." After a beat
she added, "Maybe knock first if you come by after ten."
Leah
finally reappeared then, looking a bit more reserved than she had
earlier. She sat down in one of the chairs furthest from Kiara, shooting
her a quick glance across the table but otherwise remaining silent.
(Like an animal that wasn't yet sure how to behave around strangers.)
They
assembled like this. Piecemeal and casual, sitting down to dinner
together like a family. It had been a long time since the house had felt
this much like a home. Too long. And soon enough Sera came striding
back in to rejoin them, and the conversation slid easily into topics of
current events - who was still there and who wasn't. Whether or not Leah
was done with high school (she was.) What everyone did for a living
(Annie: a woodworker and Sasha: a police detective with the homicide
unit.) And as they talked, Annie's mood relaxed. It was a nice evening,
though perhaps steeped in bittersweet memories for some of those
present.
And when it was over - whenever Sera and Dan and
Kiara decided to leave (because Annie and Sasha didn't seem inclined to
kick them out) Annie would reiterate what Sasha had stated earlier. That
they were welcome back anytime. That the house, the node and the
library were open to all who had need of it.
Wednesday, February 18, 2015
Saturday, February 7, 2015
echo chamber. [ian]
Ian
They hadn't seen each other since the night when Ian had walked out of Pho 95. And when a text finally showed up on Kiara's phone, there was no acknowledgment of the conversation they'd had on the sidewalk. Instead there was simply this:
Feel like dancing tonight?
The text came in the afternoon, just as the short winter hours were beginning to dip towards early evening. If Kiara felt like taking him up on it, he'd send her an address for an underground club in LoDo. Some place that had only recently opened up. The nondescript entrance was located in a long brick building that also housed a book store and a couple of restaurants. No sign was immediately visible to mark the location, but the dark glass door had the words Echo Chamber painted on it.
Ian was already inside when Kiara arrived, waiting at the bar with a glass of bourbon in his hand. The entrance of the club led down a set of stairs and a short hallway (which contained a coat check) before opening up to a single, spacious room. The decor was minimalistic. Black floors. Open ceiling. Brick walls. Most of the place was standing room only, but there were seats at the bar and a couple of dark, velvet sofas in one corner which were presently occupied by a boisterous group of college students who seemed to be playing some kind of drinking game.
It was impossible to avoid the music in this place. (Maybe that was why they'd called it Echo Chamber.) The majority of the club's floorspace was devoted to the dance area, where a fairly sizable crowd was currently moving in time to a rolling electronic beat.
Kiara
She's late.
Not by any ridiculous degree and certainly not enough to warrant a text asking where she was but - late. Later than they agreed on. When she does slip inside though; sans coat; she sparkles. The weather in Denver warm enough for once to invite lighter layers beneath the heavier precautions for winter. So: pale pink sequins that glitter under the turning club lights. Bare shoulders; dark hair swept up in some deliberately messy affair; long black skirt; heels.
The picture of the club-goer, Kiara. But there's always those tells with the Verbena that she's not quite - that there's more going on beneath the surface. The bold color of her mouth; adorned tonight to match her shirt; the dark liner around darker eyes; the way her shirt hooks around her neck and leaves a swath of bare skin visible on her back; the telltale lines of a tattoo barely peeking from where the material gathers at the small of her back.
She's always noticeable, the brunette, as much for the fact she intends to be as she simply - draws the eye. It's in the way she bears herself across the crowded space of the dance floor when she catches sight of Ian at the bar; the way she moves with a confidence that isn't assured (alone) from grace or prowess but simple awareness of self; of her body in relation to the world. She swans up to her partner for the night with a heavy, glittering black bracelet on one wrist; with bare skin everywhere and the hint of a smile curling at the edge of her mouth.
"Hey." She doesn't apologize for being late, but all said, she may well assume he doesn't mind. That in a place like Echo Chamber, he'll have had sufficient scenery to keep him occupied. "Starting without me?" A nod to his glass as she sets an elbow on the counter and leans into it.
Ian
"If I was starting without you, I'd be dancing." There was enough whiskey in his system to make his eyes glisten when he smiled, all smooth-as-silk and so very at home in this environment. At home, perhaps, in a different way than he had been while sitting atop a snow-capped mountain with Elijah last week. But still. At home. There were different kinds of wild places.
Still, he wasn't tipsy the way that Sera might have been. Just softer. Shinier.
Kiara wasn't the only one of them with skin showing. Ian had on a pair of jeans that were fitted in all the right places for dancing. Dark blue with a subtle, lustrous coating. On top he wore a black suit vest with nothing underneath. It hugged his torso tightly and left bare a section of skin on his lower back when he leaned over the bar. In the light of the club, the exposed skin on his arms and chest seemed as though it was dusted with something shimmery.
"Can I get you something?" He had to lean in to be heard over the pulse of the music, brushing his lips against the edge of Kiara's ear. He smelled like citrus, sandalwood and amber.
