Sunday, October 4, 2015

Carthago Delenda Est

Penelope Villiers
It was a library and Penny felt at home in those. Smiling to herself, gripping her cane and a copy of a local tourist guide, she hobbled along. Clearly looking for somewhere to sit.

Verna Gardner
Denver Public Library is about the closest thing Verna can get to real academia these days. No, nights. There are no more days. The library's extended hours on weekends means she can visit, and check out some massive tomes on history. It never was her favorite subject, but now? She's going to have to exist among people who lived it, and have firm opinions on subjects like the wars between Rome and Carthage.

Which, she is now catching up on. A few months ago, she'd have been hard pressed to tell a person where Carthage was. Now, she's rather severely poised in a cushy chair near the back of the library, enjoying the silence and reading a copy of "The Punic Wars" by Nigel Bagnall. The outfit of the day consists of black leggings and a black skirt with a frilly, blue blouse that only really fits because she's done some alterations. However, despite the relative lack of a designer label on anything, she at least makes an effort to appear polished.

She also appears pale, and is trying to cover that up with a great deal of foundation powder.

Penelope Villiers
Penny, pale and a little bewildered under the artificial lamplight, was making only the slimmest attempt to conceal her true nature. Feeding rights not been granted, it'd been a couple of evenings since her last taste of Blood. Her spectacles perched daintily on the edge of her nose, she caught sight of Verna's slender legs. The black leggings and the simple style struck some deep chord inside. As too did the subject matter of the book. Her own black mid-thigh gymslip, twin tails, black blazer and simple black stockings echo Verna's simplicity. Wondering if she'd stumbled upon a potentially useful grad student, Penny put on her best smile, gripped her walking cane tighter and limped over to say hello. "G...good evening, Miss!" she began happily, "I couldn't help but notice the title of the book you're reading! You're a student of the Classics?" she asked with a demure posture and equally demure English accent. Her spectacles still perched daintily on her nose as she spoke. Eyes wide and attentive to the lady she addressed/

Verna Gardner
Verna looks up from her book, sees a woman who's leaning on a cane, asking her if she is a student of the Classics. And there is a moment where the little mouselike, demure girl thinks of what ways would be best to lure this woman out to the parking lot. Let us go together, for safety's sake. It's dangerous to walk alone at night.

What time is it, nearly 11? And this woman has already been out walking. And she is pale. There's a little tilt to Verna's head as she considers the last time she went blood-lustful at a Malkavian and about embarrassed herself to a second-death. Better not try to lure this one off, eh? Better safe than sorry.

"Good evening. I... not really a formal student. It's just an interest," she says, smiles a little shy smile. The book tilts downward, a subtle signal that she's not going to return to it immediately. Perhaps conversation is more interesting than The Punic Wars.

Penelope Villiers
Smiling and cheerful, Penny nodded her understanding and, taking the cue from the lowered book, took care to ease herself to the seat next to Verna. Her artificial leg sticks out a little more than she'd have liked and she swiftly tries to conceal it with a gentle crossing of her flesh leg over it. A shy smile is offered to Verna as she sits and rests her own book on the desk. "Oh, I see!" Penny adds happily, "Well, the Punic Wars are fascinating! Carthage must be destroyed!" she chuckles, vividly echoing the Roman motto. Beguiled by Verna's demure appearance and the invitation to talk, Penny added, "I daresay you've an active mind, Miss! Close to midnight, and here you are, reading of ancient wars... Might I be allowed to ask, Miss, what other subjects and topics interest you?" Resting her cane across her lap and rubbing at her crippled hip, Penny's attention is almost certainly fully on Verna.

Verna Gardner
Verna is not at all so smiling and cheerful. Rather, every smile and attempt at civility comes across as just that -- an attempt. She hides her fear and sadness rather imperfectly, but oh, the attempt is made, and it is carefully crafted.

She purses her lips, and there's a downward cast to her eyes, and then: "Well, I have a degree in physics. So there is that. Science, I suppose, is my true passion." So, not exactly ancient Roman history. She slips a bookmark into the book, and slides it on a table next to her chair. May as well commit fully to this social interaction, right?

Penelope Villiers
Seeing Verna's distress, Penny was momentarily hesitant. Blinking, trying to assess the situation, she fiddled with one of her twin tails for a moment before adding, with obvious sincerity; "Physics? Goodness me! That is impressive, Miss! Might I ask, Miss, what manner of physics...?" though no scientist, she knew enough to know there were several types and hope the question might brighten her new friend's mood.

Verna Gardner
"Well, in undergraduate physics, they try to cover a great deal about everything, really. I... don't have an advanced degree," she says, and tries not to make that sound as terrible as it really is. She'll never have that degree. Not now.

"What about you?" she asks, trying to change the subject to something less raw. Yes, please, let's not talk about the life and times of Verna Gardner. It's a tactic she's been honing with some varying degree of skill ever since having the need to chat up a new person with regularity. She now knows about fifty different ways of shifting the conversation away from her.

"You seem to know your history, at least?"

Penelope Villiers
Listening and watching with obvious care, Penny nodded her understanding. Seeing the need to swap subjects, she displayed conversation agility; "Ah! Thank you! Well, I studied it at university. Not as impressive as physics, but it expanded my mind enough." she smiled, hoping to appear friendly. Suddenly it occurred to her that her new companion was suicidal, "I've always had a love of history. Father owned an extensive private library, you see. So indulging in reading about ancient worlds was all too easy!" Penny smiled sweetly and took a moment to meekly, if needlessly, adjust her spectacles, keeping her attention fully with Verna all the time.

Verna Gardner
Extensive private library? No wonder Verna wanted to bite her at the first opportunity.

"What did you study? Where?"

She extends her hand. "Oh, and I'm sorry, I've just realized I forgot to introduce myself. I'm Rachael. Rachael Davidson," she says, locking her eyes to the other woman's, giving her the name she uses in public.

Penelope Villiers
Penny smiled and seemed excited at this development. Taking a moment to gather her thoughts away from her long lost family, she replied happily; "Oh. Well, Classics and Modern History at Oxford, Miss..." as the second question came, Penny offered her own hand in mutual greeting. Cheerily responding; "A delight to meet you, truly! Miss Davidson! Goodness! My name is Miss Penelope Villiers. Most seem to prefer to call me Penny...I don't mind that too much..." she adds with cheery and easy informality. If she used an alias, now seemingly wasn't the time for it. She gently and eagerly holds Rachael's hand and tries to gather from it's feel if Rachael is used to hard physical work. Her own is strong, if petite. The Embrace having long since smoothed off the worst of any hardness from her breathing days.

Verna Gardner
Verna's hands are cold. Cold, and the only callousness resides between the fingers where a pencil would rub thick skin into existence. She doesn't bother to waste the blood to make her temperature more presentable when most will pass it off as poor circulation. But she notices things like cold hands now. Mostly, she takes note of the fact that Penny didn't bother to do it either.

Cold hands are still no guarantee of anything. But the evidence keeps pointing more and more towards, right?

The handshake lingers, where one with a warm-blooded living person would not. Oxford. Wow.

"That's impressive, truly. It's... good to meet you, Penelope," she says, using the long-form of the name. "Are you... new in town?"

Penelope Villiers
Yes, for sure. Cold hands. Mutual realization seemed to be sinking in and Penny began to feel a little silly. Smiling, she looked to her guidebook and then back to Verna. A better guide was right here.

"Oh..." she nodded slowly, carefully, "yes... new to town, Miss..." she was respectful and wary now. "Truth be told, Miss. I'm a little lost..." she tried another shy smile. "If...er..if you could help me find my way around; I'd be very grateful..." she was vulnerable, and both of them know it.

Verna Gardner
There's a bit of confusion to Verna, as she withdraws that cold hand. Why 'lost'? In a library. Late at night.

"Sure... uh. What is the place that you're trying to find? I'm sure I could help. I'm originally from Denver, so I know my way around."

Perhaps Penelope is one of those ones from whom Google Maps may as well be black magic? Well, plenty of those among the mortal population too...

Penelope Villiers
With a chuckle, she adds meekly, "er... I'm looking for a very specialized family court..." she gestures to her heart and urgently hopes Verna can read the code she's trying to offer.

"I need to make myself known to it, you see. I'm not a criminal, I hasten to add. But it's a requirement... you know," she tries to sound a bit modern, "...a very specialized visa requirement..." Penny adds a shy smile and demur giggle. Her hand now rubs at her crippled hip in a nervous gesture.

Verna Gardner
The confusion only mounts as Penelope continues. How to respond to this? To be fair, these questions are a little out of Verna's depth. So, she decides to go with further questions, to try to have a space to think and also...

There's code going on here. Something going on here.

"Which family are you talking about? Very old family? Lots of prestige?"

Penelope Villiers
Penny nods. Wide eyed. Her twin tails bob with the activity. Smiling, she's delighted Verna has understood. "Indeed!"

Verna Gardner
Verna considers a few facts. One? She's never been to the place Penelope is looking to go. She's only been told not to go there under any circumstances. Also, Penelope could be one of the Bad Guys. The Sabbat. Whoever they are. It might not be a good idea to tell her.

But then, what's so wrong about giving away a location? To somebody like Penelope, who went to Oxford, and doesn't look like an axe murderer?

"I think I know of that... court. It's um, at Richtofen Castle, I think? It's on 12th Avenue," she says, after that bit of deliberation.

Penelope Villiers
"Oh!" she nods sagely, "Richtofen...? Owned by the Von Richtofens?" she echoes.

If it were, it could be... interesting... Penny, nodding to herself, rubs hard at, very probably, where her ruined flesh meets prosthesis. "That sounds simply fascinating! I am grateful to you for the information! I daresay you are of a family with fine pedigree too! Such a lovely and welcoming lady! Goodness me! What a joy it is to meet you!" she offers happily, seemingly without any hint that she's anything but sincere.

Verna Gardner
Verna's eyes are drawn to the false leg, but she remembers her manners and tries not to notice it. Is it a joy to meet the joyless? Verna smiles at her, and the smile lacks any real mirth. She's too busy trying to figure out if she's made the right decision here.

If she has, well... Another Kindred in the city who would rather she stay alive wouldn't hurt.

"Oh, it's nothing, really. Just being courteous. If there's anything else I could do for you, just ask."

Penelope Villiers
Penny was feeling a little giddy. It was true that Verna might be a bit sullen, possibly even suicidal, but she'd been helpful, polite and forgiving.

"Goodness me! It would be an additional joy to meet you again, Miss! Are you often found here, or could we, perhaps, meet somewhere else, Miss, perhaps later this weekend or next week?" Penny is asking with vivid interest.

Noting Verna's glance to her leg, she offers a shy smile.

Verna Gardner
"I'm... not really often found anywhere," she says, takes a breath that she doesn't really need. "Next weekend sound good? I'm also not really that busy. We could go, I don't know, ignore some coffee? Or something?"

She thinks a moment, rummages around in her purse, and pulls out a slip of paper and a pen. Writes her fake name and a phone number down, then hands it to Penelope.

And there, on her face, a little hope of a smile.

Penelope Villiers
Penny, nodding often and happily, eagerly accepts the offered information. Taking a moment to reciprocate, she replies' "Goodness! Ignoring coffee sounds lovely! I shall be looking forward to our next meeting, Miss!" she smiles again. Her own bright with hope and excitement.

