Dan
Bittersweet is a slow pour coffeehouse /
mixology bar tucked away on a corner of LoDo, with a changing 'gallery'
of local art on the walls. This month, the featured artist is Tish
Evans, a local weaver / textile artist whose work spans the functional
and the fantastical. The largest piece is a wall-hanging the size of a
small buffalo like a sunset woven in negative: shadows where light
should be, and light where the shadows belong.
Leonard Cohen on the soundsystem (Nevermind)
and a low buzz of noise from the small crowd. They do a bang-up
business mornings and weekends, but mid-evening - when local
bar/restaurants are crowded enough to spill out onto the street on a
warm October night - the coffee bar / bar bar (and that is what the sign
outside says:
bittersweet
coffee bar / bar bar
)
- is sparsely populated. Among the denizens: a bearded blond guy with a
button-down flannel, the sleeves rolled quite neatly up to his elbows
revealing a variety of intricate tattoos, portfolio open on the table,
frowning at his Macbook, drinking coffee from a ceramic mug.
RiverRiver was doing as River is want to do right now- which was exploring.
She
knew the lay of the land, for the most part. Kept an ear to the ground
so she would know which gang was where and whose turf she needed to stay
out of. Where people dropped dead bodies in the event she needed to go
and be an investigator. In the event she needed to stand on her own two
feet. River's had her fill of dead things- she wants coffee.
Contemplates being a barrista instead of a dancer and there she goes,
pushes the door open with a jingle and she's got on a pair of shorts
paired with cowbox boots. The shirt is a little long for her, button
down and probably belonging to an ex-boyfriend.
She's got on a
vest and carries a purse that is the size of a small duffelbag. It
houses a world of wonders and her dakr hair is worn down. This place was
a coffee bar and an actual bar. She contemplates mixing both before she
sees the man with the blond beard. Hasn't she seen him before.
River makes a tentative approach, tries to act cool, like she's not trying to check Dan out. Maybe failing. Probably failing.
Aidan[nightmares]
Dice: 6 d10 TN6 (2, 3, 3, 7, 7, 9) ( success x 3 )
DanWhat's the point of checking someone out if they don't notice and return the look? Maybe there's a certain aesthetic
appreciation there. Maybe some folks don't want to get caught. Most
do, though. How else do you know if your regard might be returned?
--
He
glances up. Blue eyes framed with slight crinkles that deepen when his
mouth moves, as it does not, in a brief skimming grin. Notes the bag.
"That thing looks big enough to carry around three cases of beer or a side of beef."
Wry.
He looks tired, though.
He is tired.
KiaraOne of those days. That's what it is.
The
weather doesn't offer a backdrop for it, not really. It's been cloudy
all afternoon but the Denver wind hasn't taken up the mantle some locals
have; pumpkins starting to dot porches with their garish, grinning
smiles cut wide across their sides. It's not freezing, it just feels - a
little heavy. Dull and gritty where the sun slides away and
even when it returns - Denver today - feels like a city with secrets. It
doesn't always.
Sometimes, on evenings like the one it's
settling into, it feels - promising. Those secrets, the unknowns, they
feel like an enticement to come along (come find us).
-
She
almost collided with another car earlier. Intersection. Palms slammed
down on horns. Guy cutting her off (and nearly cutting a slice out of
her car). Then her engine stalled. One of those days. She had to circle
the block twice to find a park so she could make a meeting.
-
She
passes a crime scene on the way to find this mixology bar she's wanted
to try forever. There's police tape flapping in the evening air and the
sight of the lights (cutting blue and red, blue and red) against the
windows is a strange visual tattoo against the night.
There's a crowd milling around, curious stares and quiet chatter as an ambulance rolls around a corner.
Kiara picks up her pace. She's around the corner before it pulls to a stop.
-
One of those days, now - evening. The Verbena finds Bittersweet on
foot. One minute there's no sign of her and then; the door opens; a
swirl of perfume and energy and red lipstick. Kiara Woolfe, adjusting
her bag over her shoulder and frowning at the menu.
Kiara[Oh right! Awareness, just in case.]
Dice: 6 d10 TN6 (1, 3, 5, 6, 9, 9) ( success x 3 )
River"Sometimes, I like to carry a keg with me," she adjusts her purse, switches it over to the other shoulder, "true facts."
She
sounds like she's not from here, or at the very least like she's not
one who speaks English as a first language. Truth be told, River is from
here, was born in the United States but she's spent enough time outside
of the standard English-speaking populace that she doesn't have the
same cadence and timbre of a native speaker.
"Can I buy you a
coffee?" looks at the mug, realizes he has coffee, looks back and offers
a smile anyway, as if smiling would cover up the fact that she
completely missed he was drinking coffee before, "I'm River."