Kiara
There's always a lot of unspokens between the two of them. There has been from the moment they met. Things glimpsed in the turn of a head; the side glance; the lingering look but never articulated aloud. Last time she'd seen Ian it had been chasing after the ghost of his footsteps out the door; it had been reaching for his hand to halt him; to turn him back to ask - to glimpse - whatever it was.
And she'd known, was what made it hard. Somewhere housed in Kiara's expression had lain the answer. That she did know, that she was familiar. But it's another unspoken; sunk down beneath the surface and the surface; their dance; the easy banter; is so much easier to deal with. He doesn't mention their last encounter and neither does she. Ian doesn't imbibe alcohol the way Serafine did; Kiara's never spent a moment with the Cultist not in another state; altered; distant; distorted and somehow infinitely more beautiful for it. It's possible Kiara envies Sera it, that easy shedding of perception.
It's possible she'd never be capable of letting go so entirely of what was real. Pain was, to Kiara at least, as important as the rest of life.
(Pleasure, for example).
If he was starting without her he'd be dancing and there's a tilt of her head toward the dancefloor; a contemplative study of the rolling sea of bodies; the press and flex and seduction of it all. That smile curls a little more around her mouth and she lifts one thin, bare shoulder in a careless little shrug. Turns around to face the bar; bracing her weight on both elbows.
He leans in and she bends toward the motion.
"Vodka tonic with lime." She twists a little; a hand brushing the edge of the vest he's wearing; testing the fabric between her thumb and forefinger. "Is this the proper dancing uniform?" Her eyes dip over the rest of his outfit; lingering; smiling as she does, flicking them back to meet his gaze. "I approve, if so."
Ian
The fabric of the vest was soft beneath Kiara's fingers. Something with a high thread count. Virgin wool with silk accents. Ian laughed when she used the phrase dancing uniform, as though dressing for nightclubs required a particular expertise. "Yours isn't bad either." His eyes carried over the slope of her skin, tracing a line to the place where her pulse-point beat above the apex of her collar bones. Briefly, he let his hand trace the edge of her top, where the material tied around her neck - following it down past her shoulder as his fingers danced over the sequins.
His eyes lifted. He leaned in again, speaking in a warm breath against her ear. "I like your hair."
He always liked her hair. He'd had a habit of playing with it, in more intimate moments. Winding strands of it between his fingers. Memorizing the way it felt when it dragged across his chest.
"You smell good."
He pulled away to flag down one of the bartenders - a girl in her mid-twenties who looked as though she'd probably been doing this for a while. She had a perky kind of efficiency about her, sliding neatly between customers with sparkling eyes and a flashing smile. When she approached them, Ian repeated Kiara's order and watched while the bartender poured the drink and set it neatly before them. He'd already started a tab, so she darted off a moment later.
"I'm sorry about what happened last time. I shouldn't have let it get to me."
Ah. And there it was.
Kiara
For all that she's a woman of the cities; a cosmopolitan darling by birth and inclination Kiara Woolfe did forever have that touch of the wilderness to her. Whether or not it had always been there in her; in the way her presence invoked the sense of nature's cycling; the destruction and devouring; the regeneration after the fact; it was stronger now. Growing so, the more she adapted; the further she evolved. Opened up, to the person she was now. To what she was, now.
It's reflected even in the way her hair grows; wild and thick; refusing in many ways to be tamed by product or Kiara's own inclination. Ian likes it; the quantity of it; the way it moves when unbound. It's there in her scent; vague impressions of incense, vanilla and spice; the sweetness of whatever lotion it was she rubbed into her skin. Sweet, but not all the way through. Perhaps that accounted for her, too. The Verbena were creatures of the earth, after all.
Capable of great change - and stubborn resistance to it. At once yielding and immovable.
She smells good, though and there's a noise at that; her hand loosening and sliding over his chest; pressing with some brief intent over his stomach before she draws it back; leans into the cradle formed by his torso when he presses closer to whisper against her ear to be heard over the din. "So do you," she offers easily in return with a flashing grin; a wide baring of teeth and her fingers are on his neck for a moment when she says it. A palm sliding over the pulse at the base; dragging down to the v formed by his vest; dropping away as the bartender appears.
Kiara has her fingers around her glass; has the first taste of vodka and lime on her lips when he mentions - she takes a sip with measured contemplation; her brows drawing together briefly. Sets the glass down. It's already beginning to sweat in the club; droplets forming where she'd held it.
"She does that." There's a moment, Kiara doesn't expand but her tongue chases the edge of lime on her lower lip, then: "Arionna. She talks a lot of shit." She turns a little to face him; eyes ghosting over his face with that same searching expression she'd worn then, on the night in question. "I mean we all do at times but she has a world of opinions on a lot of things she doesn't let herself close enough to even experience. She talks about it with the disconnection of someone who hasn't seen - " Kiara hesitates; looks away; her frame constricts with a sharp exhale.
"I don't blame you for it getting to you. I think she's - " A smile surfaces; tugs and persists into shape across the supple shape of her mouth. Humor re-inserting itself into her voice. " - she doesn't approve of me. I don't care that she doesn't but - sometimes it gets under your skin. People talking like it's nothing. To see that. To know it."
