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24 December 2009

The longest night

"How far we all come.
How far we all come away from ourselves...
You can never go home again."
-James Agee

*** *** ***
Yule, 1994 -- Manchester House

God rest ye merry gentlemen...


The carolers, bundled up in their cream and crimson and ever-green, crowded the front stoop of the Manchester house, filling its foyer with songs of good will and harmonies of peace on Earth. Tidings of comfort and joy. Their voices carried up the heavy wood staircase, down the plaster-walled hall, and through the double doors of the room where the dark haired child slept. Her small body was overrun with fever. Stray strands of her hair clung to her sweat-beaded brow.

Outside, the night was peaceful. The moon had lost only a sliver of its fullness and the moonlight cast long shadows across the roads.

Oh, tidings of comfort and joy

*** *** ***
Yule, 2009 -- Chicago, Illinois

Emily's hands shook as she tried to fit her key into the ignition.  Like threading a needle, the operation seemed impossible while she cried.  But she wasn't... crying that was.  An unopened card sat on the passenger seat beside her, her name written elegantly across the envelope, and the twinkle-lights of holiday cheer pushed in through the windscreen, the windows, the mirrors.

I'm leaving, she had said.  Not going.  Leaving.
I should be back by...  Not will.  Should.

(I'm already gone.)

Finally she fit the key into the block and thankfully the car rumbled to life when she turned over the starter.  She didn't (couldn't) look back before driving away, but she couldn't shake the feeling that she had left something (important) behind.

Again.

*** *** ***
Christmas Eve, 2007 -- Stephanskirche, Wien

Stille Nacht, heilige Nacht
Alles schläft, einsam wacht


Rain fell steadily down into the Stephansplatz, down onto the new roof of Stephanskirche, washed over the gargoyles and spires, washed over the street.  The doors of the cathedral stood open, inviting, as she emerged from the underground station.  Emily ducked her head and hurried across the Platz, using one hand to shelter her face from the rain.

She shuffled inside, stopping in the foyer long enough to wrap a scarf around her head and shoulders.  She mumbled her Happy Christmas!es (Fröhliche Weihnacthen!) and Excuse Me!s (Entschuldige!) as she made her way to an unpopulated pew near the North Choir.  Candlelight filled the ancient space, flickered, gave life to the shadows that danced and stretched up sagging stained glass.  The voices of the Boys' Choir filled the space, reverberated off each hard (cold) detail, and echoed without amplification.

Emily knelt, waiting for the warmth (surety) of Faith and the timeless Truth of the place to fill her.  To save her.  She took up the small silver locket in her fingers... and prayed.

Schlaf in himmlischer Ruh!

*** *** ***
New Year's Day, 2002 -- Roma, Italia

Emily's fingertips toyed with the rim of her teacup, as she leaned in slightly, laughing at something the (beautiful) brown-eyed boy had said.  It was a good sound, happy and free, that welled up from the base of her ribcage and brightened her eyes.  They were people watching from a cafe on the edge of the piazza, annoying the proprietor by over-staying their espresso (his) and oolong (hers) by over an hour.  

She had pulled her chair around the table, a little, just to be nearer.  He had leaned in, as if he was going to tell her a secret.  Their eyes met and Emily's breath caught in her chest, cutting off the laughter and stilling the mirth in her eyes.

"Don't..." she said softly, cautioning, looking down and away.

"Why?" he asked, still close enough to whisper.

Emily pulled back a little, recaptured her carefree smile and almost smirking.  "If you kiss me," she said, with an odd lilt to her muddled accent, "I'll just end up leaving."

He laughed, shook his head a little, and replied.  "I don't believe you."

"It's true."

"Oh? Prove it."

Before she could pick up her teacup, or shift away, or do something else to formalize the space (safety) between them, he had kissed her.  And Emily found herself kissing back.  Because this time, maybe, she'd be around long enough to kiss him (someone) more than once.

*** *** ***
June 3, 2003 -- Somewhere in Eastern Europe

Summer.  It was a hot day, hot and humid with no signs of breaking, letting up, raining down or otherwise abating.  The sun was middlingly high, just low enough to cast shadows while still getting into everyone's eyes.  The lanky girl had stopped at the corner and was carefully studying a city map, matching strangely shaped letters to street signs.  (Lost.)  She was clearly foreign-born, presumably American.