Sunday, September 13, 2015

Ignoring Coffee

Alan Moriarty
He had invited her to coffee, to specifically ignore their coffee and seem like an engaging couple of people who are interested in talking to each other and, therefore, interesting to other people who may want to engage with them. He'd done her a service, didn't sit with his back tot he wall, but rather, sat with his back tot he door as he read over a newspaper some other patron left.

His prius is parallel parked out front with the kind of precision that only came from years of meticulous practice. He has nothing but time now, you see. He was nothing but time to worry about things like if he is betweent he lines on his space or what the coffee house smells like when he deigns to smell them. he has years to read article after article and watch as people tick their short, boring lives away caring about things that don't truly matter but matter to people who aren't going to see the centuries turn by.

Donald Trump said something stupid again. It would be laughable if it weren't so sad.

Alan turns the page, frowns because it feels good to frown at things. Doesn't much agree with the man or his awful hair. Oh, how horrible would it be to be stuck for eternity with that hair. Alan is an attractive man, albeit a little pale. Albeit cold, but his hair is cut neat and he's got on a sweater and a tee shirt underneath it. Sweater's thin and soft. The jeans are expensive, the shoes are comfortable. Tells people he's always cold, always has been. Turns the page again, heaves a false sigh.

Puts the paper down to look in the glass in front of him. Looks at the reflection of the door. Waits for Verna.

His coffee is getting cold.

Verna Gardner
People from the Community at Large are calling her. Well, okay, at least Alan is. That means something to Verna, she with the dire need for allies -- or at least people who would be a little better than indifferent to see her gone. She doesn't know how much Alan being on her side might get her, but anything is better than nothing. Being seen as more than a reclusive shut-in is better than nothing.

When he calls her, she lets it ring a few times, because she doesn't want to come across as desperate or anything. And then, agrees to go buy coffee with him.

Verna cannot parallel park perfectly. Note that this is not due to a lack of trying, or a lack of caring. She has been known to get out of the car and critique her work multiple times until she is satisfied. But, she's never quite perfect. Call it a lack of spatial awareness, whatever. She picks a 'good' space, one where she'll have to walk a bit, but one where her car won't be stuck in it diagonally.

Her boots crunch on the pavement -- the very boots she was wearing when she died. When they wear out at last, they'll be the last thing she has left to remind her of who she used to be. No one will tell her what happened to her old possessions. Maybe it's better that way.

She walks into the place, smooths out her hair (which was already smooth) and glances around for Alan, whom she doesn't spot with his back to the door, and marches up to the counter.

"Hello, yes, I would like a short cafe latte with soy milk please?" A smile at the cashier, who is unimpressed and tired. Well, if you're in the service industry and you can't smile... Somebody's not getting a tip.

Alan Moriarty
He hears a voice, and it plays on his senses. Sticks to his brain and his lips upturn. He abandons the newspaper, and not so much saunters as he does stride. Alan walks with confidence among mortals, because he has to exude confidence. He is more at home with kine than his own people, if only because he is a god among men here. He has weight, has pull.

Let it be said that he likes having pull. Likes throwing the weight he has around, but Alan's been slender for a long time.

"Watching your calories?" he says, grin bright on his pale face. Steps to her side like he was meant to be there, as though they were just part of a matched set, "shouldn't have to, you look fantastic."

Cheesy grin.

"It's a wonder you put up with me with lines like that."

Verna Gardner
"Oh! Alan. There you are. I didn't see you," she says, trying to inject her voice with some kind of vitality, something that doesn't sound as dead as she feels.

"I like soy milk. It's better, um..." It was better. To her, anyway. "In coffee." Twitch of a smile. Toss of the hair. Shrugs at him when he says he doesn't know why he puts up with her. "At least it was a compliment. Not like the latest in pick-up lines where they try to insult you."

It doesn't take too long for her coffee to come out, it's not some complicated contraption with caramel and froth that might make her truly upset at the fact that she can't drink it. She pays. Doesn't tip. Takes her little cup in hand.

Alan Moriarty
"I do have terrible taste, though. Full milk in mine, next time I may have to try soy," he tells her, continues along to their table because he walks so comfortable, Strides, and by walking with Verna seems to give her permission to stride. Give her the impetus to take up space because she can take up space.

He gives her the benefit of being able to see the room. He's generous like that.

Alan starts to fold up his newspaper and put it away in the seat next to him. He doesn't wear a coat today, but his coffee isn't steaming anymore. Pushes up his sleeves and thinks for a moment, "been getting along alright?"

Verna Gardner
Verna doesn't take up much space, by dint of nature. She's small. Even her hair won't go big for her. She doesn't stride through the place like she owns it, she just tries not to be noticed.

It's a thing this Ventrue is going to have to learn not to do.

Tonight, she's got on a black pencil skirt and a blouse that's blue and ruffled and sort-of fits her. Someone else bought it for her.

She sits across from him at the small table, sets her coffee on on it. When he asks if she's been getting along alright, she gives him a little shaky smile. "I'm still here," she says, shrugs with a smile. It's just a joke, right?

Alan Moriarty
"Was hoping it would be genuine, just a need for confirmation," he said, watched her. He doesn't need to blink anymore, but there's always the reminder that it has to happen. It's a little offsettling to talk to someone who is so keyed in, so intent. People need to blink.

There's so many things you do to falsify humanity.

"I know it's been pretty rough, but you seem a little more sure of yourself."

Verna Gardner
"What's genuine? What are you needing to confirm?" she asks, lifting her cup up to smell it, making a crinkled-nose expression at it. It goes back onto the table.

"The coffee here is terrible. They let the milk curdle."

There, an excuse to leave it be. Still, it doesn't smell as bad as she claimed. He says that she's looking a bit more sure of herself. Maybe it's just that she's getting better at pretending? Or maybe she's just more comfortable around him now.

Verna Gardner
[It was a joke!]

Alan Moriarty
What's genuine? What are you needing to confirm?
"That you're still here, and not, you know, floating off into space, being terribly worried about the impermanence of being permanent. I hate making friends only to find them wandering off into the non literal sunset."

Or the literal sunset in Verna's case. He doesn't know how much trouble she could be in.

"Ugh. I do not miss curdled milk," he said, stirred his coffee with a look of disdain, "have any places you want to frequent? Any new gallery openings in mind? Trying to keep my fingers on the pulse of cocktail parties but they're always awkward."


Verna Gardner
He says his line about the non-literal sunset, and she looks away, grimmaces at somebody currently peering into their laptop, oblivious. It's either that, or stare into Alan's eyes with a vacant, scared expression. She knows, at least, to try to hide it.

"Soy milk is easy to curdle. That's how I test a coffee shop. If they can make a good soy cafe latte, it's a decent place," she says, recovering. There's a twitch of a smile again. Verna's always been a bit... choosy, hasn't she?

She sticks to decent people now.

"Places? I have a list," she says. A list of places she's allowed to go. Places David has said yes to, or has taken her to in the past. He says there are other places she is not allowed to go. Mostly, he worries about the Sabbat, but there are others. She is never allowed to go back to the University again, nor to her apartment. There are rules. She follows them.

"No gallery openings coming up soon. But there is a chamber orchestra playing tomorrow night."

Alan Moriarty
"Do you plan on going?" he asks. Conversational, conspiratorial. Ohhh, weould she go? Would she venture out into the world? Darling, daring Verna- would she brave the wild younder and take in culture  and have a taste for whatever she so chooses. Wonders if she's got her sea legs yet.

But she's nervous, and he can tell. Takes in how she was choosy with her coffee with an amused grin, one that hasn't quite come off his face for too long, that changes to a smile because he's confident. He's easy, he knows how to say things and what he is doing. Alan owns where he is, owns where he is going.

Nowhere, that is. He's going nowhere and he knows it.

"Holidays are pretty nice, you can sneak in to office Christmas parties for stock brokers or New Years Eve parties. Actually enjoy the fireworks after," a genuine smile at that. A genuine like, it would seem, for fireworks. For the tiniest bits of color and light

Verna Gardner
"I do plan on going. It sounds delightful," she says, but there is no indication to her tone of voice that suggests that she'll actually find it so.

Mmm. If she makes it to 2016, she'll have to remember that bit about the parties.

"Last New Year's, somebody broke into my house and destroyed all my breakable things. I hope this year it goes a bit better," she says, with a wry smile. Because look -- if somebody tries that again, somebody is an idiot.



Alan Moriarty
"Do you want new breakables? I'm pretty sure I must have a box full of snow globes or something."

... oh my god, was he serious?

Verna Gardner
Her hand comes up to her mouth, and she looks Alan up and down, like she might be stifling a giggle. Actually, Alan, she has no breakables of her own right now, because nothing belongs to her anymore.

"Snow globes? I didn't have any. Just some blown glass. I liked collecting glass."

There's sadness in her voice, despite what may have passed for an attempt at a chuckle. The world hasn't been kind to poor Verna, no it hasn't.

Alan Moriarty
"Well," he says, and there is a smile. It's a genuine smile, because he remembers. He remembers what it was like to be murdered. He remembered what it was like to be fumbling with the world around him and feeling like the world was coming apart. He leaves the coffee where it is, offers her a hand.

Smiles that smile that was only for her, has a different feeling when he isn't flexing his might against the world.

"Let's go get some. I know an antique shop that's open late and it occasionally has some rather nice glass pieces."

A second.

"No strings." A bold statement for a man slipping in his compassions- no boon required. Just a kindness for someone he wanted to call a friend at some point.

Verna Gardner
She takes his hand, lets him help her up from the table. She doesn't quite yet know what he's doing, until he offers to get her some new pretty things. And there, she smiles at him -- not twitchy or sad. Yes, let's do that.

"Okay. Sure," she says. "That sounds lovely."

And it does, really. Does he value her presence so much as to buy her gifts? Not a bad thing, that. If he'd do that, he might speak on her behalf, if it came to it.

Alan Moriarty
His hands are cold, let's make no mistake. He blinks far too infrequently, but he has a smile that makes so many promises. That could give someone the world if he wasn't too busy having it for himself, because Alan was a selfish creature. Because Alan had always been a selfish creature, but...

Sometimes, perhaps there is altruism. Except, it was not altruism right now. His reasons for taking her out was entirely something that resided only in his mind. Perhaps he needed tokeep her happy, keep her placated because Verna helped him hunt. Mananged to keep him from having to explain to the right and respectable people they found that he might need to cut them to get what he needs or that they'd feel the press of very human teeth against their neck.

Perhaps he wanted to go out and buy something for Verna because he wanted to do something for someone who might actually appreciate it.

Perhaps, just perhaps, he remembered what it was like to have nothing. To have to rebuild. Perhaps he remembered hating the taste of every drop of blood that came across his lips because none of it tasted right and he merely learned to tolerate whatever he could find. He might speak on her behalf, but his word was worth nothing save to the people on the street, the very basic level of people who were too young to understand how much standing he didn't have.

Alan liked feeling like someone's equal; there was no perhaps.

And so they left into the night, to keep an antique shop open for another hour because Alan batted his eyelashes at the owner and charmed her into keeping it open an extra hour for just them. Might grab a snack later when he an Verna part. Until then, there were glass baubles to be found.

Sunday, August 16, 2015

Botanical

Verna Gardner
The Denver Botanical Gardens is where we place our scene tonight. The gardens closed early to host a summer concert, which is just winding down. People mill about, like they do after such things, talking about everything and nothing. About the weather. About the music they just enjoyed. About the flowers in the indoor exhibits that are now opened not to the public, but to nicely-dressed concertgoers.