There's a beat. The baseline of music thrums around them; Kiara's face lit by the bar beside them; the refraction and gleam of her shirt. Her honesty is a sharp thing; honed but not necessarily, cruel for it.
"I used to get a lot more angry about it."
Ian
It was an odd thing to hear coming from Ian's lips. He didn't seem the type to apologize. Or to regret. Kiara tasted her drink, and Ian lifted his in turn, finishing off most of what remained in the glass.
She spoke about Arionna - whom Ian had only really met once. His impression of the girl was barely more than a sketch, but Kiara's assessment was hardly surprising. Ian made a sound low in his throat. The resonance of it got lost somewhere in the electric pulse of sound that washed over them.
"She's a kid." If the statement felt dismissive, it wasn't intended to be. "Sooner or later the world will get more real for her. Either that, or it'll eat her alive."
And didn't they all know what that felt like.
He didn't ask Kiara why she'd understood how he'd felt that night. On a certain level, he didn't have to. Perhaps later, when they were alone. When they weren't surrounded by the press of bodies and the pounding swell of music. Later, when there wasn't the promise of a dance. (Because Ian did not forget things like that.)
"Anyway, approval is overrated. But if it helps..." He let his lips brush over the edge of her jaw, grazing lightly with his teeth as he slid down to kiss her neck. "I approve of you immensely."
(Though Kiara hardly needed it.)
He let the last measure of his bourbon flow past his tongue, tipping back his head to drain the glass when he pulled away. "I think we should dance."
Kiara
They were both such physical creatures. Touch conveyed a world of things words frequently fell short of - at least, for Kiara. Ian kisses the edge of her jaw; neck and she slides a hand along his shoulder; gripping briefly when he grazes her skin with his teeth. He can feel her pulse beating wildly under her skin; the hint of some encouraging, tiny noise rising in the back of her throat.
It was a noted thing about the Verbena, one thing she rarely held back, her pleasure, the openness of enjoying the moment.
"Oh, believe me," this, a breath of laughter as she slips the tips of her fingers beneath the edge of his vest; idly stroking his skin at the shoulder. "I stopped asking for it a long time ago." Kiara's head tips back; she finds Ian's gaze and her eyes drop to his mouth for a considering moment; tracing the shape of it. "It made my life infinitely more enjoyable. But thank you, regardless." Her fingers slide away from him to reclaim her drink as he does his own.
The pleasant burn of vodka warming her throat as he attests they should dance and she twists; smiling in that vaguely challenging way of hers; stepping back from the bar and beckoning him with her. "I couldn't agree more. Come and show me what you've got, buddy." This as she allows her footsteps to draw her back; to allow herself to be engulfed by the dancing swarm of bodies. It's hot, on the dance-floor; a space heated by too many bodies pressing too close together.
There's something almost erotic about the fact; about the writhe and blend of people, moving together; the capacity for conversation overwritten by the heavy presence of the beat instead. Kiara's no dancer, she doesn't have the training or the background he does but she does possess an understanding of the body; the way it behaves; the shift and play of muscle beneath skin.
She draws Ian into the crowd; lights flashing overhead; picking out the tiny sequined beads of her shirt and lets the rhythm have its way with her. Lets him dictate his own initiation into the music as she finds her own.
Ian[Life 1 / Forces 1 custom rote "Bodies in Motion", diff 4 -1 (practiced, etc)]
Dice: 2 d10 TN3 (4, 10) ( success x 3 ) [WP]
Ian[Dex+Performance -2 diff (ability aptitude + that rote)]
Dice: 8 d10 TN4 (1, 3, 3, 5, 5, 6, 7, 9) ( success x 5 )
IanPerhaps some day they might talk about this. The way that bodies communicated. Ian would call it a language. Perhaps that was why he became a dancer in the first place. What is art if not communication? And what is dance if not the most primordial form of art?
Ian was not an unskilled speaker. He could, when motivated, use them to great effect. But there was not a spoken language on earth that would ever be fully satisfying for him. That would ever feel like anything more than a crude translation of the nuance and honesty he found in the physical. (Perhaps that was part of the reason why everyone seemed to find him so unfathomable.)
His skin was warm where Kiara touched him - the pulse of his blood beating close beneath the surface. A few heady seconds of contact before they broke apart. Before Kiara answered his suggestion by beckoning him to follow her onto the dance floor. Then they were surrounded by the press of bodies and the heavy beat of the music. Life and Sound, all mixed up into one perfect, interwoven pulse.
Ian's senses opened up as he began to move. As he breathed in the heady mix of sweat and pheromones and focused on the way the music drove his heartbeat. Focused on the way his body moved. The interplay of gravity and kinetic motion on his pattern. How the air flowed around them. How the beat flowed through them. Until the people in the club became primal and vivid and alive. All pulsing patterns and elegant motion.
Ian and Kiara - they were also primal and vivid and alive. And the moment Ian got comfortable on the dance floor - the moment they stopped moving through the crowd and carved out a small space for themselves, he started to move like dancing was as much a part of him as breathing. Instinctive, following the flow of the music with his body, and keeping close within Kiara's space. Focused enough to move with her instead of just beside her. The muscles in his arms and torso looked fluid in the deep glow of blue light that painted over them.