A man stepped out of the space between two buildings, motioned to her and pointed at his wrist.  His face held a question but his words were lost on Emily, who wandered closer even as she apologized for not knowing the language.  Again he pointed, and she looked down.

He's asking after the time! she realized, and hastily tucked her map under her arm.  She held her left arm so he could read the time, moving closer to him yet.  He smelled of old oil, grime, refuse.

It was a hot summer day, in the early afternoon, on a backroad street, in the middle of nowhere, where she'd stopped to be friendly (helpful, even) and to find her feet.  But the man didn't want to see her watch, something Emily realized too late.  After his fingers wrapped around her arm, after the shadow of the building darkened their path, after the rancid smell of oil turned to a sharper note: fear.

*** *** ***
Yule, 1994 -- Manchester House

O, come, all ye faithful...

He pressed the cold stone beads into her palm, and helped her to close tiny, nimble fingers around them. The child barely opened her eyes to watch him as he knelt beside her bed. She was so tired, she could barely move her head. His fingers were impossibly cold against her skin; hers hand burned like fire, threatening to wipe away his very fingerprints.

"Pray with me, Emily," he said, in a voice that was still and expansive. Like a quiet lake. Still water, running deep. She willed her mind to focus on the peacefulness of his voice, the drone of his syllables, and soon the sounds were lost in an overwhelming sense of rest. Emily let go, and fell further into sleeping.

*** *** ***
December 14, 2009 -- Tekakwitha Woods, Illinois

Each footstep took her farther from the corner of the woods where the cold-thick water met the black-earth ground and the fallen kings kept court with the early Winter winds.  Farther from the place where the path traveled by her rowan-haired Other kissed the path that Emily traveled.  Where they met, consulted briefly, then diverted once more.

The ground was brown-black, dark with the dampness of melted snow, and the tiny star she wore around her neck bounced against her sternum with every step, calling out: Home, Home, Home.

The woods around her were heavy with possibilities and Emily's head was filled with the Song of Everything (Truth).  It rang in her unhearing ears, calling up all manner of memories (Hope).  The girl with a name like a trap had given her back something long forgotten, something left in a city far away.

The trail opened, dumping back into its trailhead by the parking lot where she'd left her car and Emily stepped out of the woods and back into the world.  With her eyes wide open.

*** *** ***
June 6, 2003 -- Somewhere in Eastern Europe

There was a dripping pipe in the back of the cellar, and Emily focused on that steady sound like a lifeline.  As if the plink, plink, plink could push away the feeling of his stale breath curling against her skin, the sandpaper stubble against her cheek, the fire and ache of every. fucking. breath she took.

He was yelling again, and if she hadn't already earned two broken ribs Emily would have been yelling back.  Yelling because she was tired of crying, and crying got her nowhere.  Yelling, because she wasn't strong enough to push him away and there was nothing left to throw.

His face was so close that she could see that the dirt that had collected in the crevices of his wrinkles was darker, thicker than the general coating of dirt that covered him from head to toe.  A second skin, inconsistently thick.  She could smell the vinegar from his lunch, feel him tense in anger.

She lost track of the dripping sound when his hand closed around her neck (again), clamping tightly as she scratched at his hands, pressing her into the wall (again) as she clawed at his ugly face to let her go.  Her throat burned like wildfire, and she could taste nothing but her own (stale) dry mouth as her vision tunneled.  Faded.  Went altogether dark.

She was grateful, in those last moments, that she didn't speak a word of his native tongue.

*** *** ***
Yule, 1998 -- Holyrood Abbey, Edinburgh

The stone was rough beneath her fingertips, worn by too many centuries of exposure to the elements, but the column still stood.  It rose toward the heavens, towering over her.  Emily tipped her head back and looked up, up, up to where the broken top met the grey sky, where the light moss covering the north side broke from view and there was only the firmament above.  Her gaze swept the arches that stretched toward the long-fallen roof and the whorls above a low garden gate with equal curiousity.  Awe.

This end of the Mile was quiet, in the middle of the shortest day of the year.  Her breath formed tiny clouds that rose, shattered into wisps and dissipated quickly.  Emily breathed in Winter, and breathed out Wonder.