Dan"False
lies," he rejoins, this quick skim of a smile cutting through his
beard. It reaches - but only just - his dark blue eyes. Watching as
she shifts that purse, his eyes cutting across her frame - hand to strap
to hand again - with a light precision that strikes one as aware rather
than observant. "Now if you'd said a half-keg I might've believed
you."
And so. Mouth slides from that into a slight smirk as
she offers to buy him a coffee and yes, he already has coffee. Wasn't
simply here to steal their wifi and he thinks about telling her that,
but he doesn't.
Cuts a glance down at his mug like: yeah. "I
already have one. You're welcome to buy yourself a coffee and pull up a
chair, though."
--
Then he's sitting back in that
chair, this long spare frame, button-down and fitted jeans and leather
boots. Sits back enough and tall enough to catch Kiara's eye. Gives
her a wave that could be taken as an invitation, if she's looking for
one.
KiaraSo, Bittersweet. She takes
two steps inside and nearly collides with a young man on his way out.
It's Kiara's fault this time, she's staring down at her phone and
tapping out some (vitally important no doubt) message with the fall of
all that long, dark hair tumbling over a shoulder and then - jostled.
She looks up, startled and is reaching to apologize when he's doing the
same; adjusting glasses up a thin nose and waving her apology off,
because - well - it's probably the eyes and the hair.
It usually was, with the pagan.
Still,
she's breathing out and pushing back all that hair with a
bracelet-laden wrist when she spots (feels that resolute splash of
radiance) Dan and the hand flowers out. He gets a smile and she nods
toward the bar - universal I'm going to order first gesture - before she's moving. Kiara often seems to be perpetually doing that. In motion. Moving. (Running).
She's
in jeans and boots and a calf length cream trench-coat, the brunette;
the bag over her shoulder is old and worn and looks battle-scarred; it's
stitched at one edge; there's a feather attached to the zip.
-
Returns
to greet Dan and - "River, right?" - A gesture with her coffee, Kiara's
dark eyes find the other woman. "Did your pants pull through?"
Smilingly, a curl at the edge of her mouth.
RiverShe
does take the invitation, does take a moment to order coffee- vanilla
chai latte- waits with the kind of careful patience that one has to have
when ordering nice coffee. It comes out in an avocado mug with a
nice, open top. As though she were going to read tea leaves in her
oversized beverage receptacle.
She turns around, catches a
look at Kiara and smiles. Raises a hand and with a little wiggle of her
fingers lets the woman know that, yes, she sees her. With the curve of
her lips (full, unpainted, she lets the woman know that she is pleased
to see her. The first person whose name she remembered in this city. A
woman, most importantly, who wasn't going to hold a pair of ripped yoga
pants against her because River can be a walking ball of embarrassment
waiting to happen.
She sits down, "Aaaand... Kiara?"
Waits for confirmation.
Did your pants pull through?
And
this is the part where her cheeks turn bright pink. She clears her
throat, takes a long drink of her coffee-infused chai drink and she sets
it down. Hands on her glass, "oh, uh... no? The yoga pants sleep with
the fishes."
DanThe tables are only so large,
and his is more-or-less full. The open portfolio (leather, quite as
scarred as Kiara's bag) is closed with a neat sweep of his tattooed
hand. This glimpse of scrawled notes, a handful of suggestions of chord
progressions, little more. Then he folds up the Macbook and tucks both
away in his own rather indispensible bag. Battered black leather, a
Ramones pin naturally skewered through one of the stresspoints to either
hide or hold together the largest of the holes where the leather and
its lining have worn-through.
Leaves his phone on the table, though, Dan. He's waiting for a call.
Still
gives them both a quick-wry-smirk, more for Kiara in that moment than
for River - but that's familiarity, more than anything. The function of
it. "There some particular reason you are throwing yoga-pants into the
river?" (Sleep with the fishes, see). Gets a glimpse of River's
frothy coffee-thing, "Is it the coffee you like in that, or the rest of
it?"
KiaraRiver's embarrassed and Kiara's
smile grows a little at the edges. She's taken her coffee black -
perhaps that says enough. Still, when she says the pants sleep with the
fishes, there's a flash of sympathy there. She makes a soft noise of it
as she finds a chair - maybe hooks in one from another table if room is
too cramped - and settles in this flourish.
Bag hung over the
back, legs neatly crossing at the knee. Those boots, which have rather a
tendency toward complicated laces that criss-cross up the length and a
zip that runs along the side - those are black too.
"Technically,
it's all your fault, Dan." She begins with a pointed little lift of
fine dark brows. "We were playing the game you started and River here
went for a spectacular throw," River gets the benefit of Kiara's eyes,
then. They tick over to her and she delivers this little wink with her
mouth still edging that little flux of teasing humor before continuing,
raising her coffee to her mouth to sip from it when she concludes.
"And gravity took offense to her prowess. And Alexander's, as it turned out."
A beat, she swallows. Contemplates Dan for a brief pull. "Hey, how's Sera?"