Briefly, he pulled her close and settled his hand on the small of her back, pushing up beneath the hem of her sequined shirt to feel the skin beneath. He let their hips meet when he did it. Let their bodies form together the way so many others around them were doing. And he kissed her again - on the shoulder. Then the throat. Then the outer edge of her ear. Because she was beautiful and alive and he wanted to touch her.
Ian[Edit: "use words to great effect."]
KiaraShe'd told him at the Chantry when he'd found her there, alone, attuning herself to the heartbeat of the Node that she'd intended to be a doctor, once. The details had been loose at best, a subtle shaking apart of the layers that made up who Kiara Woolfe was. Who she had been, before she'd Awakened. Who she might have become. There's a great many things they still don't know about the other; secrets buried; truths unknown and while she offered herself freely in many respects to those she met; those she shared a bed; her body with there were a great many more she held in check.
It was easier, in so many ways, to keep those elements caged away from the light.
Still, she cannot always keep her appreciation for the way the human body operated; the shift and play and motion behind it censored from all awareness. There's muscle memory of a sort, there. The desire to feel and deduce - the want to heal, what needed it. Because different she may have been but Kiara was, at her core, a healer. A practitioner of arts to soothe; to repair and hone. Ian was beautiful to watch in motion and she did - watch him - keep her eyes fixed on the fluidity of his body; drop her lashes to half mast to study the way their bodies lined up; to remember and keep the sensation of heat between them when he drew near.
The beads of perspiration on her skin; the burn of his palm where it pushed under the thin fabric of her shirt.
She wrapped her arms around his neck as he pressed his lips to her shoulder; throat; could probably taste the sweat on her skin; the lingering sweetness of perfume. She keeps him close, Kiara, a hand fisting into his hair before she twists in his embrace and they're dancing with his chest to her back; her body snug against the cradle of his hips.
They don't talk but there's a conversation in the way she drags his hands around her body; links their fingers and puts his hands on her hip; on her stomach. There's an unspoken invitation to the way she tilts her head back and gives him leeway to put his lips back against the shining column of her throat.
Bodies communicated and theirs had always had a particular chemistry for it; on the dancefloor; tonight; it's stronger and more blatant than ever.
IanIan's movement slowed when they drew together - when Kiara turned and wrapped his arms around her body. The invitation elicited a low sound from Ian, resonant in a way that was more felt than heard. This too was a dance - a conversation (touch me, yes, I want you.) There was surrender there (though not submission.) Surrender to each other, and to the inexorable force that drew them together.
They barely knew each other. Still. After all these weeks. Funny the way people discover each other (in increments, as friends or lovers or colleagues.)
Ian answered Kiara's invitation without a second thought. His mouth found her neck, open and tasting, tongue pressed to the pulse of an artery. One of his arms wrapped tightly around her torso just beneath her breasts, as though to hold her to him. The other was gentler - exploring and teasing, tracing fingers down the length of her stomach to play at the waistline of her skirt.
How long had they been dancing? Long enough to see beads of sweat on their skin. Long enough for the music to take on a trance-like quality. But not as late as Ian usually stayed out. The night was still (relatively) young.
And yet...
"Let me know when you want to leave."
There was a slow smile at that, and Kiara would feel the way his lips moved against her throat.
KiaraShe likes the build up. Enjoys the chase. She'd probably be the first to admit it. To say she's guilty of throwing herself headlong into experiences without ever really stopping to contemplate if it was the wisest move; the smartest, well considered action. Ever since that first moment - awakening - feeling so much as seeing her mentor at her side there had been that bone deep thrum to move. The drive for momentum.
Change was a necessity, was it not? Kiara had become so very good at eliciting it; pulling and tugging at the strands in her world to rearrange them as she wished. Never looking back - that too, had become a rule for survival. You never, ever looked behind you.
(Her dreams chased her, though, she had never quite been able to outrun those).
Still, in the here and now - there's reason enough to chance a look over her shoulder; to let her mouth bend and curve into a heated little smile and to stroke her fingers over his arm. To tilt her face up so that it presses her nose up; the point of her chin under his jawline; lets her reciprocate the attention he's been paying to her neck all night.
Lets her murmur against it, "You know I think," punctuated by her body moving back against his in a sinuous little motion; a roll of her hips just so, "You should take me home about now." She finds his eyes, then; traces the edge of his jaw with a finger.
"But first you should kiss me." Her hair's become wilder for the physical activity; strands loosening around her face; clinging to her nape of her neck; her mouth is quite as bright as ever though; wide and supple and expressive - it's her eyes, though, with the Verbena, that forever offer the challenge. Playful and competitive.
There's a dare in them somewhere; a push for Ian to meet her on the precipice - or maybe to jump off it alongside her.
IanThis was one of Ian's many contradictions: he looked backwards all the fucking time. You wouldn't expect it, maybe, from someone so driven. So focused on the here and now. But memory was a deep thing for him. It went down and down and on forever. He remembered every single person he'd ever slept with. (Maybe not all at once. Maybe not always easily. But given the right key, the doors would open and there they'd be - taste, touch, sound and smell.) He would remember Kiara long after they'd gone their separate ways.