Cedric stood a little behind her, his feet planted firmly in the gravel of the Abbey floor.  The Song of Creation rang in his ears as he watched the rapt wonder on the child's face.  He had hopes for her, hopes and also prayers.  

After a long silence, she asked, "Is this what God hears when He closes His eyes?"

*** *** ***
Christmas Eve, 2009 -- O'Hare International Airport

With one hand holding fast to the strap of her messenger bag, Emily beat out a steady (impatient) tattoo against her leg with her passport.  She tipped her head from side to side, trying to release the tension in her shoulders.  Of all the minor annoyances in international travel, Emily loathed queuing the most.

In each new line she found herself mulling over the recent additions to her vocabulary, oddly capitalized words, strange turns of phrase.  The large man in front of her stopped to dig his passport out of his carryon (For the love of... [Be nice. It's Christmas!]) and Emily felt her blood pressure rise.  It was good that she was getting away for awhile, going back to things that seemed more familiar.

When she reached the podium, Emily absent-mindedly handed the attendant her ticket and passport, open to the proper page.  It was the wrong color, with the wrong watermarks, so the kind-eyed gentleman turned it over in his hands and took rather too long to read her name off the pages.

"Thank you, Ms. Littleton," he said, handing the maroon booklet back to her.  "Enjoy your flight."

Not long thereafter, Emily settled into her seat.  Tucked in her earplugs.  Leaned her head against the window and tried to fall asleep.

*** *** ***
Yule, 1994 -- Manchester House

An elder woman, with wide argent swaths to her salt-and-pepper hair, stood at the end of the bed, long delicate fingers wrapped around a small, silver ovoid that called out Home, Home, Home in the same voice as the very floorboards of the old house. She watched the sleeping child with worried eyes, grey like overhead clouds, troubled.

"Let her rest, Eleanor," he said, with the same quiet-calm voice. The rosary was tucked into one pocket, now, but the restful calm had not abated. The room thrummed with a protective warmth. "This is not Emily's time."

He led her from the room, pulling the doubled doors shut behind them. Outside the snow had just begun to fall.

*** *** ***
Christmas, 2009 -- Thirty thousand feet

You are the place my mind runs to today
Wherever it wanders, it finds you


She had been staring at the envelope for half an hour--intermittently pondering how strange it was that she could have translated that timespan into miles if she'd only known their average ground speed.  Twice, she'd tucked a finger under the flap and started to loosen the seal.  Twice, she'd thought the better of it and tucked the envelope back into the seat-back pocket.

The woman beside her was sleeping, now, and Emily was grateful for the privacy.  They were zooming over some nameless stretch of land or sea at an unknowable time of night.  Emily was neither here (Chicago) nor there (Taipei).  It seemed fitting, now, to open the card Jarod had given her.  Safe.

Emily drew a careful breath, told herself that reading this wouldn't change a damned thing, and opened the note.  In the neither-here-nor-there of thirty thousand feet she wouldn't have to explain to anyone who it was from, how she knew him, what their relationship (what relationship?) to one another was.

...this isn't for you
I told myself, it wasn't for you.


What she couldn't quite admit to herself, not just yet (possibly [probably] never), was the flicker of anticipation (hope) at the corner of her mind as she looked over what he'd written.

21 December 2009

The longest night

[Emily Littleton] Yule, 1994 -- Manchester House

God rest ye merry gentlemen...

The carolers, bundled up in their cream and crimson and ever-green, crowded the front stoop of the Manchester house, filling its foyer with songs of good will and harmonies of peace on Earth. Tidings of comfort and joy. Their voices carried up the heavy wood staircase, down the plaster-walled hall, and through the double doors of the room where the dark haired child slept. Her small body was overrun with fever. Stray strands of her hair clung to her sweat-beaded brow.

Outside, the night was peaceful. The moon had lost only a sliver of its fullness and the moonlight cast long shadows across the roads.

Oh, tidings of comfort and joy

-----------

Yule, 2009 -- Chicago, Illinois

The night is cold, and the crescent moon is swaddled in blankets of thick clouds. Now and again she breaks free of the grey long enough to cast weak shadows across the frozen ground. It is too cold, too dry to snow, and what precipitation does come falls as hard ice pellets. Denser than hail, far crueller than snow.