River"The
rest of it. I like chai, but I like chai that lives dangerously. I
don't like the coffee aftertaste- espresso lollipops, jelly beans,
tiramisu-" she makes a face, nose scrunches up and she shakes her head,
"-I like covert coffee."
But there was the question fo
the yoga pants, realizing she didn't really carefully dodge that
particular question well enough, River clears her throat. Tried to think
of a witty reply but, at the end of the day, she's not the best with
witty repartee; she's average. Honesty is the best policy and she
meanders to her point.
Kiara covers this rest of the story and
here she is trying to hide behind her coffee cup but it wasn't working.
So! The Euthanatos, who was supposed to be bestowed with the kind of
dignity befitting a wheel turner, cleared her throat and relaxed. Or
tried to relax and ended up cross her legs to keep from figiting too
bad. "When I got home they had unraveled to the point of being leg
warmers so... they have failed me for the last time."
Dan"When
gravity fucks you over - " he is not precisely laughing, but there is
humor in his lengthy frame, skimming over his underlying - what is it.
Tension? Something like it. "Disbelieve."
Still though: the
reference to the game, et cetera. His gaze slides from Kiara to River
and there is a different note: first seeking, then recognition. One
fits itself into the other, like a placing of puzzle pieces. "That's
where I've seen you before."
River is confessing to enjoying
covert coffee then: so Dan does not suggest that next time she's here
she try a plain, slow-poured something. You're a coffee person on you
aren't. River doesn't seem to be. Dan's so hipster it hurts, right?
But he's not an ass about it.
--
Then Hey, how's Sera?
flick of his gaze back to Kiara and something like hang-time there. A
second really, no more. And it is not so much that tension asserts
itself, as it is a lessening of his temporary ease. "Tan, I suppose.
Last I heard from her, she was still in Thailand."
KiaraThe
talk of coffee pulls at a thread of memory. Corona Street, not so long
ago, but months, now. Kiara hadn't been in Denver so long and there was a
party - Dan had quizzed her on her preferences and she remembers it now
in that abstract, fuzzy-at-the-edges like an old photograph way:
(French press or drip?
Press.
Woman after my own heart)
There's
some awareness of that time in Kiara's expression as she watches Dan
and in the way her mouth adjusts itself into something a little less
joyful. Just - aware. Not without concern, perhaps. Somewhere tied into
it. "She does love the sun. Why am I not surprised?"
Then, simple: "If you hear from her, tell her I said I want a souvenir. Something cheap and ridiculous."
Maybe
she's been letting River recover her dignity, but Kiara's eyes return
to her, now. "How is your friend? I got the impression she wasn't
totally sold on whether or not I planned to do something dastardly with
you both the other night?"
DanHis mouth
quirks, Dan, this glimmer of affection, yeah, or maybe respect framing
the edges of the expression, which is otherwise banked and closed but
not shuttered. "Will do." is the only assurance he offers Kiara.
He appreciates, though, her circumspection.
And sentiment.
--
Hangs
around a little while longer, more background than foreground. Excuses
himself to take a call not long after. Steps away and outside, where
he digs through pockets and pulls out a kretek. Not a habit he indulges
in much, except when Sera's around, but now he smokes it while he
chats.
Later he might return. If River or Kiara or both are
still there, he might suggest that they meet up later. Friend of his is
playing at The Black Sheep - the set'll start about 10 if they're
interested.
--
RiverShe does give the indication to Dan that she will be going to see the show. Seems on board.
--
"Farrah?" as though River had other
friends, "oh, we're doing pretty well. We have a couch? We're settling
in pretty nice; I found out that the apartment manager is letting us
paint things. Farrah is a doctoral candidate, so anything that isn't studying or also studying is strictly off the table."
A gesture outward.
"We have a rule that someone has to buy us dinner before dastardly deeds happen."
Ian[Awareness?]
Dice: 6 d10 TN6 (1, 4, 4, 5, 5, 7) ( success x 1 )
KiaraKiara
doesn't commit, at least, not 100%, to the offer of going to see a
band. She does offer enthusiasm for the idea of it, though. The way she
shies away from instant confirmation gives this impression maybe she's
got people to meet or just - things on. In that undefined way people
sometimes do.
Their lives, this world, that gathering feeling; like tiny atoms starting to whirl together with intention; who knew. Who knows.
So,
Dan departs and Kiara slides over into the chair he's left; it's still
warm with the impression of him. Palms her coffee between her hands and
cants this look outside; into the darkness. She's a healer, this woman,
in tune with the other side perhaps in ways River is, too. The ripples
and fluctuations around them - Kiara's focus lingers as long as it takes
to note that one or two of the locals she'd seen gathered around that
crime scene earlier have arrived for coffee.
There's something
that sticks at her about it - the macabre fascination. The jangling
reminder that sets her teeth aching. River's saying something, though.