One of the sides of the building hosts a hallway greenhouse, walled and roofed with curving windows, called the Orangery. Lined with benches, planters, and hanging vines, it contains orchids, bromeliads, neatly-trimmed bushes, and a quiet young woman sitting on a bench, dressed in a green sweater dress, with black hair, dark eyes, and her hands in her lap just so. It seems like she wants to be one with the garden.

She watches people as they walk, using the Orangery as a passage from one part of the building to another. Occasionally, she'll pick someone out to smile nervously at, but so far she hasn't drummed up the courage to actually strike up a conversation.

That's about to change. Internal battles have been waged. Verna's decided. The next person to come along, no matter who it is, they're bound to be decent to taste, and she's just going to do it. She's going to say hello.

Trace
If this were a story bent towards romantic interludes this would be the part where Verna finds not only courage but a tall dark handsome stranger here in the Orangery. It would be the latter strolled along and woke the former.

This is not that sort of story. She may well find courage enough to speak to the next person and the next person may be tall and a stranger but that's about where that fairy tale ends.

The stranger: tall, sure. Pale though and with skin inclined to freckles if not burn. Ruddy underneath the pallor. Blood in milk. That's not enough of a tell for her. She's new at this. He has unremarkable features and a gangly frame. Hair loud orange and short.

He wears dark jeans and a black button-down shirt. It is August but August nights in the mountains can get cold and he is wearing a light jacket overtop. Hands in his pockets.

The fucker is whistling as he walks along.

Verna Gardner
This guy -- he may not be tall dark and handsome, but he's decent enough, yes? No weird piercings, that's good. She smiles at him, tries not to wind the hem of her dress around her fingers, and... and...

"That's a nice song you're uh... whistling. What is it called?"

He'll probably say something like: 'It's called Mind Your Own Freaking Business' only with more cursing. Oh, she hates this part...

She slides over, as if to make room for him on her bench. Hope springs eternal, doesn't it?

The woman currently trying to lure Trace into a conversation is wearing too much makeup, trying to cover for something. Pretending to be alive is a new thing for her. Not everything has clicked yet. She probably needs some pointers from somebody who isn't a guy and knows what color foundation goes best with 'bloodless'. But still, there has been a great amount of effort put into this presentation.

There's been a great amount of effort put into figuring out what to say, too, but that much isn't nearly as obvious. Verna tries. She gives it her best, you know.

Trace
At least the question catches his attention and he doesn't respond with hostility.

That's a nice song. He stops whistling so soon as she compliments him and hesitates on whatever path he had been walking. Unlike the young vampire Trace has a knack for picking out others of his kind. Her makeup job is lacking but that is not what gives her away. One of the first things she learned from her sire was that the Venture are not a clan gifted with Sight.

So what's it called.

"Oh," he says and there's a lilting quality to his accent that hints at distant shores though he's long since left them, "I wish I could tell you, but if it's got one, I don't know it." Before she can respond he takes a closer look at her. Not sure what to make of the empty spot new-made beside her other than an invitation. She seems nervous. Trace looks as if he's smiling to try and reassure her but then he changes his mind after the action potential has already triggered the muscles. "Are you waiting for someone?"

Verna Gardner
"Not anyone in particular," she says, with a tilt of the head, her eyes grazing the floor. Could be she was waiting for you all this time, you lucky dog you.

She looks up from the floor finally, keeps on smiling at him, even though his expression twitches and doesn't quite reach a smile in return. Not promising, that. But as it was a fake smile anyway, there's nothing to dim on her face.

Trace is a pale redhead. Redheads are always pale though, right? There's nothing that she can point to, no tell that sticks out. Nerves, oh, she has those in spades. But it's not because she's sussed out what he is and is keeping herself taut and alert. She's just like this.

"Are you? Looking for someone?"

Trace
That line only works on people who have pulses. Pulses tend to bring blood flowing to places that are hardwired to respond to stimuli the reptile brain picks out of otherwise innocuous conversation. The man standing before her appears a normal sort of pale. Shifts his weight back and forth between his feet as he decides whether he's going to continue on the path or keep this strange young woman company for a few minutes.

Which means after that initial facial tic the man has time to watch her. Intent. Insightful even. Verna has been in the presence of highly intelligent people in her time on this earth but that's a different breed of beast than being in the presence of a highly perceptive person.

He's not strictly sane but neither is she strictly alive. Both of them can fake it for a while.

"No," he says after a pause that almost stretches out for too long and then blinks as if he's just jolted back into the present moment. "No, I'm just out for a stroll. I was at the concert, this evening, it was..." His eyes tick to the empty space beside her. Back to her face. Runs a short circuit like that until he returns to her face a third time and indicates the bench with an open palm. Harmless. Pale as he is she can't read the blue of the veins beneath his skin. Most people don't notice that. "Mind if I join you?"

doo de doo @ 10:35AM
[perc + empathy: aura perception. aka childe, what is wrong with you.]
Roll: 6 d10 TN8 (1, 3, 5, 10, 10, 10) ( success x 3 )

doo de doo @ 10:36AM
[Forgot to double 10s for Insightful. The little piss-shit got 6 successes.]

Verna Gardner
What the Hell is wrong with her? Look into her soul and find out. It's what got her into this mess in the first place.

And what a mess... Pale, she is so pale. Grey and silver hang off of her like chains, not shifting with her thoughts but steady -- a presence sunk deep into her, heavy as lead. The fear she couldn't hide even without Trace's supernatural sight fuzzes over everything with orange static jolts. Here and there, a wisp of something dark red and hungry, blood veins running in a body of dead flesh. He can see it all.

The why of it remains hidden.

She wants. She's deeply sad. She's afraid, but not, apparently, of him in particular. She's oblivious.

That smile is a practiced lie. Sometimes, she can pretend for long enough to walk out of a place like this with a meal. She works hard at pretending that the ruin of her psyche doesn't really exist. It's not there. It never happened. What's going to happen in the future -- won't.

So, she keeps it up, uncrosses and re-crosses her legs in his direction, leans his way, says: "I'd love for you to join me. My lucky night. Cute guys... hah... hardly ever just fall into my lap."

Ugh. Oh, that was terrible. Verna, this is why you fail.

Trace, perceptive as he is, can probably almost see the internal beating going on behind that flimsy, fake, happy smiling mask.

Trace
"Ah. Yes, well..."

No eagerness as he takes the invited seat beside her. Nothing predatory or perfunctory about it either. This is not his lucky night. When he sits he sits as if it is his duty to do so. Trouble stains the air around her. It coats his breath. It's a wonder she can hold her spine straight.

"It takes a bit of searching, doesn't it? Everything you need's been provided already. Bit of searching, bit of hope..."

He has kind eyes. No cruelty in his face or posture. Same as all of them he is capable of such mindless destruction but he doesn't seethe menace as some of the older creatures of their kind tend to. Doesn't have an impenetrable gaze or an air of superiority.

There are those among them who would do away with their nature altogether. Reclaim their humanity. Very few stories and very few of them. Little kindness or compassion either.

"... well... the world's full of cute guys. Plenty else, too, once you find what it is you actually need, and I--" A beat. "--am talking quite a lot." Another of those flinching smiles. "Haven't even asked your name. So sorry." He extends his right hand with its freckled skin and thin fingers. "Tracy."

Verna Gardner
He doesn't reply how she'd like. Okay, well, that's just a minor setback right? Maybe he's not into girls. Or maybe just not into girls who go straight for the flirting within five seconds of meeting him (and, let's be honest, there's a man after her own heart). There's always the 'please sir, walk me to my car?' gambit.

His replies, however, are strange. Everything you need's been provided already? At that, her brows slide together. He talks about finding what it is she actually needs, and right now, a willing warm body (to lighten by a pint or so) is exactly that. Blood's the only thing that she needs right now -- it makes this whole existence worthwhile. It's the only thing that makes her feel good.

Well, okay, that and impossible changes in her situation. She needs the world and nearly everyone in it to stop treating Verna Gardner like the greatest punching bag ever. That would be nice.

Her eyes aren't nearly so kind as his, as she deflates at the realization that this mark isn't going to be so easy. Her eyes are far too wrapped up in what's going on behind them, and Trace has seen that lovely tableau. From whence would she pull reserves of kindness to give to others? Why would they deserve what little she has?

He extends her hand, and she slides her own hand into it, gives a little squeeze, and then (quickly!) retreats, because she's not actually all that into touching people with her room-temperature skin lest they wonder about that. She still doesn't know that 'Tracy' doesn't have to wonder at all.

"I'm Rachael," she says, giving him the name she gives to Kine (and still, that is very weird, having to think of them as cattle). "I don't mind you talking, hmm... What is it that you do, Tracy?"

Trace
Here's the thing about Trace's hand: he doesn't need to burn blood to appear human but that doesn't mean he can pass for one without exerting a bit of effort.

The neonate does not wear her emotional turmoil like a second layer of clothing. Neither does that mean she could lure a vessel over to her and take from him what she needs to survive. Her aura is a pained picture and a hypnotic one and Verna can't tell a Malkavian when one has sat down right next to her.

As long as she's thinking of him as a man and not a monster Verna can tell herself he seems sane enough. Nice but a little weird. Their handshake does not last long not because he shies from it or pulls back once it's begun but because she thinks her cool skin will shock him.

Both their hands are cool. Verna however is not a tall bony ginger who is probably used to people recoiling. She had a boss once with poor circulation. A physicist who she only ever saw ingest coffee and brandy. Trace does not have to wonder about the reason why this young woman's hands feel lifeless and cold and though he registers that she like he has not devoted vitae to appearing human no shock stings his face.

Rachael. He'll buy it for now. Once he's got his hand back in his possession Trace returns it to his jacket pocket.

"What do I do?" Perhaps he doesn't understand the question. He seems charmed by it if nothing else. Pitying perhaps. She's the one sat on the bench unsure of what it is she's doing and trying hard to flirt when it doesn't come natural to her. His feet are planted on the ground and he's leaned back against the bench and he gives her his attention easy like they're both just waiting for a bus. "I was called, sister, and I answered. Have you been at this long?"

Verna Gardner
Oh. Crap. She's either snagged a priest, or a cult member, or a children's praise-and-worship leader who likes to pretend he's super important. He was 'called' and he 'answered'? 'Sister'? Her eyebrows raise, and her smile finally falters a bit. But then -- oh just roll with it.

"At, uh, this? Oh, no. Just been sitting here since the concert ended. It smells nice in here. All the flowers. It's relaxing," she says, nervously adding additional unnecessary sentences. She leans her body away from him, cursing herself for having tried to hit on a... Whatever he is. Man of the cloth? Man of the complete and utter lack of rational thought?

"If you don't mind me asking... Are you a member of the clergy?"

Trace
If he notices that she's leaning away from him it has no bearing on how he continues to respond to her. He's focused on her face and her hands and not on what she's doing with the rest of her body. How was she to know that her inner turmoil is a quick-struck match for those who can see the colours of a person's soul? No way to know and no way to know what she's just invited to sit down beside her unless she asks.

So she asks.

"Mind? No more than rain would mind you asking if it were water, I suppose." Does he stop and think about his answer? He pauses but he doesn't look away from her. "I'm not. I was. God's abandoned us and that business with the Messiah was all a bit of storytelling. You'd do best to steer away from clergy, not all water's meant to be rain."

Verna Gardner
God's abandoned us, the former priest says.

"Oh," Verna says, trying to come up with a response "Um..."

Yeah, that isn't going very well. For as much as 'Rachael' once seemed like she wanted to have a nice chat, now she looks like she'd best be going now. Left the oven on. So sorry.