Emily has found her way to Jarod's building, mostly from memory. Things are subtly different about her. She wears slacks instead of jeans, for one. For another, her footfalls sound more cripsly (proper shoes [not trainers or stompy boots]) against the sidewalk. Her hair is swept up and wrapped back into a tidy knot at the back of her head, secured by a couple jewel-toned clips. Her sweater is touchably soft, and not obscured beneath countless layers. The silver chain around her neck is visible, but the star it holds fast (close to her heart) is tucked under her shirt. It beats out a melody of its own, of comfort and joy, calling Home, Home, Home.

The Orphan waves to the doorman, grinning brightly. She offers him one of the two boxes she carries -- inside are home-baked cookies, from Old World recipes, and a pair of clementines. She wishes him a Happy Christmas, in her muddled accent. She asks after his family. And after she is done being delightfully pleasant, she asks if he might take the other box up to Jarod... or, if it wasn't trouble, let her up to drop it off herself.

[Jarod Nightingale] Charlie, one of the building's newer doormen, was more than well aware of the rules. And Mr. Nightingale in penthouse A on the 10th floor had never once given any indication that certain individuals be allowed in without his notification. But the girl standing in front of him now had been to the apartment on multiple occasions, and furthermore... she was offering cookies. And it was nearly Christmas. Giving Emily a warm smile, he graciously accepted the gift (bribe) and walked through the lobby to the elevator, using his key to open the doors, and then again to access the top floor before nodding a good evening and stepping back out. The elevator doors closed, and up Emily went.

Once she'd arrived at her destination, there was only a few paces of marble entrance-way between herself and Jarod's apartment. If she listened carefully, Emily might hear the muffled sounds of two voices barely permeating the thick wooden panel of the door. One of them was Jarod's familiar timbre. The second was distinctly female.

[Emily Littleton] Yule, 1994 -- Manchester House

O, come, all ye faithful...

He pressed the cold stone beads into her palm, and helped her to close tiny, nimble fingers around them. The child barely opened her eyes to watch him as he knelt beside her bed. She was so tired, she could barely move her head. His fingers were impossibly cold against her skin; hers hand burned like fire, threatening to wipe away his very fingerprints.

"Pray with me, Emily," he said, in a voice that was still and expansive. Like a quiet lake. Still water, running deep. She willed her mind to focus on the peacefulness of his voice, the drone of his syllables, and soon the sounds were lost in an overwhelming sense of rest. Emily let go, and fell further into sleeping.

-----------

Yule, 2009 -- Chicago, Illinois

She would not consider it bribery, offering cookies to the doorman. No! It was simply what people did during the holidays. They offered comfort, traded good cheer, breathed in the cold and out an immoveable faith in humanity. (Hope.) Emily had the unusual fortune of spending many Christmasses here in a row. They totaled three now, and she felt oddly at home in the city. Stranger yet, she had people ... to bake with, to share with, to miss when the nights grew short again.

It is not until she exits the elevator that Emily considers Jarod's social calendar. That he might have company. That he might not want her to visit. She is so accustomed to running into him without planning, that the finer details planning a meeting eluded her.

Her footfalls stop, just outside his door. Just within earshot of the twinned (twined?) mumurs that slip out beneath the heavy (heart [heartwood] wooden) partition.

Catching her lower lip in her teeth for a moment, Emily considered the wisdom of not knocking. Charlie downstairs would see her come back with the box, and he knew that Mr. Nightingale was in -- No! That wouldn't work. She could leave the box and -- No! Emily had never stayed only a few minutes at Jarod's flat. She could knock, and brave interrupting whatever tete-a-tete Jarod was hosting -- Woe! There were consequences there that Emily did not yet want to incurr. Or she could stand in the hallway, waiting for Fate to make her choice for her. Which was dangerous. At best. And...

She knocked twice, cleanly and clearly, then stepped a little away from the door. Emily did not ring the bell, if there was one. She found that crass. She simply knocked, and waited, and hoped that delicious cookies and a warm smile would be enough for him as well.

It had worked with the doorman.

Jarod was definitely smarter than the doorman.

If (when) the door opened, she'd be smiling brightly. Because it was Christmastide, and she came bearing cookies.

[Jarod Nightingale] There were countless other nights when this situation could have gone very badly for Emily. Despite their... relationship? It was completely unknown how Jarod chose to spend the nights when they were not together. Perhaps he had an entire harem of lovers that visited him on various different nights of the week. Or, then again... maybe he was a little more normal than his persona built him up to be. (Most people were.)