Doctoral candidate. Studying. Buy them dinner, first. That gets a curl
of her lip. A gleam in her eyes. "I'll have to bear that in mind," she
offers with a smile and then, her thumb thoughtfully stroking the edge
of her cup. "I studied myself for a while. In another life."
She sits back. "How about you, student ... ?" She traces her eyes over River's form, as if to pick at the pieces of her whole.
RiverShe
does watch Dan go. Peers over her shoulder and watches with a little
smile on her face like she most assuredly appreciates the view and very,
very cluelessly has no idea that she is not of the kind of person whose
Dan's orientation traditionally lines up. But, still, it does not stop a
girl from looking and she takes a drink of her chai latte. Tastes the
little hints of vanilla at the top of it, closes her eyes and smiles like this is a sensory experience that she was more than willing to embrace.
She puts the glass down.
Is
she a student. Puts a hand up and shakes her head, "not right now. My
bachelors is in applied performance- dance and urban planning."
River
shakes her head again, takes a second to just observe Kiara and take in
that Kiara is a lovely woman with lovely fashion sense. Takes in the
people around her and shrugs. It's a quiet bit of pleasure on her face.
Quiet and small and pleased to be in the middle of it all. The
little sunshine creature, inhaling the people and waiting for the
movement. Hesitates, because some part of her feels as though there
should be the wind on her senses and there is nothing there. There is
movement, but not the kind she hoped for (not the movement she dreaded,
buried shallow.)
River (ahem)
RiverShe
does watch Dan go. Peers over her shoulder and watches with a little
smile on her face like she most assuredly appreciates the view and very,
very cluelessly has no idea that she is not of the kind of person whose
Dan's orientation traditionally lines up. But, still, it does nto stop a
girl from looking and she takes a drink of her chai latte. Tastes the
little hints of vanilla at the top of it, closes her eyes and smiles like this is a sensory experience that she was more than willing to embrace.
She puts the glass down.
Is
she a student. Puts a hand up and shakes her head, "not right now. My
bachelors is in applied performance- dance and urban planning."
River
shakes her head again, takes a second to just observe Kiara and take in
that Kiara is a lovely woman with lovely fashion sense. Takes in the
people around her and shrugs. It's a quiet bit of pleasure on her face.
Quiet and small and pleased to be in the middle of it all. The
little sunshine creature, inhaling the people and waiting for the
movement. Hesitates, because some part of her feels as though there
should be the wind on her senses and there is nothing there. There is
movement, but not the kind she hoped for (not the movement she dreaded,
buried shallow.)
Ian"I will never understand
what it is you have against coffee." Emma sets her hip against the shop
door and pushes it open, fixing Ian with a level gaze that suggests she
has judged him and found something wanting. Her hair is loose tonight,
long and softly layered, and she's wearing a pair of white shorts and
calf-high brown leather boots with a dark burgundy sweater. Inside, the
shop is warm and lit with this incandescent glow. It radiates out into
the fall evening as Ian follows his companion inside.
"Coffee
tries to hard. Tea has more nuance." Ian glances toward the bar,
contemplating. He's wearing jeans and a white v-neck t-shirt and a
fitted leather jacket with zippers on the sleeves and a high collar. For
a moment his eyes stray toward to the textile art display, but when a
familiar note of resonance catches his attention, he glances toward the
table where Kiara and River are seated.
"Oh, is that what we're calling boring
these days." Emma bumps him with her hip as she strides up to counter,
and Ian gives the back of her head a little eye-roll before he abandons
her. (See, they do this. She'll find him when she's ready.) He
approaches the table with this little half-secretive flicker of a smile -
just turned up at one side of his mouth. When he arrives he sets his
hands on the table, looks between River and Kiara, smiles a little wider
(a little more open, warm, flirtatious) and says "Mind if I join you?"
KiaraIt's
a layered thing, of course. With the brunette but honestly - it's the
same with each of them. The Verbena's appeal wrapped up in that energy
she carries with her, in the way she paints her eyes and mouth these
arresting, bold colors.
The manner her hair seems almost to
possess a will of its own, some thick, wavy halo with a definite
inclination toward sliding and curling around the female's shoulders and
neck. It's a layered thing - Kiara feels (and if you look for
it, appears) like the earth witch she is. With those bright, electric
smiles and those long lashed gazes she settles on you at any given
moment.
River feels like the tickle of sunshine playing over
your skin and together like they are - workers of the cycle both, in
their ways - they feel like interlocking pieces; cogs in the wheel.
Fostering and encouraging life.
She knows what River is, now.
There are questions on the tip of her tongue, curiosity. A thousand
unspokens, but she settles for: "Is that why you came to Denver? For a
job?" There's always more to it, of course. Other reasons, less -
mundane ones. There's a hint of that too, in the brunette's voice before
her eyes travel over River's shoulder to the door.
Just this
tiny catch at the edge of Kiara's mouth before they tick back. "I know
another person who you might be interested to meet, actually."