"I don't really know what to say to that, really. I'll keep your advice, though I never really had the desire to steer toward priests, to be honest. My family's not very religious, is all."

Trace
Rachael has terrible taste in marks and even if he had been a somewhat normal individual she hasn't yet figured out what he is. He isn't in a rush to tell her. Calling and clergy and so on and so forth but he isn't a saviour and he isn't the answer to a question Verna hasn't asked yet.

She needs to feed. She is an appealing and diligent young woman. He isn't worried about her and even if he felt a thread of worry that grayness in her soul could just as much be the fault of newness as it could be her own brand of insanity.

But she doesn't recognize him for what he is. If she does she's kept that to herself.

He considers what she has to say about her family but he doesn't offer up his own. Sits unblinking beside her for a few minutes weighing out whatever he's about to say next and if she gets the idea that he's staring past her now and not looking directly at her Verna would not be imagining things.

"In the beginning, there's darkness. There always is. Accept the sun'll never rise on you again and it's possible to see just fine without it. Maybe the next fellow to walk by'll have what you're looking for."

Advice. He's just an advice dispensary tonight. With that he rises from the bench and straightens his spine from the slouch he'd adopted. He means to leave her on that note.

Verna Gardner
Oh. Oh. Verna's eyes open wide, because Trace has finally said something that brings the truth. Truth is a funny, amorphous thing. But when it fits into place, you know. Suddenly, all sorts of Trace's utterances make, if not sense, then a better semblance of it.

And also, she hit on that.

Well, that's just really very unfortunate, isn't it? If she could blush, she would be right about now. But she can't feel any heat rising in her face, and that's a strange comfort.

"I... oh. I didn't know... Who you were." What you were. "Good evening, Tracy. Perhaps I will see you again. One of these d... nights."

When she speaks, she tries to impart respect for the man -- holds herself even tighter together. David has told her to treat her elders with respect, and her elders are every single one of them.

Trace
That sense of disconnect and disorientation she had speaking with the Malkavian was not abnormal. That she did not recognize she was speaking with another vampire was not abnormal. The road to success is fraught with failure and children do not learn by lessons taught in classrooms alone.

Her depression could be from anything. Maybe another night they will sit and talk and try to understand each other. Like as not he's too far gone to understand another person or to make himself understood. Not sincerely. It's difficult to understand a shattered mind without having pieces gone out of one's own and his entire clan is known for speaking in riddles if they speak at all.

This is neither here nor there. Trace stands from the bench and returns himself to rights and he does her the kindness of turning to face her a last time as she wrangles with what it is she's just learned. Maybe she wouldn't know madness if it looked her right in the eye. He doesn't have a glazed or vacant cast to his eyes. All Verna can claim to take away is the fact he seemed not to blink a single time while they were speaking or the fact that there's something human in there somewhere.

He stands in silence watching her a moment and then he says, "The gate is narrow, and the way led to it hard, and those who find it few. We'll meet again, sister."

He gives a stunted nod like to put a period at the end of their sentence and then he ambles off into the Orangery again. Whistling as he goes.

Monday, August 10, 2015

A Mutually Beneficial Arrangement

Verna Gardner
It's strange, what dying has done to her. There's not only the physical oddities of super-nature (which would be enough, surely) but also the social changes. She used to enjoy trips out of the house to somewhere nice, somewhere cultured and classy. They were presents to herself for hard work or a good job. Now, she has no work. Now, she goes to events like this gallery opening (this Camarilla-patrolled gallery opening) every night, and can't actually absorb the entertainment.

It's still early in the night, so Verna is still wallflowering, still hanging back and trying to drum up the courage to actually do what needs doing. The hunger is a real kick in the teeth, it forces her hand, makes her break out of her shell and do the pursuing of strangers, but it's still difficult. It still feels far scarier than yelling at people twice her size and more than willing to kill her. Strange how that works.

She's got a glass of white wine in her hands, and isn't drinking it (of course). She's seated on the low black rectangle of a modern-style leather and steel bench, taking in no paintings, but watching the people milling about. Her outfit tonight is a nice, new green blouse with a black skirt that looks crisply off the rack, or at least the dry cleaners. Her makeup is a perfection of eyeliner and lipliner and carefully blended blush to drive away the appearance of being 'sick'. In fact, the only thing not quite right about her appearance is her mood, which seems to radiate despondency into the world.

It's the long, dark 'Why me?' of the soul. And it's just beginning for poor Verna Gardner.

Moriarty
What does Alan do at these sorts of things? Why, he flirts of course. He might not be eating whatever is on the menu but he had always been the sort to grow attached to sheep and chickens. Some soft hearted thug at first that grew old and then took some morbid delight in eating Betsy or Bessie or whatever livestock he'd been so attached to at one point.

Alan Moriarty would literally kill for a steak some days. 

But there he was in a nice suit with the top button undone and he had been chatting with someone but for now someone caught his attention. Someone who had a particularly dour look on her recently dead face. 

"I believe we've met before," he said, bridges the gap.

Verna Gardner
There might yet be a time tonight when Verna gets up the nerve to flirt, but that wouldn't be before a careful study of the crowd and each individual's weaknesses and social ties. The trick, she figures, is to find the loners -- the ones easily plucked from the crowd. She looks for low-hanging fruit to bite. She doesn't just do that sort of thing for fun. It would be crude.

She looks up at the approach of Alan, at first a little tense and hopeful about the prospect of food coming to her for a change, and then realizes that she's seen him around before, somewhere. Somewhere like this. Oh, Hell.

"I, uh... Yes," she says, puts a smile on for the newcomer. "I remember. You were the one who liked the Kinkade paintings?"

Yes, Alan. Now that that cat's out of the bag, it's what you'll be known for. Congratulations.

Now, there comes the rummaging around in Verna's living memories for that night. Candy paintings. Cipriano was there. Alan seemed to know him. Whatever the case, she can't bite him. He might be a friend of Cipriano's, and he gets... upset when his friends are hurt. Oh why won't the food ever come to her?

Moriarty
"That's me," he smiles, a little tight at the edges because on top of being clanless he was also forever going to be known as the person with a taste for pastoral light portraits. The roses mourn in some far reaching corner, their breath perpetually free from their lungs but had they need it would have been stolen from them in a gasp because who could possibly like Kinkade in a fashion that wasn't ironic?

"Candy paintings from actual candy ever come into fruition?" he smiles and it's genuine. Teeth nice and straight and bright. Not at all the kind of sharp that one would expect from a predator. No, not at all. When one looks at Alan, one does not see a predator. One sees something at the edges, perhaps the sort of pallor that came from not being terribly well. 

But no, not the big bad wolf here. 

"Afraid that neither of us are getting our fill of artwork in that case. It's all oil paintings and acrylics... there's a landscape in pomegranate, though."

Verna Gardner
He asks if the candy paintings ever happened, and the smile falters. "No. I have been... unexpectedly busy. It was such a disappointment to Cipriano though," she says, and that's understating things quite a bit. Thing is, she can't be certain how much to tell this man.

Unexpectedly busy getting killed. Cipriano was so disappointed he wanted to (at the very least) deliver a beating to the one who did it. Yes, let's not go there...

"Pomegranate? Real pomegranate juice? Interesting. I haven't seen it."

Moriarty
"Yeah," he said, as if he was thoroughly impressed by the concept, "it's all Greek and I thought it was nice."

A second passed, and he catches that falter of the smile, and he gives her a reassuring smile. Bridges the gap and drops his voice ever so slightly, "dear lady, you look absolutely famished, and miserable. It's very nineties."

Verna Gardner
She stands, takes her still-full wine glass with her, because that sounds like an invitation to go see the pomegranate painting, but then he follows it up with a comment on her appearance, and her eyes widen a touch.

Really? Does she honestly look that terrible? There's a moment of self-consciousness there. She's never really thought of herself as too thin. Okay, maybe in the chest...

"Do I? I'm not really miserable," she says, covering up the obvious lie with a titter of a laugh. It's one of those polite social lies. How are you doing? Fine, thank you. Nobody's ever just fine, are they?

Moriarty
"I suppose miserable isn't quite the right word... Maybe-" he does laugh at that, " Lovely, yes. Classic, certainly. But if we are going to go for the word miserable I would say that the source of your woe comes from being in a room full of people and there isn't a one of them worthy of your presence."

A smile, a grin, at the corners of his lips and the light in his eyes, "it's the bane of people who are remarkable who realize perhaps how unremarkable the world can be. Whatever the case, I'm just glad you're humoring me, because I am being an ass."

"Painting?"

Verna Gardner
A smile creeps its way onto her face by the time he's finished, a half-quirked thing, but it's real. And that's rare enough these days. No, nights. Never any days anymore. She hasn't gotten around to mourning that yet, but give her time. There's only so much that can fit on her plate of utter despair.

"Well, you're a charming man, Alan? Alex? I'm embarrassed to say I forgot," she says, and rubs at her hand as if to scratch an itch. Such a human gesture... But then, she was human so recently.

"Mm, yes. Painting," she says, and waits for his lead.

"The world... the world isn't unremarkable. It's terribly beautiful, I think. Just under the surface, there's all of these little processes going on, just so you can experience the most dull things," she says as they leave. "But it's those processes, those bits and pieces of the world that I find the most interesting."

Moriarty
"Alan," he tells her, "and you're... Verna, yes?" he does not wait for confirmation, not too long because he knows he's correct. There's a sort of cockiness in that, in knowing that he is ever-so-occasionally good with names. He hunted like a Mary Kay lady, heard rumors and knew which clients he could cross off his list. When one has less than ideal capacities, one has to play games long term.

He continues on, walks slow and purposeful but knows precisely where he's headed and makes the lazy way of getting to the painting he actually wanted to look at. Can't be too eager, or else people notice. Circle slow, circle slow. 

"So it's like peeling back the shell to see the heart of the machine?"

Verna Gardner
She shouldn't be doing this -- shouldn't be going off and chatting with a guy she doesn't intend on biting. It's using up precious time that could be spent sitting there looking morose and peoplewatching. Okay, so maybe she's got some issues with time management lately...

But he's nice. He threatens to have an actual conversation with her. And he means to get her to actually enjoy a painting. That's heavily tempting to the girl who hasn't had much of those things lately.

He calls her by her name, a name she really shouldn't be using anymore. "Rachael, actually. It's Rachael. Middle name," she tries to explain, and doesn't get around to saying which one's the middle.

"And yes, yes it's very much like that," she says, but there -- she's so sad in that sentence. She misses it more than sunshine.

Moriarty
"Rachael," he repeats, he remembers. He Thinks to himself but doesn't judge because no one calls him Joseph anymore but his sister in quiet moments where her ire has raised and she wants him to see reason and she wants to have more pull than status dictates and it works. Joseph Berryman was murdered, you see. Joseph Berryman could have sympathy for those who had lost... Alan wasn't Joseph often, but it was clear that perhaps the man wasn't entirely dead. 

(No, no he was. Courts said so, he'd come and met some woman when he came back, aging and dark and married twice over and she'd smiled at him. Told him their picture was in some gallery in New York when some pretty woman with bright eyes- later, he'd found out, that woman had become a Toreador- took his picture dancing. Shadows of segregation. Perhaps he had felt a little more than just a desire there... but his heart didn't beat and such frailties were lost on those who could live forever... if living was a word for it.)

He drops his voice, and perhaps there's sympathy there. Perhaps it's even real, "how long have you been in mourning, dearest?" 

Verna Gardner
Mourning? She gives him a look that's sans-smile, but it's a momentary glance. Then, she looks to his hands, at the quick of his fingernails. Pink? Or... Pale.