In any case, Emily found herself outside of his door, and there was clearly another woman inside, but having already come this far, she braved the potentially uncomfortable situation and knocked. Twice. The voices inside stilled, and a few moments later, the door swung open to reveal... not Jarod, but someone unfamiliar. A girl close to Emily's age (perhaps a year younger), with pretty mixed-ethnic features bearing a primarily Asian cast. Her long brown hair was layered with streaks of bright pink and blue, and a small ring adorned a pierced nose. Like Jarod, her eyes were blue, though of a much lighter, crystalline shade (almost colorless). She was wearing a pair of tight jeans that ended mid-calf, and a pink satin camisole, and stood a few inches shorter than Emily herself did.

The unknown girl smiled brightly when she caught sight of Emily (and her box of cookies), and she stepped back to beckon this new guest inside, turning around to meet Jarod's gaze as he came around the bend in the hallway. "I believe you have a visitor." Her eyebrows went up meaningfully, as if she'd just found something precious and secret of his and was dying to open it up and see what was inside.

For his part, Jarod looked a bit... surprised. Here was a face he hadn't been expecting to see tonight. Certainly not... in this particular fashion. But he strode forward quickly and moved to shut the door that the younger girl was still holding open. "So I see," he commented with a small smile in Emily's direction before shooting the other girl a piercing stare. (Classic sibling code for: behave yourself.) "I'm surprised the doorman let you up here." (There was a slight note of disapproval in his tone, as if this spoke ill of said doorman's trustworthiness.)

The girl coughed rather loudly and crossed her arms over her chest.

"Maia, this is Emily. Emily, my sister Maia."

Sister. The important word of the evening. Not lover or friend with benefits or one-night-stand or random pretty flirtation number 2,463.

[Emily Littleton] Yule, 1994 -- Manchester House

An elder woman, with wide argent swaths to her salt-and-pepper hair, stood at the end of the bed, long delicate fingers wrapped around a small, silver ovoid that called out Home, Home, Home in the same voice as the very floorboards of the old house. She watched the sleeping child with worried eyes, grey like overhead clouds, troubled.

"Let her rest, Eleanor," he said, with the same quiet-calm voice. The rosary was tucked into one pocket, now, but the restful calm had not abated. The room thrummed with a protective warmth. "This is not Emily's time."

He led her from the room, pulling the doubled doors shut behind them. Outside the snow had just begun to fall.

-----------

Yule, 2009 -- Chicago, Illinois

As Emily looked between Maia and Jarod, her bright, well-meaning smile shifted to something more devious (playful [wicked]). The mischeviousness spread to her eyes, making the twinkle brightly despite their dark fields. Light blue eyes met deeper blue eyes and the sudden, near telepathic clarity of purpose that was the privilege of teenage girls came quickly into play. Maia was, after all, closer to Emily's age than Jarod. And Jarod had been, for some long, so stoically calm.

She quirked an eyebrow, let one corner of her mouth raise a little higher than the other, shifted the box in her hands so she could offer one to Maia. "A pleasure," she said, not needing to offer her name. "Happy Christmas."

Behave yourself, he'd glared to Maia. Jarod had eyed no such thing to Emily. Some part of her was all but gleefully dancing in place she kept far, far hidden from prying eyes, far far tamped down and inscrutable. And... AND she had surprised him, which was a present in and of itself. Oh, later she would surely pay for being so (smug) pleased with herself. But for now, it was absolutely delicious.

"How long are you in town for?" she asked Maia. Con-ver-sa-tion-a-lly. Because she was just curious, that's all. Emily toed her shoes off her feet, and lost about an inch and a half of height when she stood barefoot on the floor again.

And for Jarod? She offered over the box, and an explanation. "Oh... I just wanted to drop off some cookies for you." She looked between them, still grinning warmly. "There's enough for you both, if he feels like sharing." Let the good-natured, all-in-good-fun ribbing begin.

Jarod had been on his best behavior with her roommates. Sort of. (Not. At. All.) Emily's flavor of best behavior was a little different, it seemed.