That
primal energy grows bolder, stalks the edges of that bright,
rejuvenating bubble their table has formed. Sets a pair of hands on the
table and the Verbena doesn't look at Ian for a little, sliding moment
but she addresses his presence with a flash of teeth. "He's a dancer,
too. Ian." There's a play of something familiar; warm and intimate in
dark eyes.
The curve of her mouth. "Meet River."
Mind if I join you?
A
chair squeaks; Kiara's foot nudges it out with casual, wordless aplomb
as she picks her coffee back up and takes a measured sip.
RiverShe
offers a sad, but apologetic smile. Something that meets her eyes
every-so-quietly as mournful. Strange, really, to think the Chakravanti
as mournful creatures, those so well acquainted with death, but there
she is. A little smile, a little apology in that smile. Her hands stay
on her glass. "There were some changes in San Diego and it was best that
Farrah and I had a change of scenery."
Nuanced, you see, is the word for that. She exhales harshly, then looks at Kiara, "I didn't mean to bring the mood down."
But
that energy changes and Kiara flashes her teeth, content to leave the
rest of the problems aside, brush them under the rug or wrap them up in a
tarp and bury them in some desert. She seems to know this man, and
River smiles. Stands up because you stand when new people arrive at the
table. Offers a hand.
"It's nice to meet you," and offers her
hand to whomever else may be with him, because she is polite. She sounds
a little like some telanovella actress.
IanRiver
offers him her hand and he takes it with a relaxed gesture. Casual
but... there's a curious spark in his dark eyes when he looks at her.
"And you."
He does this thing with the chair: picks it up and
flips it around so he can sit leaning with his arms folded. The fabric
of his jeans hug the muscles in his legs in a way that seems to reaffirm
Kiara's statement. He does, in fact, have the physique of a dancer. A
ballet dancer, more specifically. For that matter, so does Emma. Kiara
is surrounded by dancers. Some people might find that intimidating. Kiara, though, is not some people.
Ian
rests forward against the back of the chair and gives Kiara a
lingering, quiet look. Something about it feels a little intimate. "What
style do you do?" This is for River, but it takes Ian a half-second to
turn his head and realign his attention. When he does, he lifts his eyes
in an interested expression. It's been awhile since he met another
dancer who was Awake.
Emma, of course, is not. She doesn't
resonate the way the others at the table do. But she has her own kind of
presence. When she gets her drink, she eyes Ian across the room and
gives this little huff of dry amusement. Almost as if to say: typical. She
takes her time joining them though, spends a moment glancing at
something on her phone before she walks over and pulls up another chair
from a neighboring table. She doesn't quite sit with them so much as near them, leaning back with one leg crossed over the other and a mug of coffee in her hands.
"I
remember you," she offers to Kiara, a little smile of wry recognition
touching her elegant features. "You had that lovely ruby necklace."
"Emma, this is River and Kiara. Everyone, Emma." Ian gestures between the three as he makes introductions.
KiaraThere were some changes in San Diego and it was best that Farrah and I had a change of scenery.
Something
about that catches the brunette's attention. Arrests it, you might even
say. She's swallowing a mouthful of coffee and Ian is rearranging his
chair in this deft, complicated little maneuver that she doesn't react
to so intently that she must be accustomed, in some regard, to it being a
commonplace method of Ian settling down.
There's a certain
betrayed familiarity between these two, the shared glances, the way the
Verbena for her part, doesn't move over to give herself space from this
newcomer who feels like some elegant predator in the wild, all that
supple, fluid strength. "I understand how that goes. New York." Kiara's
eyes are compassionate; there's a warmth there, an offering accompanied
with a give of her red mouth.
"That's - for me," a wrist
motions at herself; the collection of bracelets she wears slide together
in a delicate harmony. "It was - I had to leave. With my - a friend."
River stands when Ian and Emma arrive and Kiara - doesn't, but then
there's something deliberate to that, too. She's at her ease with these
newcomers; tilts her face and meets Ian's lingering look with something
contained and sweet, at the edges.
Her hand brushes his arm; she leaves it there, just shy of it.
Emma
remembers her (or her necklace, more directly) and Kiara's expression
shifts to one of pleased surprise. "Oh, yeah. Yeah. That's - it was a
gift, actually. I don't get many chances to wear it but the evening
seemed like it called for its debut."
A beat, she considers Emma. "It was an amazing show. I'd never seen anything quite like it."
RiverShe
does not give too much thought between the looks and familiarity that
Ian and Kiara share. Does not think about their proximity or anything of
the sort because she does not know them. In truth, River doesn't know
much about anyone in this story, in this town, in this giant play of
theirs. She is merely someone in the background, someone with a few
lines who comes in and delivers them only to exit on stage left. No one
thinks much of the man who walks into the carnage of Hamlet, who says the sight is dismal. The Ambassador.