That's still not a guarantee, is it?

"Mourning? Who would I be mourning for?"

And if he responds appropriately, certain suspicions will be landed in more of a definite category. Don't be too upset, Alan. She did the same thing with Cipriano, guessing and playing games with words that could mean so many different things under a different context.

Moriarty
Just... pale. Not pink, not bright and vital because, tonight, he has no desire to expend the energy to get to a blushing vital state. He could will his heart to beat if he put enough blood behind it, but it was a waste and food was scarce at these sorts of things. The laws of the hunt applied differently to him. 

"One doesn't always mourn a who, sometimes the what is more important... you gave up your passion, it sounds like, for the little moving parts under the hood of creation. It just seemed sad to me." he then continued, "so how long have you been mourning your potential?"

Verna Gardner
"I didn't give it up," she says, terse. "I don't know where you got that idea. I have a great deal of potential."

There's reason behind that sudden chilliness that has nothing to do with any rudeness on Alan's part. Truth is, she doesn't even know her own cover story. Whatever her former acquaintances are supposed to know about her, she doesn't know. She was simply never supposed to talk to any of them again.

And that wasn't the right response to the game of 'are you... dead?' She can't be sure of him. Best to be rid of him.

"Listen. I should just..." flee in mortal terror of not knowing what the Hell to do lest she break the Masquerade and die? "I've no reason to be wandering around here moping. Really."

And now, look for a way out? Or drastically change the subject?

"I'm terribly sorry," she says, and there's a bit of truth there, though everything else she says is fake as gold paint. It seemed like an actual friendly exchange was just starting, and it's looking like she just can't have that anymore. "Maybe it would be best if we just not go there." Flounder much? Maybe.

"So, tell me, how do you know Cipriano?" More direct, that. And there's a pointed look to go with it. "You seemed almost to be, ah... Kindred spirits?"

Okay, now she's just going to start waving the sign in front of his face, it seems. And if he ignores it still? Kine, has to be. Right?

Moriarty
"Don't apologize unless you've done something wrong, if you're in a position where you don't have to scrape, don't bow unless forced," he tells her. Perhaps a little bit of kindred society there, perhaps a little bit of survival skills, perhaps imparting something of a luxury that he doesn't have, "I assure you that we? Are on even ground."

There is a subject change, and one that he can get behind. Give her some context, maybe be helpful. Maybe. One can't always tell if Alan wants to be helpful or not

"Cipriano and I happen to operate within the same social club. Movers, shakers, the absurdly gorgeous and the notoriously ugly- varied group of great and glorious pretenders that hold my still and cold heart," he says, tones quiet but conversational. Someone would have to invade their space to get to where they needed to be, "sort of a dead poets society but with less poetry and more dead."

Verna Gardner
"I suspected that might be the case," Verna says, and though the tenseness to her shoulders doesn't exactly leave, there is at least a firmer foundation here. They both know a little better where they stand now, don't they?

"To your earlier question, it was April."

She'd say she's joined the club too, except that's not entirely accurate. She's not acknowledged by the Camarilla yet, because they haven't decided what they're going to do with her. 'Nonentity' is a description of the status of Verna Gardner.

So perhaps 'even ground' isn't entirely accurate.

But still, she is Ventrue. She is assured that that is important. She is assured (admittedly by her Ventrue sire) that theirs is the best, most powerful, exclusive clan of kings. And Alan is right, that if she isn't in a position where she has to, she shouldn't bow and scrape. Just, it's difficult to tell when nowadays. For all she knows, Alan might be another powerful arbiter of her fate. Or David's.

Moriarty
To answer your earlier question, it was April. 

"The first few months are the hardest. You're redefining who you are... once you have some strings to pull, you could literally be anyone you wanted, no need to forego passion just... change how you express it. You've an eternity to perfect your crafts, and years to see your work actually come to fruition. It's satisfying, but it is an entire paradigm shift... I'm still getting used to it, it's all a fine line of realizing you can live forever and then realizing that just because you can doesn't mean you will," he said. 

he'd mused over it before, that such eternal creatures were ultimately cowards, afraid of their own demise because they see their eternity as so important. After a point, you age to being alien, you can no longer live in the world you were once a vital part of. No, he would like to live long enough. A thousand years may do, but he had no desire to spend centuries scraping. 

"It doesn't matter how it happens, it always feels like something is stolen, even if you're expecting it."

Verna Gardner
Alan and Cipriano both made the same mistake. They assume she can imagine where she's going to be in five years (or fifty) when practically the only thing she can deal with at the moment is making it through her and her sire's... what? Trial? One night at a time she forces herself to keep on going, because each night could be the one where nameless people drag her off.

"I've already realized that it's highly unlikely I'm going to live forever. No problems there," she says, in a bit of gallows humor.

"I can't finish my degree. I'll never have that doctorate. Not legitimately, you know," she says, and shrugs. "It's a silly thing to be concerned about, I know."

She doesn't want to talk about the other things that have been stolen, like all of her property, and potentially her very immortal life. It's easier this way. Let everyone see the tip of the iceberg, because that part's obvious, right? Of course everything in her life is changed. Of course she mourns. But let's shove the embarrassing bits underneath, nobody needs to know about them.

They round a corner, and there is a new wall of paintings to discover. And one of them is a watercolor Greek landscape in varying shades of blue, purple, and green. The pomegranate painting. The artist must have used the pomegranates at different levels of ripeness or different acidities to get such control over the color, and it is an intriguing work. There is a blue-green sky. It dawns on her that the last time she was at a gallery opening, she talked with Cipriano over a painting with intense blues. Now she knows why that sky color was so important to him.

"It's pretty," she says, after a bit of thought. "I don't imagine it will last, though. The acids in the juice will likely eat the paper away. A pity."

Moriarty
"It's not silly, very rarely do others consider the impact of their actions on others. Perpetual twenty somethings with phenomenal power. I want this, so why can't I have it right now? Nevermind that you're sentient. Nevermind that you may not want this... it's cruel, and everyone seems to think it's a gift," he confides. 

He doesn't go on, doesn't insist that living forever or dining on mortals or being anything other than a cursed monster is just that- being a cursed monster. People may say they have power and wealth but they forget, they do not think- this came of a curse. Caine was not given his condition because he was virtuous. But Alan knew he was no innocent Abel, did not get to presume to understand the father of all that they were. 

"Things are different now."

And his eyes go to the painting, and he does smile, "no... no it won't, the most beautiful things rarely do last, and if they did not fade and disappear we would fixate long enough that they would cease to be beautiful."

Verna Gardner
Alan goes on about their curse, about how her sire didn't take her desires into account when he Embraced her, not caring that she was her own person with her own wants. That's not what happened to her. She was never wanted by David. He didn't take her desires into account when he did it, because she was already dead. He didn't know her, and it was the last thing either of them expected would happen that night. But it happened.

Perhaps Alan thinks she is Cipriano's childe, and that would make some sense considering their closeness. If she had been his, the event might very well have been something planned or expected. But no. He makes the argument that beauty is fleeting, that a thing is most beautiful if it might be destroyed. People never really bother to examine things from the sand mandala's point of view, though, when it is faced with a lunatic box fan.

"I wonder how the painting would feel about being made of such fragile stuff, if it could feel."

Moriarty
"If it thought far enough to realize it was fragile, and that its existence is fleeting... I think it would feel sad. All fleeting things do, they see the inevitable end and it ruins, sometimes, a completely beautiful present." 

He looked sideward at her, voice dropped again and his tone soft, "I'm not going to ask you to smile, it's patronizing. If you push yourself you can feign the frailties of being alive, you know. If you wanted, we could both do it, pretend we're both living, breathing strangers."

Perhaps there is sadness in that, his smile stays though, tinged quiet with sorrow but the smallest bit of happiness, "we lie so readily... sometimes, it's nice to pretend, though."

Verna Gardner
"It's a waste that I can't really afford," she says, not turning away from the painting. "I'm still... learning. You know. To hunt?"

And all of this is getting in the way of that, not that she particularly wants to be hunting. The blood, yes. That, she wants. Everything else that leads up to it, not so much. But see, Alan, the woman is just as famished as you said. She's a not-so-beautiful thing with a great need for propriety. She wasn't flirting or even mingling with anyone she might have fed on when you approached. It doesn't take a lot of doing to figure out that she might be pretty terrible at this.

Moriarty
"Well," he starts in a patient voice. In a voice that has done this before, in a voice that was a little invested in the topic. he turned to look at the people gathered 

"Who is your type? I'm sure we could work something out here."

Verna Gardner
"What do you mean, work something out?" Verna asks, a little suspicious. It sounds like he's suggesting that he help her hunt in exchange for something. But what something?

Her eyebrows raise, and there's a squint to her eye. But then, she does look around at the people. It's strange, regarding them as food. Strange and enticing. She can just imagine herself sinking her fangs into this one or that one...

Moriarty
"Your prey isn't stupid, and it is easier to hunt in a pack," he tells her, he's comfortable, he's assured. He's looking into the fray, not looking for the sickly stragglers but the prized meats. The good cuts of things because he couldn't ignore the idea that this? Could be fun, "you take what you want, I skim a little off the back end. I'm... very likable when I need to be."

He looks back at her for a moment, "it gets easier when you learn certain skills, but I don't mind using what I have to ends that are mutually beneficial."

Verna Gardner
That little squint to her eye doesn't go away as she looks over to him. "Why is that mutually beneficial to you? I'm not saying no. Just... You barely know me. What's in it for you?"

Then, it's back to perusing the crowd. There's a nice-looking old man, but she crosses him off the list because hey -- he's old enough for the experience to give him a heart attack. There's a revolting woman who is probably a prostitute out with her john -- they get crossed off the list too, because Verna doesn't want to vomit. Among the loners in the room, a young Asian woman leans up against the wall in an expensive outfit -- she looks good. A man with black hair and a black suit with green tie -- nice as well. He's by a window, but peering at a painting on the wall like it holds the meaning of life within.

There are options. And there are castoffs.

Moriarty
"I don't have to leave obvious bitemarks if you're the one doing the initial push. Some of us are more readily capable of passing as human and, in that regard, I am very... very lucky. Having blunt fangs isn't necessarily pleasant, though." 

He casts his attention to the man in the green eye. His brows raise for a second, his mouth upturned slightly. That one, yes, that one seemed fine. He also looks for couples, for people who look bored with their current guests. People he could meet with later. Seeds to plant and tend. 

Verna Gardner
"... Blunt?" Verna says, and oh... now she looks a bit concerned. Well, concerned for poor Alan, because that sounds absolutely terrible. It's bad enough as it is with sharp ones. "I see. That must be awful."

She runs the scenario over in her mind, how it's going to work. The two of them feeding from the same vessel. If she could still blush, she would be. It's a reminder of the first time she... ate in the presence of another. She's thinking about it, Alan, and as she does her face goes through the motions of thought. Caution and wanting flicker in her eyes.

She nods once, her mouth a straight line. "Okay."

With a glance at the man in the suit, she says: "That one looks nice."

Another glance, this time at the woman leaning against the wall "And her."

Moriarty
He waves a dismissive hand, "more of an inconvenience than a hinderance. You just have to bite harder, or use alternate means to make your entrance. It attracts interesting people." Interesting. yes. Interesting like thrill seekers. Interesting like people who were... Well, now, Alan didn't talk about his sources too readily. 

"Sometimes, an additional complication can be fun. You take your entertainment where you can." 