[Jarod Nightingale] Oh, the girls were enjoying this. And Emily did not even know yet how absolutely delightfully devious Maia Nightingale could really be. When Emily offered her the cookie, she accepted it with a warm smile and took a bite. "Oh, thank you!" A couple of tiny crumbs fell to the hardwood floor, and Jarod's eyes followed them instinctively, but he was too polite to say anything while company was around.

Maia's own eyes glittered as they shifted between the box of cookies and Jarod's face. "Isn't that sweet? She brought you cookies. I wish someone would make me cookies." She was teasing, clearly, and from the absolutely puppy-dog expression she tossed her brother (awwww, she mouthed silently), she was thoroughly enjoying the opportunity. "I'm just stopping by for a quick visit. Drove in from Madison on my way home. I was sent on a mission to try and cajole my dear, catty, absolutely no-fun brother here into actually coming to see his family for Christmas. Heaven forbid. Now you must tell me how y'all know each other."

Y'all, she'd said. And there was that slow Texan drawl that rolled along with her words. Not the obvious, cowboy cliche. No, she was a big city girl. Her accent was light. But it was there.

Jarod managed to take the teasing in stride, though he did glower slightly when Maia made that isn't-she-adorable face at him. He looked down at the tin of cookies that Emily was holding out for him, as if the idea of baking cookies and wishing people Happy Christmas was completely alien to him. Still, he reached out and took it from her, noting with reluctance that the baked treats inside emanated an absolutely heavenly scent. He reached over and set it down on top of the granite counter in the kitchen, and his eyes flickered back to Emily's own. Wary. Contemplative.

"She was just about to leave, actually." Hinted in Maia's general direction. Then the faintest glimpse of a smile touched his lips. "Thank you."

"And here I thought that models couldn't eat carbs," Maia interjected as she reached over to steal a second cookie without asking permission.

"We make exceptions on special occasions," Jarod commented with a slight hint of irritation, watching more crumbs fall onto the floor.

[Emily Littleton] "Oh," Emily said lightly, with a little wave of her hand now that it was free of gifts and other encumbrances. "I didn't make them for Jarod." Because that would be silly, because models don't eat carbs. "I was baking with Enid--she's taking the holidays hard this year, her boyfriend passed not long ago--but I can't exactly bring these with me on the airplane... and I don't want to surrender them at security..."

Which led her to the logical conclusion of offering them around. To people she knew, like Jarod. Playing with Maia was decidedly less fun than Emily had thought it might be, and Jarod's sister was getting CRUMBS on the FLOOR!

It was hard to believe these two were cut from the same cloth.

(I. Am. Not. Adorable!)

She watched another crumb fall, with slightly less palpable annoyance than Jarod's own.

"... And very few people I know are well traveled enough to appreciate traditional cookies." The way she said tradition was very different from how the Awakened community tossed it out, but no less resonant. Tradition meant something, offered structure, bound disparate wheres and whos into a sense of Holiday, of Community. It was all Emily had to give her a sense of grounding.

"I could go if you two want some more sibling time," she said, keeping that warm smile (cheer and good will) on her features, holding onto it like a life raft in the trouble glare-ridden waters of Nightingale-sibling-interactions. "I have to pack anyway."

[Jarod Nightingale] "No," Jarod replied quickly, which said more about his present feelings than perhaps his initial hesitation may have. (Men were supposed to greet home-baked cookies with expressions of great enthusiasm, after all. And they were supposed to notice when a girl they'd been sleeping with had dressed up.) "Wait a moment, will you?"

Like he'd said. Maia was just leaving. Or so the look he shot his baby-sister implied. Neither he or Emily had actually answered her question, which may have spoke of a similar desire on their part not to acknowledge relationship details (which, after all, meant acknowledging a relationship of some form or another.) Or perhaps a simple desire for privacy. Either way, Maia was to be left unsatisfied. She pouted dramatically, looking for all the world like the youngest child of a wealthy family who was far too used to getting her way.

"Oh, alright. Fine. I get the hint. Jarod, I'll be at Mike's place tonight. I'll call you before I leave in the morning. Not too early, of course. We're going to make margaritas and sing karaoke with his roommates." She grinned with impish delight at the prospect of anything resembling a party.

Jarod smirked. "Don't do anything I wouldn't do."

Maia uttered a shrill, boisterous laugh as she slipped on a pair of knee-high black boots and grabbed her coat and hand-bag out of the closet. "I wouldn't worry about that, brother dear. You're pretty much impossible to top. Goodniiiiight." Her bird-like voice trilled knowingly behind her as she closed the door, leaving Jarod and Emily in relative silence.