Sometimes to survive, one needed to forget. But to evolve, you have to remember.
Right now though? Ian wasn't looking anywhere but here.
But first you should kiss me.
The pressure of his arms pulled Kiara into a half-turn, loosening his hold on her so that he could catch her mouth in a hard kiss. A little bit claiming and insistent. More than a little hungry. And for a few moments he actually stopped dancing.
Then he grabbed her hand and led them both off the dance floor and out of the club.
They hadn't seen each other since the night when Ian had walked out of Pho 95. And when a text finally showed up on Kiara's phone, there was no acknowledgment of the conversation they'd had on the sidewalk. Instead there was simply this:
Feel like dancing tonight?
The text came in the afternoon, just as the short winter hours were beginning to dip towards early evening. If Kiara felt like taking him up on it, he'd send her an address for an underground club in LoDo. Some place that had only recently opened up. The nondescript entrance was located in a long brick building that also housed a book store and a couple of restaurants. No sign was immediately visible to mark the location, but the dark glass door had the words Echo Chamber painted on it.
Ian was already inside when Kiara arrived, waiting at the bar with a glass of bourbon in his hand. The entrance of the club led down a set of stairs and a short hallway (which contained a coat check) before opening up to a single, spacious room. The decor was minimalistic. Black floors. Open ceiling. Brick walls. Most of the place was standing room only, but there were seats at the bar and a couple of dark, velvet sofas in one corner which were presently occupied by a boisterous group of college students who seemed to be playing some kind of drinking game.
It was impossible to avoid the music in this place. (Maybe that was why they'd called it Echo Chamber.) The majority of the club's floorspace was devoted to the dance area, where a fairly sizable crowd was currently moving in time to a rolling electronic beat.
Kiara
She's late.
Not by any ridiculous degree and certainly not enough to warrant a text asking where she was but - late. Later than they agreed on. When she does slip inside though; sans coat; she sparkles. The weather in Denver warm enough for once to invite lighter layers beneath the heavier precautions for winter. So: pale pink sequins that glitter under the turning club lights. Bare shoulders; dark hair swept up in some deliberately messy affair; long black skirt; heels.
The picture of the club-goer, Kiara. But there's always those tells with the Verbena that she's not quite - that there's more going on beneath the surface. The bold color of her mouth; adorned tonight to match her shirt; the dark liner around darker eyes; the way her shirt hooks around her neck and leaves a swath of bare skin visible on her back; the telltale lines of a tattoo barely peeking from where the material gathers at the small of her back.
She's always noticeable, the brunette, as much for the fact she intends to be as she simply - draws the eye. It's in the way she bears herself across the crowded space of the dance floor when she catches sight of Ian at the bar; the way she moves with a confidence that isn't assured (alone) from grace or prowess but simple awareness of self; of her body in relation to the world. She swans up to her partner for the night with a heavy, glittering black bracelet on one wrist; with bare skin everywhere and the hint of a smile curling at the edge of her mouth.
"Hey." She doesn't apologize for being late, but all said, she may well assume he doesn't mind. That in a place like Echo Chamber, he'll have had sufficient scenery to keep him occupied. "Starting without me?" A nod to his glass as she sets an elbow on the counter and leans into it.
Ian
"If I was starting without you, I'd be dancing." There was enough whiskey in his system to make his eyes glisten when he smiled, all smooth-as-silk and so very at home in this environment. At home, perhaps, in a different way than he had been while sitting atop a snow-capped mountain with Elijah last week. But still. At home. There were different kinds of wild places.
Still, he wasn't tipsy the way that Sera might have been. Just softer. Shinier.
Kiara wasn't the only one of them with skin showing. Ian had on a pair of jeans that were fitted in all the right places for dancing. Dark blue with a subtle, lustrous coating. On top he wore a black suit vest with nothing underneath. It hugged his torso tightly and left bare a section of skin on his lower back when he leaned over the bar. In the light of the club, the exposed skin on his arms and chest seemed as though it was dusted with something shimmery.
"Can I get you something?" He had to lean in to be heard over the pulse of the music, brushing his lips against the edge of Kiara's ear. He smelled like citrus, sandalwood and amber.
Kiara
There's always a lot of unspokens between the two of them. There has been from the moment they met. Things glimpsed in the turn of a head; the side glance; the lingering look but never articulated aloud. Last time she'd seen Ian it had been chasing after the ghost of his footsteps out the door; it had been reaching for his hand to halt him; to turn him back to ask - to glimpse - whatever it was.
And she'd known, was what made it hard. Somewhere housed in Kiara's expression had lain the answer. That she did know, that she was familiar. But it's another unspoken; sunk down beneath the surface and the surface; their dance; the easy banter; is so much easier to deal with. He doesn't mention their last encounter and neither does she. Ian doesn't imbibe alcohol the way Serafine did; Kiara's never spent a moment with the Cultist not in another state; altered; distant; distorted and somehow infinitely more beautiful for it. It's possible Kiara envies Sera it, that easy shedding of perception.