He grinned, looked out and takes in the man with the suit, the woman at the wall, "who do you want to talk to first? Want me to take the lead?"

Verna Gardner
Eww. Attracts interesting people? Eww. Verna smiles though, because it's the polite thing to do, and because he really is doing her a favor, if he's being truthful about things. Still, she's deeply uncomfortable, and it shows through her smile.

"Yes, I don't do well with... strangers. Mmm... The guy first? I don't really... I mean, it's not important."

Moriarty
"Rachael is actually pretty fantastic with strangers," he tells her, turns towards the man and offers Verna an arm. A smile, something conversational and gentlemanly because oh heavens he knew how to present himself. Knew how to behave because you had to know what rules you were bucking when you decided to buck them, "where precisely has he been lingering? Let's watch for a moment and pick up a path."

Verna Gardner
"He's actually going from painting to painting, really interested. And alone. It's why I picked him," she says, low voiced. She takes his arm because she too knows how to behave, and hey -- she's following his lead here. He's the one with the experience.

She looks down the hall at her target and victim, and sure enough he makes a little 'hmm' noise and shuffles down to the next piece of art on offer.

"Rachael has to learn to be pretty fantastic with strangers, I guess."

Moriarty
"That's promising," he muses, listens to why she picked the way she did. They know ow to behave and he starts on with the slow approach. A circuit at paintings that he could trace the arc of, trace the progression until they- lazy and purposeful- would end up at the same place as their projected prey. 

"There's ways you can mask your discomfort as something like strength. This gets easier, build close enough relationships and you don't have to be fantastic with strangers."

Verna Gardner
She walks with him, matching his slow speed. It's a kind of crawling stalk they're up to, she thinks. Make it look like an accident.

"I have some phone numbers. I don't want them to put anything together though. I'm afraid they might. And then what?"

And then, she'd have to take care of it, somehow. It wouldn't be just her head on the block for a breach of the Masquerade, it would be David's too.

"I'm sure it'll get easier. With time," she says, voice tinged with sadness, because she has to fight to believe that time is a thing she will have.

Moriarty
"It's a matter of making new acquaintances... you might need to leave Denver for a couple decades and then come back. I used to be from here," he told her, conversational. He takes a second, just a second, exhales slow because he likes the motion. Because sometimes you need to fake the little things that keep you cool. "Everyone I knew is either dead, gone, or senile."

My, he doesn't sound sad at all, does he? (At the corners, maybe, just the barest hints below the pallid surface.)

Verna Gardner
They are approaching the prey, and thus Verna declines to explain why she has to stay. Maybe eventually she and David will leave (or flee) but right now it would look... bad. They'd be trying to escape justice. And thus...

Alan says that everyone he knows is dead, gone or senile, and it gives her a hint as to how long he's been... like this. He would otherwise be an old man, and she tries to imagine that. She's walking next to somebody who could be her grandfather. Great-grandfather, maybe? And she's about to share a 'meal' with him. What are you doing, Verna? This is craziness...

She keeps going though. Despite warnings children get about strangers with candy, Verna doesn't suspect Alan of a thing.

"I've been lucky. The only acquaintances I've run into lately have been... already in the know."

Moriarty
"You know, you do have the awkward and relatively unkind option of, when the time is appropriate, taking the people who matter most along with you. Share eternity with your friends like it's a king sized Kit Kat."

Verna Gardner
Verna just gives him a glance and says: "No. Maybe to an enemy..."

She's been through a lot lately. No part of this 'eternity' seems like a tasty thing to share with others. She wouldn't have wished what happened to her on anyone but Jon Marc.

There's a breath she takes in, without needing to. It feels good to stretch the ribs. It feels like a human thing to do, and she is as yet so close to being human.

Moriarty
[Awe: Charisma 3+Performance0 = 3 dice. Look, being a performer is hard, okay!]

Dice: 3 d10 TN7 (8, 9, 10) ( success x 4 ) [WP]


Moriarty

And, perhaps, he felt the way Verna did. And, perhaps, he took a moment to center himself and straighten his spine. There was a second that the pale man, with his dark hair and his crystalline blue eyes- he could have been considered a right and acceptable figure. He might not have been the most confident of figures, but at that moment Alan Moriarty could have faked his way into anything. His lips upturn, and that curse of theirs rears its head and masquerades as a blessing.

He smiles, and it seems genuine. Eyes alight, heart still dead within his chest but this is the look of passion, the gleam in the back of his gaze that had that predatory aire. He knew what he was doing, and like stupid gazelles grazing people look at them, some subtle, some not so subtle, and it's all a quiet affair. It's all a subtle shift that these people in the room were interesting. And suddenly patterns were changing, things had rearranged, people around them were literally walking towards the hungry lion.


Joseph took it as an opportunity to lead Verna over to their mark, to stand beside him for the briefest of moments. Now or never.


"Excuse me," Alan says, charming smile, dangerous manner. Their mark turns, smiles back.


Fish in a fucking barrel, darling.


Verna Gardner

She walks with him, and she notices his Discipline's effect on other people first. The shift in attention, the gazes, the interest. He's powerful, Alan is. She turns to look at him, to admire that.

He never told her that she would be affected too.


Likeable, hmm? Yes. He is that. Look at how the man smiles at him. Her own mouth curls up on its own accord, glancing at their intended snack and leaning into Alan's arm. Yeah, she's here with the most interesting man in the room. Take that, everybody else. Whatever misgivings she might have had about his relative age seem to be gone.


Moriarty

This is about hunting. And… you know… maybe a little about ego-stroking. Because even if he wasn't anyone in vampiric society, Alan Moriarty could walk into a room full of kine and be their king; he was better than food, and there was something to be said about that. Something that he could enjoy ever-so-briefly without the bitterness of station taking away the joy of knowing. Let children have their fun, dearest.

Verna curls up against his arm and it sells it. He didn't tell her how many people would be impacted, didn't tell her that people who were no longer just people felt the impact as well. He just… went with it. The man in the nice the turned to look at them, eyes going to Alan before flicking over to Verna and his lips upturn with a pleased smile.


"Yes?" the man responds. He's a bass, it rumbles for a moment before settling in to something smooth like the strings on a fine instrument.


"Oh damn," he said with a laugh, "I'd worked up all my witty things to say before coming over here and now they all sound like cheesy pick up lines."


The man laughed, "I could stand to hear a cheesy pick up line every now and again. I'm overdue."

"Would you settle for an introduction?" Alan asked.
"Evan," the man said as he offered his hand to Alan. Then, to Verna.
"I'm Alan, and this is my friend Rachael."

Verna Gardner

Alan is good at this. Good in ways Verna has yet to force herself to be. She lets him do the work while hanging at his side like the third wheel he isn't going to let her be.

It's obvious which of the two is more outgoing. Verna just gives the man a quick handshake, not lingering long enough to let the cold of her flesh sink into his bones.


"Hi," she says, shy and demure. And yet -- hungry.


Moriarty

"So, Alan and Rachael, are you from Denver?" Evan asks, "I haven't seen you around these kinds of events before."

"Rachael's a workaholic, and I have notoriously bad taste. She was pretty insistent that I come out and take in the culture of the city," Alan could make self-effacing jokes, was just charming enough and just appealing enough and just tuned in enough to make them into non-answers for when it came to why people hadn't seen him around before.


"Oh?" Evan's eyebrows perked up, the smile on his face turning to the shy and demure creature on the other man's arm, "what is it that you do?"


Verna Gardner

A twitch of surprise that she'll have to speak. What was the last thing she told somebody? Some lie?

"Oh, it's just a job. I'm a manager at GDH Consulting? Honestly, I like to do things like this to get away from work," she says, trying to draw the conversation away from what she does. It's something suitably boring. GDH Consulting doesn't even exist.


Vampires lie. It's a necessity. He's probably think her insane if she told him the truth.


"What is it that you do?"


[Manip + Subt because that was a total lie. +2 diff because shy. Spending WP]


Dice: 5 d10 TN8 (2, 2, 6, 8, 9) ( success x 3 ) [WP]


Moriarty

"I feel your pain," he said with a laugh, "I'm the hiring manager at Berryman and Oates. It's exhausting, to say the least. If I could avoid having to think about human resources until Monday I could be a very happy man."

Alan has started moving, and the problem with things is that people had their eyes on him, and while it made people impressionable it also made it a little more difficult to make a move to actually isolate someone. Sometimes, you're just a little too good at your job. But, there is meandering, off towards a corner somewhere, off towards an exit.


"Trust me," Alan said with a laugh, "if I had to work at a place called Berryman and Oates, I wouldn't want to think about human resources either. It just sounds like a superhero duo mixed with a breakfast cereal."


Verna Gardner

Alan walks, dragging his enthralled prey off, as she helps to herd him. Evan, the hiring manager at Berryman and Oates. That's a nice, respectable profession, isn't it? Bet he doesn't have any unfortunate tattoos. Clean, this one. He'll taste good.

Two people by a wall of paintings they're passing are whispering to each other while staring at the trio. It feels... exposed. But they're moving somewhere where they won't be seen, aren't they?


She laughs at Alan's joke, and then follows it up with an appreciative hum.


Moriarty

[lying about things! Manip+sub]

Dice: 7 d10 TN6 (2, 5, 6, 6, 10, 10, 10) ( success x 5 )


Moriarty

They're headed for the exit and he stops, he takes a moment and turns to look at Evan- who had a voice like an upright bass, who had a pop of color in his expensive suit, who considered himself to be an interesting, enjoyable professional enjoying his time with a relatively nice couple, and they were leaving. Something made his stomach sink, the notion that they were leaving and it made him rethink what he could do- if anything- to make them stay.

"You're not going already, are you?" he asks.


"Afraid so. I need to go pick up a piece that I purchased, do you mind walking Rachael to the car?" like this would be the best thing that he could conceivably do at that juncture, give them some time to themselves. The man nods, a little disappointed to part but.. at least he got to spend time with Rachael, right?


"That's not a problem," all charm, this one. Evan even offers his arm to Verna, "lead the way, fair lady."


Verna Gardner

She slips her hand out of Alan's and lays her hand over Evan's arm, making sure not to touch his bare skin. She smiles at him. "You're too kind, sir," she says, mimicking his formality.

"I hate walking alone at night."


There's a deep truth. A girl walking alone at night is prone to being attacked and killed. Verna has some rather first-hand knowledge of this. But now? Evan's the one in danger. He just doesn't know that yet. Hopefully, he never will.


She leads him out into the warm night, moon-and-sodium-lamp lit. It's warmer outside than inside, the sky dark and starless. She starts off toward the parking lot, slow as she can. Nobody needs to move quickly.


Moriarty

He walks all calm and comfortable with her. Walks slowly, too, because he is taking her pace, because he seems to be enjoying his company. She hated walking alone at night, why couldn't he just walk her to the car? He could even wait with her should the need arise, Alan wouldn't be too long- right? Evan was comfortable there, yes, but he shouldn't be.

Silly kine, they never even know when they're in danger.


"So, manager, art lover… what else is there to know about you? How long have you and Alan been together?"


Of course he presumes they're a couple. Of course


Verna Gardner

Verna knew. The night she died, she was packing a gun. She checked all shadows, and looked for enemies, and told her killer off at least three times. She didn't know everything, but she knew danger when she saw it.

Not that it helped any.


"Ohh, a few months," she says, walking along. "He's so funny and charming. It almost makes up for his love of Thomas Kinkade paintings. I'm trying to... broaden his horizons a bit."


And eat. Mmm, yes.