No,
they think of Fortenbras. No, they think of Hamlet. They think of
Rosencrantz and Guildenstern and how they had died because of that funny
little play where someone made them into real, breathing men. No one
thought of the Ambassador. River was that ambassador, though, so devoted
to her part. Studied her lines and said them with pride, took in the
players on the stage and was pleased to be graced with their presence
because the curtains may go up and down as they please but she was
there. She was on the stage with them. She was welcome.
She
does not think of intimacy, her appeal is that she is unavailable and
soon enough she is out of a situation where she can leverage this. Kiara
says that they have something in common, the main player to the
Ambassador. She has this sort of problem, that she had to leave- fled
her lands away from her play and found herself, less Hamlet and perhaps
more Falstaff. Alas, her life is no comedy. Though they have funny
parts.
But, perhaps she is Falstaff; Kiara seems to be
good-natured. Seems to be of good-humor, perhaps a pure sensualist. She
does not know her well enough to perform a character study but she
smiles like she understands, smiles at Kiara like she cares about her
stilted words and the things that cause them. Does not speak to them,
though. Not in mixed company, not in front of others because those
stories are not those River herself wishes to share.
The
Ambassador has his own story, you see. Not one Shakespeare penned but
one by the actor, one that spoke only to the performer, unique every
time.
Ian asks what she performs, what kind of dance she does and she straightens up, brightens.
"Modern
jazz," she replies with a happy smile. Her muscle structure is
different, but expectedly so she's not terribly endowed in the cleavage
department. Enough to make a shirt interesting, but not enough to cause
back problems. Which, of course, caused a few problems in her current line of work, but we certainly digress. "Mostly modern jazz. I will choreograph hiphop routines if someone asks nicely."
Nicely, she says. Nicely, because if someone does not ask nicely River will not choreograph them anything and that is that and you can go take your dancing business elsewhere. Harumph.
IanIt's
impossible not to be aware of how close Kiara's hand is. The way she
brushes his arm. Emma notices it too, see. Because she knows Ian, and
she's an observant creature (it takes an observant person to be able to
really know him.) There's a moment where her eyes linger on the two of
them before shifting to take in Kiara. When she looks at Ian again,
there is this subtle glimmer in her eyes, but she lets it go. Kiara
compliments them on the show and Emma smiles against the lip of her
coffee mug. She takes a careful sip before replying.
"Thank you. I hope you come to the next one."
River,
as it happens, is a jazz dancer. Ian offers her what feels like a
sympathetic smile when she says it. "That takes dedication." Jazz is
hard to get jobs with, these days (not that ballet is easy - or any form
of dance for that matter.) Ian doesn't explicitly mention that, but it
is perhaps implied. "Emma and I are in a contemporary ballet group."
Emma
offers a sound of agreement at that. "We're having auditions next
Spring if you feel like switching genres." A beat and she asks, "Do you
have any shows coming up? I try to see as much of the competition as I
can." Her smile there curls up into a teasing, wryly flirtatious thing.
KiaraHer life is no comedy but there must be traces woven in there somewhere.
A
respite, however brief, from the enduring tragedy that seems wound
around the Verbena (around all of them, in truth) like serpents that
devoured themselves only to begin anew. There's certainly moments -
moments where they can simply be - no more or less than anyone
else around them, milling at the edges of the cafe, admiring the artwork
on the walls and discussing colors and contextual themes and the way
black and white, light and shadow have been inverted just so - but there
is, like a drop of ink in water.
A stain that spreads and colors it.
They are not constrained (or fortunate enough) to be the players of parts they can shuck off; not for good.
Still
(of course), discussion can (and does) turn to jazz and the pagan
contents herself like a lounging cat at a chaise with settling and
listening to it, her fingers curled into her cup and her face attuned to
the cadence of the conversation; the rise and fall of voices.
("I
suppose that depends if I'm invited," she does offer to Emma at one
point, with a tiny gleam of humor, her eyes drifting to Ian's face and
then back. "But I'd love to.")
There's a dish broken at some
point and the shatter of the china seems to unweave Kiara's focus; it
slips back; snaps back and she straightens her spine a little against
her chair; the constrains of a frown pinching at the edge of her lips.
Her fingers curling ever so slightly firmer around the cup in her hand.
It's just dregs now.
She picks it up as she scoots her chair back.
"While
you compare notes, I'm going to get another drink." There's a subtle
curl of wry humor to the way she adds: "Since I'm the only one who can't
claim ungodly measures of flexibility."
RiverIan
knows, and likely Emma knows, dance jobs are hard to come by.
Especially for women (or anyone, really)- there's tons of people who
have been doing this since they could walk and only a finite number of
spots. Even being as trim as she is, there was a chance someone could
tell River she was too heavy or didn't have the right physique or that
she wasn't tall enough (River Vasquez was never going to be a Rockette).