It's possible she'd never be capable of letting go so entirely of what was real. Pain was, to Kiara at least, as important as the rest of life.
(Pleasure, for example).
If he was starting without her he'd be dancing and there's a tilt of her head toward the dancefloor; a contemplative study of the rolling sea of bodies; the press and flex and seduction of it all. That smile curls a little more around her mouth and she lifts one thin, bare shoulder in a careless little shrug. Turns around to face the bar; bracing her weight on both elbows.
He leans in and she bends toward the motion.
"Vodka tonic with lime." She twists a little; a hand brushing the edge of the vest he's wearing; testing the fabric between her thumb and forefinger. "Is this the proper dancing uniform?" Her eyes dip over the rest of his outfit; lingering; smiling as she does, flicking them back to meet his gaze. "I approve, if so."
Ian
The fabric of the vest was soft beneath Kiara's fingers. Something with a high thread count. Virgin wool with silk accents. Ian laughed when she used the phrase dancing uniform, as though dressing for nightclubs required a particular expertise. "Yours isn't bad either." His eyes carried over the slope of her skin, tracing a line to the place where her pulse-point beat above the apex of her collar bones. Briefly, he let his hand trace the edge of her top, where the material tied around her neck - following it down past her shoulder as his fingers danced over the sequins.
His eyes lifted. He leaned in again, speaking in a warm breath against her ear. "I like your hair."
He always liked her hair. He'd had a habit of playing with it, in more intimate moments. Winding strands of it between his fingers. Memorizing the way it felt when it dragged across his chest.
"You smell good."
He pulled away to flag down one of the bartenders - a girl in her mid-twenties who looked as though she'd probably been doing this for a while. She had a perky kind of efficiency about her, sliding neatly between customers with sparkling eyes and a flashing smile. When she approached them, Ian repeated Kiara's order and watched while the bartender poured the drink and set it neatly before them. He'd already started a tab, so she darted off a moment later.
"I'm sorry about what happened last time. I shouldn't have let it get to me."
Ah. And there it was.
Kiara
For all that she's a woman of the cities; a cosmopolitan darling by birth and inclination Kiara Woolfe did forever have that touch of the wilderness to her. Whether or not it had always been there in her; in the way her presence invoked the sense of nature's cycling; the destruction and devouring; the regeneration after the fact; it was stronger now. Growing so, the more she adapted; the further she evolved. Opened up, to the person she was now. To what she was, now.
It's reflected even in the way her hair grows; wild and thick; refusing in many ways to be tamed by product or Kiara's own inclination. Ian likes it; the quantity of it; the way it moves when unbound. It's there in her scent; vague impressions of incense, vanilla and spice; the sweetness of whatever lotion it was she rubbed into her skin. Sweet, but not all the way through. Perhaps that accounted for her, too. The Verbena were creatures of the earth, after all.
Capable of great change - and stubborn resistance to it. At once yielding and immovable.
She smells good, though and there's a noise at that; her hand loosening and sliding over his chest; pressing with some brief intent over his stomach before she draws it back; leans into the cradle formed by his torso when he presses closer to whisper against her ear to be heard over the din. "So do you," she offers easily in return with a flashing grin; a wide baring of teeth and her fingers are on his neck for a moment when she says it. A palm sliding over the pulse at the base; dragging down to the v formed by his vest; dropping away as the bartender appears.
Kiara has her fingers around her glass; has the first taste of vodka and lime on her lips when he mentions - she takes a sip with measured contemplation; her brows drawing together briefly. Sets the glass down. It's already beginning to sweat in the club; droplets forming where she'd held it.
"She does that." There's a moment, Kiara doesn't expand but her tongue chases the edge of lime on her lower lip, then: "Arionna. She talks a lot of shit." She turns a little to face him; eyes ghosting over his face with that same searching expression she'd worn then, on the night in question. "I mean we all do at times but she has a world of opinions on a lot of things she doesn't let herself close enough to even experience. She talks about it with the disconnection of someone who hasn't seen - " Kiara hesitates; looks away; her frame constricts with a sharp exhale.
"I don't blame you for it getting to you. I think she's - " A smile surfaces; tugs and persists into shape across the supple shape of her mouth. Humor re-inserting itself into her voice. " - she doesn't approve of me. I don't care that she doesn't but - sometimes it gets under your skin. People talking like it's nothing. To see that. To know it."
There's a beat. The baseline of music thrums around them; Kiara's face lit by the bar beside them; the refraction and gleam of her shirt. Her honesty is a sharp thing; honed but not necessarily, cruel for it.
"I used to get a lot more angry about it."
Ian
It was an odd thing to hear coming from Ian's lips. He didn't seem the type to apologize. Or to regret. Kiara tasted her drink, and Ian lifted his in turn, finishing off most of what remained in the glass.
She spoke about Arionna - whom Ian had only really met once. His impression of the girl was barely more than a sketch, but Kiara's assessment was hardly surprising. Ian made a sound low in his throat. The resonance of it got lost somewhere in the electric pulse of sound that washed over them.