Moriarty

"Oh, god, he wasn't kidding about terrible taste," Evan says with a laugh, looked up when he said it and was content to go along with her. Was actually enjoying the moment, too. Once he wasn't thinking so heavily about the person they had just been with he could actually focus on the person that he was with.

"If you two weren't in such a hurry to leave, I'd offer you drinks at my place," he said, "I've been collecting some post-modernist works. A little from the Dada movement, it's been awhile since I've had company over and I hate to break ways so soon."


Verna Gardner

"Yeah, I know," she says, to the terrible taste comment.

Her eyes light up when he offers to take them home for drinks. Oh, to be alive again, and get such an invitation... He's not really asking her back to his place. It's Alan he's interested in. She knows that. And yet.


"Oh, ah... We don't really need to be anywhere soon. I'll bet he'd be thrilled."


Verna, at least, seems thrilled with the concept. They could go someplace nice, have... drinks. Yes. It's perfect.


Moriarty

"Fantastic," he says, and carefully pats himself down to reach for something in his pocket. He does, eventually, retrieve a pen and a business card, Evan Yarborough - Barryman & Oates. He turns the card overhand carefully scrawls his phone number and address onto the back of the card. He even has nice, impeccable handwriting.

"Promise you're not some charming cat burglar?"


Verna Gardner

She giggles, a little shy thing covered up by her hand. Verna Gardner? A cat burglar? No. She's far too innocent. Look at her, Evan -- the very image of nice and sweet.

"I promise. No stealing. I'm a good girl," she says, and takes his card.


"Mmm, where is he?" she asks, looking toward the entrance to the gallery.


Moriarty

Sure enough, in good time there came Alan. Cheeks flushed, expression bright- and one could assume that he was just a little more lively and vibrant now that they were in the night air. He headed over to the car- never mind that they had come in separate cars- and offered Evan an award-winning smile.

"Not getting into too much trouble?" he asked.


"Where's the painting?" Evan asked curiously.


"Seems it would be rude to take it off the wall mid-showing," Alan offers an overly dramatic sigh.


"Unfortunate but understandable. Rachael and I thought it might be fun to have drinks at my place."


"Did you, now?" Alan grinned, something a little edged, a little playful, "I suppose I could acquiesce, provided I'm invited."


"Why wouldn't you be invited?" Evan asked with a laugh, "see you all soon. I need to tidy up a bit first." And, with that, he left.


Verna Gardner

'Rachael' smiles at Alan -- oh, he has a good answer for everything, doesn't he? So good at this.

She lets him work on Evan, engaging in the kind of banter that's difficult for her. As soon as Evan's out of the picture, her expression loses its mask of playfulness. She holds the business card up for Alan between two fingers.


"Got his address. And number."


Moriarty

"You are a bastion of self control," he says, taking the card between his fingers and looking it over. He took a glance at the car they were standing beside, "is this one yours or are we taking mine?"

He looks over the number again, then flips it to the front. Berryman and Oates. Flipped back over and handed back to his current companion.


"I was honestly expecting you to have your fill in the parking lot and call it good."


Verna Gardner

"That would be rude," Verna says, and takes the card back. "I'm not rude."

Also, she doesn't want yet another Kindred in the city ticked off with her presence. It's the little things, right? If she can get enough of them on her side, well...


She reaches into her purse, and the lights on the car next to them blink to signal its unlocking. "This one's mine, if you don't mind?"


It's not anything super expensive. Mid-range, Japanese, a few years old. It's also not her car. Everything she has belongs to her sire, including herself...


Moriarty

"I hate driving," he tells her, but smiles anyway. She says that it would be rude, that she isn't rude, and he started to climb on in tot he passenger seat. This was an exercise in trust. He couldn't do this with just anyone. Most people would have taken the prize from underneath him and called it good, but this one doesn't seem to be a vulture.

He could use their relative lack of standing together as a mutual arrangement. Leverage for the future, you see.


"Did you know that this has a fantastic forward crash test rating?"


Verna Gardner

She walks around to the driver's side, slips in, and the first thing he has to say about it has to do with the forward crash rating of their vehicle. She just gives him a sideways glance and starts the car.

"I... did not."


Nor did she particularly care, but okay. In some ways, Alan Moriarty really does come across as a genial grandfather in a young man's body. He's into those stupid paintings, and knows about the safety ratings of cars. In others, well...


"Listen, I... I'll follow your lead okay? How is this going to go?"


She inputs his address into her phone, tells it to navigate. A computer voice echoes in the car: "Turn left on Marion Street. You are on the fastest route, and there is little traffic. You should arrive at your destination in seventeen minutes."


It's the kind of thing that comes naturally to Verna -- her death so recent, the advances of technology still seem normal to her.


Moriarty

"Basically," he says slowly. Is careful with buckling his seatbelt and adjusting the seat and trying his level best not to check his reflection in the passenger mirror to be sure he still looks presentable. You had to be polished and poised and he'd lost a little vitae for the evening trying to feign humanity. Still had the flush and the voluntary involuntary breathing. Blood was an amazing thing, but he was going to pay for it later.

"We are going to go, and converse, and let him drink. And make sure he's having a decent enough time. Let him put his defenses down, flirt, and then make a move. He can consider it a wild night with socially acceptable people. He's got a managerial job, he's not going to brag about it, that would make him look bad at the office."


Verna Gardner

Verna nods, flickers a nervous smile at Alan. It sounds reasonable. It sounds like Manager Evan will make it through the night. She licks her lips and pulls down the sunshade to check her makeup (because she does not have the same amount of control he does about checking and rechecking her appearance).

Then, she pulls the car out, turns left on Marion street, stops at the stoplight while her phone tells her to turn left at the intersection twice.


"Okay. It's still a little... much to get used to for me. Just going home with people I just met. Things I have to get used to, hmm?"


And this, Alan. As much as she likes you, as much as she's in awe of you, she's uncomfortable. This isn't the sort of thing respectable, good girls do.


Moriarty

"If you play your cards right, you only have to do it a couple times. Build existing relationships- we could even 'break up' and then? You get to play the heartbroken darling," he heaves an overly dramatic sigh, even raises his voice a fourth of an octave, "oh Evan, it's just awful- I thought it was going to work but it didn't! I'm so glad you've been here for me. It's so lonely sometimes. Bang, there you go. Then, when you're good to be out on your own you can cast out a line for people who are looking for wounded birds to help fly again."

A beat.


"It's a card I don't get to play," he stops for a moment. Looks over at her checking her makeup to be sure every bit of her appearance was on point before he turned and looked out the window again, "your issue is that you don't know your angle, so you don't know how to play it. This isn't luck, it takes some skill and a lot of self-awareness. You've got a lot going for you, Verna, you just need to figure out your arsenal."


Verna Gardner

She hums, drums the wheel with her fingertips, and the light turns green.

"Like, be the owner of a large laboratory that holds regular blood drives? I think that would be lovely," she says, pulling out into the intersection. Her phone interrupts by telling her how they'll be on this street for a mile.


"I don't want to be a wounded bird forever."


Moriarty

"Nobody can be a wounded bird forever. If you are, good will dries up pretty damn fast. Instead of being the person people want to help, you become a lost cause who won't stand up for herself," though, he does pause, grin something bright and pleased at Verna because... well, why not? She had an idea, "and if you suddenly play your cards right and become an owner of a labratory, or someone who is a philanthropist who holds blood drives and allocates money to public projects that saves you thousands in tax breaks? Well, then you're a success. People get to feel good about having helped you... of course, some people will think you owe them.

"And if they problematic, show them gratitude and dump them in a concrete foundation somewhere. Or make sure they're thoroughly attached to you, and then make sure that their toys become your toys.


"It's a game of resources. And in thirty or fourty years when it stops making sense that you're still young and lovely, you get to fade to the background. Make sure someone you chose is running your company, and you still get to skim off whatever you like."


Verna Gardner

And if they're problematic, dump them in a concrete foundation somewhere. Hmm. There are some problematic elements Verna would love to shove in a vat of concrete to bake. She'd even be generous and give Jon Marc some air holes to breathe out of.

And now she's speeding -- better stop that.


"Yeah. I just have to do this for a little while..."


Whatever happens, really. If she dies for good here soon, that just means all this slogging through the mess that's been made of her life will cease. She won't have to pretend anymore.


Her phone tells her to turn right at the next street, so she gets over, puts the blinker on, keeps following its robotic voice instructions.


Moriarty

"Just a little while," he assures her.

They continue and soon enough they were at the location, which was a nice enough house in the suburbs. It had a lovely yard, manicured and meticulous and very clearly not cared for by the man who lived in the house. He even had a pond out from with a waterfall and water lilies and a few coy in the shallow depths.


When they park, Alan gets out. Even comes around to open her door if she'd let him. Tosses her that award winning smile, partially real, mostly magical.


"Now, to convince a business man to do illicit things with strangers," he laughs about that. Just a little, under his forced breath.


Verna Gardner

She does allow him to open her door for her, to treat her like a lady. She finds herself smiling again in response that ridiculous mug of his. Somehow, she doesn't think it'll take much to convince Evan to do illicit things with Alan.

Has Evan ever been with a man? Maybe not. Still, Alan is all confidence and trustworthiness and so perfect. Verna takes his hand and walks up the path to Evan's house with him, putting on her brave face.


"Somehow I doubt that will be a problem for you," she says, takes a breath in order to remind herself to breathe. In, out. In, out.


Moriarty

"Excuse me, Mister Yarborough, I have a bridge I'd like to sell you," he half whispers to Verna.

Soon enough, his hand is at the door and he knocks. Once, twice rapidly, then once again. Dat- tatat- dat. He waits patiently and there is a shadow at the door, at the peep hole, which soon enough yields an opening door and the man with the dark hair and the nice suit- sans tie, of course- is there. White Russian in hand.


"You made it," he said, stepped aside and opened the door the full way for them, "come in, welcome to Chez Yarborough."


"I'll have you know, Evan, parking here is terrible," Alan said, gesturing to the driveway with the only car in the drive being theirs, "and I have no idea how we're going to manage."


Evan laughed and gestured them inside, "what are you having? I can get you drinks and give you the grand tour."


"Would it be too much trouble if I had a beer?" he asked, "what do you kids drink these days, Coors?"


"You weren't kidding about taste," Evan laughed, an aside to Verna .


Verna Gardner

Verna laughs behind her hand. "Coors?" she says, giving Alan a jab with her elbow. "What can I say? He is a work in progress." Only, it's obvious that she's pretty delighted with her companion isn't it? She's just trying to sell their image.

She steps inside, eyes landing on the various things inside the entryway, appraising. And it's nice, isn't it? The kind of house a collector of Dada works would have. It's acceptable.


David told her once -- people expect you to drink. Just accept that, and pretend. Ditch it when you can. She gives Evan a smile and says: "I'll have what you're having."


Moriarty

The walls in the front entryway are grey. There is a nice, understated glass entry table with a basked for car keys and his wallet. Everything has a place. There's a mirror over the table that is nice but unremarkable, and on the wall there is a painting with swirling colors and geometric lines and the earth being peeled apart like an orange from outer space.

Alan takes the jab, leans with it and laughs, "what? Fine. Something local? Rachael tells be there are fantastic microbreweries here."


"Fine, one white Russian and a Runoff IPA," Evan replied. He led them into the living room. All modern, all comfortable to people who liked sleek edges and strange curves. The fireplace wasn't lit, but it had glass sparkling inside of it, wrapped around a corner and the face was some shining white. The floor s were a dark hardwood.