They're in a contemporary ballet group and her face lights up as though she is delighted, because she is
delighted. Takes her hands away from her cup to lace them together in
front of her. River's voice is animated, and she wears her delight
rather openly at that. Sunshine, persistent rays of springtime that poke
through. It shines in her countenance.
"I could be coaxed
into conquering my fear of pointe," she tells Emma. props her tongue
briefly against one of her canines while she thinks about whether or not
she has and shows. River shakes her head, "right now, the competition mostly does yoga in the park and applies feverishly for jobs. I got to town... last week? This week?"
She wobbles her hands back and forth, makes a little nyehhhhh
noise, as though this would make the time frame make sense. Kiara does
make her laugh, though, "then come do yoga with me! I promise, even if
you have a desk job I can do it at lunch."
IanThat crash makes Ian glance up in the direction of the noise. The response is almost animalistic - the way his attention snaps instantly
to alertness. But it's just a broken dish, and the moment passes
quickly enough. Kiara's reaction isn't much different, and Ian's hand
goes out to tough hers briefly, settling on her wrist before she gets to
her feet. She makes a comment about flexibility and he glances up at
her.
"You're plenty flexible." To his credit, he lets the
innuendo fall subtly - by insinuation more than tone. His eyes follow
her as she moves, feeling the pulse of her resonance drift away, and
perhaps he watches longer than he strictly needs to. But only a little.
Then
his focus is back on River. "Ah, you really are new. You know if you
like I could probably introduce you to some people. I know a lot of the
choreographers in Denver. Don't know who's auditioning right now but...
connections never hurt."
KiaraYou're plenty flexible.
Her
fingers slide across the edge of his jacket in response; all those zips
and the give of the fabric; she tugs gently at one of them; the metal
teeth giving a few tiny inches. "You're plenty biased." If she's aware
that Ian's friend is likely watching this interplay, that River might be
too, in the unconcerned manner strangers did one another - she doesn't
give any impression of it.
Her fingers brush over the bare
skin at the back of his neck, but River is laughing and that and the way
it seems to magnify that wonderful, warming sense of her, all
that bright, infectious delight. Kiara's eyebrows draw together and she
gives a rather impish, nose wrinkled, dimple in cheek face at the
prospect of herself doing Yoga.
"There's an image. I
do run, though. In Washington Park a few times a week. My schedule is,"
she laughs, has to, really, because: "Flexible like that. I work out of
my apartment." She drifts off, then. When she returns its with a fresh
cup and saucer; steam dancing from the surface.
She doesn't state what exactly
it is she does, but there's an ease as she re-settles herself; crosses
her legs and insinuates herself back into the conversation, twisting the
handle on her cup around in a clockwise motion until she's satisfied
with its angle and then collects it up; sipping and leaving a red
imprint at the rim.
"You know I have a regular who comes in
for realignment. She's a dancer at a local community theatre." A little
smile, her dark eyes tick up to River's. "I could ask her if she knows
of anything going."
RiverHer cheeks are pink for a different reason. People are offering to introduce her to people, people are opening up and being nice
and she- new girl with her obvious new girl aura- does not seem to know
what to do aside from take in the woman of the earth and the man who
was at once feral and elegant. Kiara is intriguing, Ian seems nice, Emma
is... Emma is worthy of watching and offering coffee to and pouring
over her finer details.
"Thank you," she says it like she means it. SOmething she learned from her mentor- say things that you mean.
Something
makes a little chirpy noise on her phone. It is most assuredly a chirp
and the young woman with the gigantic purse dives into her myster Mary
Poppins purse and retrieves a cell phone. It's making little chirps and
tweets and River, with her mouth curved up to the side, doesn't quite
seem know how to make it stop so she pushes the home button two or three
times before it finally shuts up.
She sighs, looks relieved.
Dives back into the purse and retrieves a piece of paper and a pen.
Scribbles her phone number- her handwriting is like the kind of cursive
Victorian women wrote love letters in. Meant to be beautiful, and so it
was made so by will and intention.
"I would love that," she
looks at her phone again, "but I have to get to a job interview? Maybe
we can meet up again? I'm leaving you all my number, just... text with
your name? So I know who you are?"
Because, clearly, River was not very good with technology.
She
is getting her things together, getting ready to leave before she gives
a small wave, takes her chai latte with her because she's drinking it
quickly, hoping it's gone tepid. Interview should be quick and then she
can make the show with Dan, right? Black Sheep.
IanYou're plenty biased.
He
does let slip a smile, at that, though he manages to keep any further
thoughts on the matter to himself. Emma, meanwhile, takes in the way
Kiara's fingers slide over the back of Ian's neck. Takes in the way they
look at each other. In some respects, it isn't anything she hasn't seen
before. But if it were only those things she noticed, her attention
would not linger the way it does.