"She's a kid." If the statement felt dismissive, it wasn't intended to be. "Sooner or later the world will get more real for her. Either that, or it'll eat her alive."
And didn't they all know what that felt like.
He didn't ask Kiara why she'd understood how he'd felt that night. On a certain level, he didn't have to. Perhaps later, when they were alone. When they weren't surrounded by the press of bodies and the pounding swell of music. Later, when there wasn't the promise of a dance. (Because Ian did not forget things like that.)
"Anyway, approval is overrated. But if it helps..." He let his lips brush over the edge of her jaw, grazing lightly with his teeth as he slid down to kiss her neck. "I approve of you immensely."
(Though Kiara hardly needed it.)
He let the last measure of his bourbon flow past his tongue, tipping back his head to drain the glass when he pulled away. "I think we should dance."
Kiara
They were both such physical creatures. Touch conveyed a world of things words frequently fell short of - at least, for Kiara. Ian kisses the edge of her jaw; neck and she slides a hand along his shoulder; gripping briefly when he grazes her skin with his teeth. He can feel her pulse beating wildly under her skin; the hint of some encouraging, tiny noise rising in the back of her throat.
It was a noted thing about the Verbena, one thing she rarely held back, her pleasure, the openness of enjoying the moment.
"Oh, believe me," this, a breath of laughter as she slips the tips of her fingers beneath the edge of his vest; idly stroking his skin at the shoulder. "I stopped asking for it a long time ago." Kiara's head tips back; she finds Ian's gaze and her eyes drop to his mouth for a considering moment; tracing the shape of it. "It made my life infinitely more enjoyable. But thank you, regardless." Her fingers slide away from him to reclaim her drink as he does his own.
The pleasant burn of vodka warming her throat as he attests they should dance and she twists; smiling in that vaguely challenging way of hers; stepping back from the bar and beckoning him with her. "I couldn't agree more. Come and show me what you've got, buddy." This as she allows her footsteps to draw her back; to allow herself to be engulfed by the dancing swarm of bodies. It's hot, on the dance-floor; a space heated by too many bodies pressing too close together.
There's something almost erotic about the fact; about the writhe and blend of people, moving together; the capacity for conversation overwritten by the heavy presence of the beat instead. Kiara's no dancer, she doesn't have the training or the background he does but she does possess an understanding of the body; the way it behaves; the shift and play of muscle beneath skin.
She draws Ian into the crowd; lights flashing overhead; picking out the tiny sequined beads of her shirt and lets the rhythm have its way with her. Lets him dictate his own initiation into the music as she finds her own.
Ian[Life 1 / Forces 1 custom rote "Bodies in Motion", diff 4 -1 (practiced, etc)]
Dice: 2 d10 TN3 (4, 10) ( success x 3 ) [WP]
Ian[Dex+Performance -2 diff (ability aptitude + that rote)]
Dice: 8 d10 TN4 (1, 3, 3, 5, 5, 6, 7, 9) ( success x 5 )
IanPerhaps some day they might talk about this. The way that bodies communicated. Ian would call it a language. Perhaps that was why he became a dancer in the first place. What is art if not communication? And what is dance if not the most primordial form of art?
Ian was not an unskilled speaker. He could, when motivated, use them to great effect. But there was not a spoken language on earth that would ever be fully satisfying for him. That would ever feel like anything more than a crude translation of the nuance and honesty he found in the physical. (Perhaps that was part of the reason why everyone seemed to find him so unfathomable.)
His skin was warm where Kiara touched him - the pulse of his blood beating close beneath the surface. A few heady seconds of contact before they broke apart. Before Kiara answered his suggestion by beckoning him to follow her onto the dance floor. Then they were surrounded by the press of bodies and the heavy beat of the music. Life and Sound, all mixed up into one perfect, interwoven pulse.
Ian's senses opened up as he began to move. As he breathed in the heady mix of sweat and pheromones and focused on the way the music drove his heartbeat. Focused on the way his body moved. The interplay of gravity and kinetic motion on his pattern. How the air flowed around them. How the beat flowed through them. Until the people in the club became primal and vivid and alive. All pulsing patterns and elegant motion.
Ian and Kiara - they were also primal and vivid and alive. And the moment Ian got comfortable on the dance floor - the moment they stopped moving through the crowd and carved out a small space for themselves, he started to move like dancing was as much a part of him as breathing. Instinctive, following the flow of the music with his body, and keeping close within Kiara's space. Focused enough to move with her instead of just beside her. The muscles in his arms and torso looked fluid in the deep glow of blue light that painted over them.
Briefly, he pulled her close and settled his hand on the small of her back, pushing up beneath the hem of her sequined shirt to feel the skin beneath. He let their hips meet when he did it. Let their bodies form together the way so many others around them were doing. And he kissed her again - on the shoulder. Then the throat. Then the outer edge of her ear. Because she was beautiful and alive and he wanted to touch her.
Ian[Edit: "use words to great effect."]