Evan was perched at his bar, carefully mixing away.


"I told my secretary a few years back that if the recession hits us hard enough, I'd go be a bartender. As such, I just get to be a hit at parties," Evan told the two of them.


Verna Gardner

"You have a lovely home, Evan. That painting, it's... gorgeous," Verna remarks, stepping into the room, and finding a place to lounge on the couch, legs crossed, hands in her lap.

After a few seconds of stillness she forces a breath, yes, remember that...


"I'm sure you are a hit at parties. I mean..." she coughs, unsure of what to say next. You're a hit with us? Oh... small talk. How does it work?


Moriarty

"The entirety of Dada was a commentary and rebellion against sociopolitical and cultural values of the time. It's the tiniest bit of anarchy, incredibly avant garde for the time- very anti-war and, funnily enough, anti-art but they created an entire climate where art could be alive and wasn't restricted by the establishment's values. It's ideas instead of a style," Evan said, a smile bright on his face and soon enough he returned, took a seat on the couch and gave her the drink.

Alan came and took his seat beside Evan, looking from the coffee table to the art and then, finally, to the man with his beer. Still in the dark glass bottle. Alan 'took a pull', long enough to taste it on his tongue, and quick enough to spit it back out into the bottle.


"I've got a couple expressionist pieces coming soon enough, so maybe my collection can begin a transition to art through the ages."


Verna Gardner

Verna knows what Evan is doing. Takes one to know one, right? He's showing off what he knows, and there's nothing wrong with that in her book. She takes her white Russian and thanks him. She doesn't even attempt to sip at it, just looks down into the glass, remembering what it used to taste like. Maybe she'll taste in Evan later.

Her eyes graze up his body, landing squarely on his neck. He talks about his coming expressionist pieces and she grins.


"Oh, you must tell us when they arrive. I'd love to see them."


Moriarty

She looks up his body and his lips upturn, the corner of one side tilting up a little more than the other. He settles into the couch, gives Verna a once over but settles on her face instead of anywhere else. My, she really can pick 'em sometimes.

"I wouldn't mind showing you- both of you," he says, as if he rememberd that Alan was there and then remembered that Alan was there and looked back at him. Takes another drink. Cheeks flush.


"You two really are going to stuff some culture into me yet," Alan told them, held the beer in his hand and casually slipped his onto the man's knee. Doesnt' get shooed away.


Verna Gardner

"Really? Both of us?" she says, trying to sound as sexy as she can. It's adorable. She's such a shy little thing, and she's trying so hard.

She gives Evan a grin, and if she could blush, she'd be joining him.


"I think I'd enjoy that." A glance at Alan, conspiratorial. Can we eat him yet?


Moriarty

Alan throws Verna a grin, a flash of eyebrows upward. He even has the decency to take Evan's drink and put it on the coffee table. Yes, Verna, we can eat him now.

Verna Gardner

Verna slides her own white Russian on the table, and uses her freed hands to start unbuttoning Evan's shirt. They're going to pass him back and forth between them, and that could get... messy. Best not to leave the obvious stains behind, yes?

She's got such a look to her, Evan. So hungry for him. Eyes on the skin she's unveiling, even though it's nothing much yet. He could still say no. He could protest...


"I'd enjoy that a lot."


Moriarty

She could probably feel the pulse in his chest, something beating hard like he could hardly believe this was happening. Alan let his hand trail down the man's leg and he has a grin on his face. And he has this moment, this moment when he thinks... he could be nice, he could just let Verna have the guy and go back to the gallery, talk to some girl who was looking at the abstract expressionists in the corner, but he then concludes-

Nah. Fuck being nice. He's hungry. He could think of any number of things he could be doing if he wasn't feeling up some HR manager at Berryman and Oates- who the fuck was Oates, anyway? He'd have to ask his sister.


Oh, right. His sister was getting old. He was going to have to kill her off at some point. She was looking a little too spry for a woman in her seventies. Ugh. That's going to be a headache. He watches Verna with a little pride, like she's finally starting to learn to ride a bike. Sure, the training wheels were on, but she was doing fine.


Evan, on the other hand, was quick to help Verna unbutton his shirt. Eyes wide, pulse pounding- was this actually happening? actually happening? It wasn't like he could tell anyone about this but damn this was-


"Fantastic."


Verna Gardner

She tries to keep her cold flesh off of Evan's, even though that pounding pulse entices, makes her want to just put her ear against his chest and listen. It throbs in his neck, and she's entranced by that movement.

The man, he tries to touch her, puts his arms around her to draw her closer, and that almost stops the chase after his pulse. She doesn't like it when they touch her. But he's not after her bare skin yet. He can't feel how cold she is. And in a few seconds, it won't matter anyway.


Her lips ripple with the slip of her fangs beneath them, fangs that Alan can't boast. Verna's are sharp and hungry things that she only displays once she's close enough to her prey's neck that he can't see. She pauses, hanging there while Evan's hands roam lower on her back, remembering what David taught her. Bite quick. Count to three. Lick the wound. Except no, not tonight. Tonight, she'll leave his vein punctured for Alan's turn.


She takes a breath, and strikes, trying to stifle the groan of pleasure that bubbles up, because Alan is there and she doesn't want this to be weird.


Moriarty

One tow three, then four-five-six. They have the same time frames. Alan is quick to come by. Quick because he doesn't want the guy to bleed all over the place because these sorts of things are hard to explain away in the morning. Nobody likes blood on their expensive sofa. He knew this for a fact. He had to buy a new sofa three months into living here again because, well, when one feeds from the kinds of people that aren't afraid of someone biting them hard enough to draw blood with blunted teeth, things tend to get a little messy.

Note to self, call Miranda tomorrow. Ask if she wants to see a movie.


He doesn't have the fangs that Verna does, and he is quiet, the quiet sort that could just radiate satisfaction that eating something that tasted fantastic could bring. Alan was a quiet sort, had always been in that regard. Tries not to make a sound because this is a business exchange. One does not moan in a business exchange.


Of course, Evan does. Of course Evan does, this is ecstasy for him. To Alan and Verna, this was just a typical evening. Come on, everyone eats strangers, right? Of course right. Count to three for her, then six for him, and lick the wound before anything was odd. Hell, maybe even give Verna some reprieve and actually make out with the guy. Being dead made Alan realize his preferences were much more fluid than he had originally anticipated.


Have a pulse. Check.

Not repulsive. Also check.
Don't have any weird diseases, open wounds, or recent dental surgeries. Check, check, and check.

Mostly, making out with the guy gave Verna a chance to reclaim her decorum. He shoots her a look over Evan's shoulder, a kind of this could be awhile, sorry look. Like he was in line at the grocery store.


Verna Gardner

Oh, he does taste a little like white Russian. At least, the alcohol is there. Not even close to drunk, but she can taste it in the periphery. She can taste the rich food he eats too, can practically taste the MBA... God, it's good...

And then Alan is there, to take over. A part of her rises up in revolt against that. Why? Why share, when she's got such a taste in her mouth as this. But she does, slides her fangs out, lets him in, one mouth replaced with another on Evan's neck.


Does he wonder, in that split second, what is going on? Does he care?


Verna pulls a compact out of her purse and checks herself while Alan does... his part. She makes sure her lipstick is still good, wipes a streak of red off of her cheek, and brings it to her mouth.


When she looks over, Alan's making out with the man, giving her that bored apologetic look. She just smiles with relief and checks to be sure they didn't leave any 'evidence'.


Moriarty

And it does go on. Alan makes some of the perfunctory noises, occasionally tries to signal Verna over to trade off so he can take a break, but eventually ends up going the distance by himself. this takes finesse- hunting and sharing someone is hard. You eat too much and you have to figure out where you're going to dump a body.

They did, however, manage to make the place pretty clean.


The white Russian on the table almost gets knocked over at some point and Alan is tipping the guy over on the couch, looks up briefly in hopes to find some clock or something or anything to give him an indication of what time it was. Alan pulls back soon enough, half breathless (because there is no breath to give) "Hey, I have a plane to catch at six AM, if I don't leave now, I'll miss it."


Apologetic, Evan sounds displeased, but he does sit up soon enough. Perhaps a tad tipsy, clears his throat, "anything for business."


"Knew you'd understand," he told Evan, kises him on the cheek like he had the capacity to do so. Presence is a beast of a gift, you see, because that awe lets him get away with things like kissing human resource directors on the cheek like it's middle school. Hell, he doesn't even know if the guy entertained the notion of... well, now. No need to think about that.


"Call you in a week?" he asked Evan.


"I have a conference next week," Evan replied.


"Well, how about we call whenever the Hell we please, then?" Alan quirked a brow, a little challenging, "bring a little of that anarchy you like so well in your artwork into a living, vital context."


"How do you know I'll answer?" Evan asked with a teasing grin.


"Because you're the type of man who doesn't leave things unfinished," Alan replied, got himself off the couch and didn't bother to claim his beer, "talk to you soon."


Verna Gardner

Alan signals for her to take over, and her expression changes to one of sheer 'no' -- eyes widened a bit, a tiny shake of her head. No, you're doing great there, Alan. Keep up the good work.

Truth be told, she knows how that would go. Hey, why does your tongue feel like it just came out of the refrigerator? And she doesn't see the reason to waste all that energy just to fake a bit of warmth. The feeding's done. Why is Alan even continuing with the charade? Does he like that? Or is it just to avoid questions?


When he comes up for air, makes his excuses, Verna finally starts pretending like she's in on the act, shooting playful looks at Evan over Alan's shoulder. She lets him do the talking though, while running her fingers through his hair. It seems like the thing to do. Or, at least, a thing to do.


She follows Alan off the couch, takes his arm, looks back at Evan, at his disheveled, slackened body. "Sorry to have to leave so soon. I'd love to get to know you better, but then -- I'm sure we will."


Moriarty

So, there he is, Respectable and rumpled looking as a fairly attractive pair of people are making their way to the door. It was like high school, what with stopping at first base and all, but Alan was completely content to keep it at first base because... well, because. Period, the end.

They got walked to the door, ushered to the threshold but no further, and they were left with a shut door and their thoughts.


Crickets chirp.


"Well, that was not awkward," Alan said.


Verna Gardner

Verna smooths out her hair, and pulls at her dress, trying to look like she's not having a Walk of Shame moment, when Alan makes his comment. It's hard to tell whether he's being sarcastic or not.

"Well... we succeeded? I mean... Thanks. He was good."


She licks her lips, tries to banish the discomfort involved in what just transpired by concentrating on how much better it feels now with a fuller stomach.


Moriarty

"Hey, when you're full up you can't complain," he told Verna. Alan walked to the car, but actually did linger to open her car door for her. "It gives you something to do other than wonder about where your next meal is coming from."

Alan waited patiently for Verna to get on into the vehicle. This is what happens when you embrace boys that may have been to charm school, or at least made out with someone who has.


"And did you taste lamb chops? I freaking love lamb."


Moriarty

Silence, then?

"... wanna go back to the gallery and try again?"


Verna Gardner

They walk back to the car, and Verna smiles at his courtesy in opening her door. She likes chivalry, this one. The doors slam shut one after the other. She turns on the engine.

"Yes, I think. Was that lamb? Ahh, nice."


Then, he suggests they go again.


"Yes. Let's," she says, and perhaps there's a note of true happiness in her voice that hasn't been there before. It feels good to feed. It almost lets her forget for a while.


She thinks she remembers the way back to the gallery, or at least how to get out of Evan's neighborhood. They'll be free of a robotic voice interrupting their conversation this time.