Still, she's interested in
River. River who is new and pretty and something of a puzzle. (Emma
likes puzzles, see. It's why she's friends with Ian.) So her attention
comes back to the other dancer and hovers there while she sips her
coffee. She's about to make an offer of her own (because why should Ian
have all of the fun?) when River gets a call. There's some scrambling,
and when River writes her number down, Emma is first to pick up the
paper, offering River a lovely, lingering smile. "We'll do that."
Ian
glances at Emma and smirks, but doesn't say anything. "Have a good
night," he offers to River. When she's gone, he takes the number from
Emma and enters it into his phone.
Kiara"That
I think I can manage." Kiara offers with that same, engaging hook of a
smile she's had on offer most of the night. "Maybe we can have dinner.
You can bring Farrah." River's gathering her things, then and getting
ready to leave and Emma is flirting by way of a farewell and there's
this particular way Kiara smiles down into her coffee cup; swirling the
dark contents that reads she's finding that privately entertaining.
She likely understands, too. In another time, in another place - well, River feels like sun-drenched comfort.
The
Verbena folds the slip of paper into her pocket when the others are
done with it and turns her focus to watch the other woman depart;
there's a sense that in the aftermath, in the way her expression lingers
somewhat in the directions the evening has unspooled around them, she'd
offer something a little more personal, a private observation to the
man beside her, but - "She seems sweet, doesn't she?" - it's idle,
instead.
A casual observation with some degree of awareness
articulated beneath it. For the fact there were newcomers, despite
everything. She lets out a quiet breath, a quick exhale and her face
(and body) twists toward Ian and, by extension, Emma.
"Dan
invited everyone out to see a band later," her fingers find the edge of
her cup and trace along the edge. "Apparently Sera is overseas," in lieu
of explaining why it was just Dan and not Sera-and-Dan, as so often
seemed to be the case. "It could be fun."
A beat, Kiara's eyes
travel over Ian's face, tick to Emma. She allows a touch of that humor
to surface again. "River might be there."
River"I'll ask her," she tells Kiara, gives a little wave and, with that, she dashes off with herself.
IanShe seems sweet, doesn't she?
Ian
gives the matter a moment of consideration. There's a light tip of his
head. A thoughtful expression. He can't say what he wants to say around
Emma, so instead he says, "I'll reserve judgment, but she seems nice
enough."
"Ian likes complicated women," Emma offers, and
there's a lick of veiled amusement in her tone. Perhaps a little
insinuating. Ian glances at her and raises an eyebrow, to which she just
smiles. "And we actually have to be at a friend's birthday party
shortly. Unless he's planning on ditching me, which... I would not put
past him."
"When was the last time I did that?"
"Six months ago, when you made me catch a cab home from that gallery because a cute boy wanted a ride."
"Okay, I remember that, and for the record you told me it was fine."
Emma
gives this mock offended exhale, but it doesn't linger long. Ian takes
the moment to look back at Kiara. "To be honest, I'm not sure he'll want
me there." Dan is not Sera, of course, and Ian knows that. It's
possible he has his own opinions (or none at all) about Ian's character,
but he's also one of Sera's best friends. And birthday parties aren't
the sort of obligation one can skip out on without it looking at least a
little bit dickish. "And I really shouldn't miss this. Shannon would
probably be kind of annoyed."
He stands up slowly, giving Emma
time to finish her coffee. When he leans into Kiara's space he
whispers, "I'll see you soon though." There's a shadow of regret in his
voice. For a moment he looks as though he'll leave it there, but then he
closes the gap to kiss her. If Kiara allows it, he'll linger there,
cupping her face with his hands.
Emma politely looks down into her coffee cup and doesn't say anything.
KiaraIan likes complicated women.
There's
a certain way Kiara reacts to that, it's subtle, at best. Just this
edge to her smile, the way it curves into something a little less openly
amused; a little self aware, perhaps. Her chin lowers and she's smiling
again into her coffee cup.
"Does he now."
Quiet,
contained. Her eyebrows betraying her as they rise and she can't resist
shooting him a look to weigh the exchange; to observe the camaraderie
that evidently exists between the two dancers. To be honest, he
starts and Kiara's eyes remain on his face as he offers the reasoning
why he shouldn't go, why it would be an unwelcome intrusion.
There's
a spill of disappointment in Kiara's eyes; tipped in around her mouth
as it pulls into a little grimace of understanding; memory of his
confession. "Yeah. You should go. I get it." And for all the ways she
seems a little regretful for his impending absence in her evening - her
tone is sincere. She understands (she always does). When he rises, her
eyes follow that progress too and she tilts her face up and smiles into
the catch of their mouths coming together.
He cups her face
and she reaches up and briefly slides her fingers over the base of his
neck, plays with the fine hairs at the nape and rubs at his lower lip as
they part; her lipstick ever so slightly smeared. It adds to the trace
of wildness about Kiara Woolfe as she whispers: "Yeah, you will. Get
going."
Then, to Emma, as she pushes her cup away, spent. "Keep him in line for me. Don't let him ditch you."
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