KiaraShe'd told him at the Chantry when he'd found her there, alone, attuning herself to the heartbeat of the Node that she'd intended to be a doctor, once. The details had been loose at best, a subtle shaking apart of the layers that made up who Kiara Woolfe was. Who she had been, before she'd Awakened. Who she might have become. There's a great many things they still don't know about the other; secrets buried; truths unknown and while she offered herself freely in many respects to those she met; those she shared a bed; her body with there were a great many more she held in check.
It was easier, in so many ways, to keep those elements caged away from the light.
Still, she cannot always keep her appreciation for the way the human body operated; the shift and play and motion behind it censored from all awareness. There's muscle memory of a sort, there. The desire to feel and deduce - the want to heal, what needed it. Because different she may have been but Kiara was, at her core, a healer. A practitioner of arts to soothe; to repair and hone. Ian was beautiful to watch in motion and she did - watch him - keep her eyes fixed on the fluidity of his body; drop her lashes to half mast to study the way their bodies lined up; to remember and keep the sensation of heat between them when he drew near.
The beads of perspiration on her skin; the burn of his palm where it pushed under the thin fabric of her shirt.
She wrapped her arms around his neck as he pressed his lips to her shoulder; throat; could probably taste the sweat on her skin; the lingering sweetness of perfume. She keeps him close, Kiara, a hand fisting into his hair before she twists in his embrace and they're dancing with his chest to her back; her body snug against the cradle of his hips.
They don't talk but there's a conversation in the way she drags his hands around her body; links their fingers and puts his hands on her hip; on her stomach. There's an unspoken invitation to the way she tilts her head back and gives him leeway to put his lips back against the shining column of her throat.
Bodies communicated and theirs had always had a particular chemistry for it; on the dancefloor; tonight; it's stronger and more blatant than ever.
IanIan's movement slowed when they drew together - when Kiara turned and wrapped his arms around her body. The invitation elicited a low sound from Ian, resonant in a way that was more felt than heard. This too was a dance - a conversation (touch me, yes, I want you.) There was surrender there (though not submission.) Surrender to each other, and to the inexorable force that drew them together.
They barely knew each other. Still. After all these weeks. Funny the way people discover each other (in increments, as friends or lovers or colleagues.)
Ian answered Kiara's invitation without a second thought. His mouth found her neck, open and tasting, tongue pressed to the pulse of an artery. One of his arms wrapped tightly around her torso just beneath her breasts, as though to hold her to him. The other was gentler - exploring and teasing, tracing fingers down the length of her stomach to play at the waistline of her skirt.
How long had they been dancing? Long enough to see beads of sweat on their skin. Long enough for the music to take on a trance-like quality. But not as late as Ian usually stayed out. The night was still (relatively) young.
And yet...
"Let me know when you want to leave."
There was a slow smile at that, and Kiara would feel the way his lips moved against her throat.
KiaraShe likes the build up. Enjoys the chase. She'd probably be the first to admit it. To say she's guilty of throwing herself headlong into experiences without ever really stopping to contemplate if it was the wisest move; the smartest, well considered action. Ever since that first moment - awakening - feeling so much as seeing her mentor at her side there had been that bone deep thrum to move. The drive for momentum.
Change was a necessity, was it not? Kiara had become so very good at eliciting it; pulling and tugging at the strands in her world to rearrange them as she wished. Never looking back - that too, had become a rule for survival. You never, ever looked behind you.
(Her dreams chased her, though, she had never quite been able to outrun those).
Still, in the here and now - there's reason enough to chance a look over her shoulder; to let her mouth bend and curve into a heated little smile and to stroke her fingers over his arm. To tilt her face up so that it presses her nose up; the point of her chin under his jawline; lets her reciprocate the attention he's been paying to her neck all night.
Lets her murmur against it, "You know I think," punctuated by her body moving back against his in a sinuous little motion; a roll of her hips just so, "You should take me home about now." She finds his eyes, then; traces the edge of his jaw with a finger.
"But first you should kiss me." Her hair's become wilder for the physical activity; strands loosening around her face; clinging to her nape of her neck; her mouth is quite as bright as ever though; wide and supple and expressive - it's her eyes, though, with the Verbena, that forever offer the challenge. Playful and competitive.
There's a dare in them somewhere; a push for Ian to meet her on the precipice - or maybe to jump off it alongside her.
IanThis was one of Ian's many contradictions: he looked backwards all the fucking time. You wouldn't expect it, maybe, from someone so driven. So focused on the here and now. But memory was a deep thing for him. It went down and down and on forever. He remembered every single person he'd ever slept with. (Maybe not all at once. Maybe not always easily. But given the right key, the doors would open and there they'd be - taste, touch, sound and smell.) He would remember Kiara long after they'd gone their separate ways.
Sometimes to survive, one needed to forget. But to evolve, you have to remember.
Right now though? Ian wasn't looking anywhere but here.
But first you should kiss me.
The pressure of his arms pulled Kiara into a half-turn, loosening his hold on her so that he could catch her mouth in a hard kiss. A little bit claiming and insistent. More than a little hungry. And for a few moments he actually stopped dancing.
Then he grabbed her hand and led them both off the dance floor and out of the club.
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