Jarod looked at the ceiling and let out a long-suffering, deep sigh that seemed to release tension from nearly every muscle in his upper body. Then he swung his eyes back down and rested them on Emily for a long moment. "Sorry about all that. She's a bit... much."

Indeed it was hard to imagine they were even related, were it not for the fact that they looked alike. Perhaps their lives had consisted of different experiences. Younger children were sometimes more sheltered than the rest of their family, and Maia was quite a bit younger than Jarod was.

His eyes traveled from Emily's face to the silver chain at her neck, then worked their way down her figure and back up again. She looked... nice. It was probably the first time that she'd been better put-together than he had, since they'd met. Jarod himself was dressed in the kind of outfit one might lounge around the apartment in: jeans and a t-shirt. He was barefoot, and the shirt was solid black and clung to his torso stylishly.

"So, where are you off to?"

[Emily Littleton] Emily managed to stay out of the way as the tempest-waiting-to-happen that was Maia swept past her, gathered her belongings, and knowingly slipped out the door. Emily managed to get a have fun! in there, along with a little wave, but she was secretly hoping Maia hadn't ground any of those wayward crumbs into the floorboards. Jarod's head might explode if she had.

Given the sigh he let out, his head was probably very close to exploding already. (She's a bit...much.) "Little sisters are supposed to be," Emily said, with an amused quirk to her features that left him wondering how personally Emily knew about little sisters, and their relationships to older brothers. She didn't have one of her own... (younger sister [older brother]) did she?

It was easier to breath after Maia left. There was less Nightingale-Nightingale tension. Jarod, on his own, was intense enough to make Emily uncomfortable a times. Imagining a family full of Nightingale siblings was ... terrifying.

She had not come near enough, yet, to give Jarod's little sister any hint of their relationship (what relationship?). Which means she had not come near enough, yet, to succumb to the subtle gravity that often ended up pulling them together. It left her to watch him, with appreciation, as the tension dropped out of his body. And to watch him, with curiosity, as he found his center again in Maia's absence.

"I'm leaving to visit my parents," she said, still lightly, still touched by the unexpected surprise of finding his ineffable sister in Jarod's foyer. "They asked nicely and I haven't seen them in awhile. I should be back after New Year."

Should. Not will. I'm leaving. Not I'm going. Some patterns were too clearly written in Emily's past, in her habits, for her to change them now, for him. She was leaving and she should, but might not, be back in a few weeks.

"I take it you're not going home?" she asked, turning the question back around to him, and Maia, neatly. While she waited for him to answer, Emily crouched down and starting picking up Maia's crumbs by pressing one finger to the floor and then knocking off the ones that stuck into her upturned palm. It was possible they bothered her almost as much as they bothered Jarod, or that by being helpful she was avoiding his train of questioning almost as completely as they'd both ducked Maia's.

[Jarod Nightingale] "Ah, well... I hope you have a good time, in that case." If he noticed anything odd about the way she phrased her response, he didn't acknowledge it. (After all, people did leave. And sometimes they didn't come back.) "I'm... not really sure if I'm going home, to be honest. I wasn't planning on it, but it's been a few years and apparently my step-mom is pitching a fit about how we're never all in the same place for the holidays like a normal family."

The way he said this, it seemed that the prospect was more of a chore to him than a welcome homecoming. Perhaps his family was a bit... fractured. It might explain the reason why he and his sister were so different... right down to their opposing accents. (Hers from Dallas, his from.... nowhere in particular.) But Jarod didn't really want to talk about his family. That much was obvious by the way he seemed to tense up again upon mentioning them.

And Emily was picking up Maia's crumbs, which... surprisingly, proved almost heart-melting. Jarod's eyes softened as he watched her do this, and if she happened to glance up, she'd see something like gratitude there. Maybe even a little more than that. There was a stainless steel trash can residing under the sink, and Jarod obligingly walked over and opened the cabinet door so that Emily could get to it.

"Where are your parents at?" Since she hadn't yet offered up the particular detail of where. And although sometimes he might seem as if he wasn't paying attention to these little details, there was actually very little that he didn't notice.

[Emily Littleton] There were no normal families. Emily might have told him this, if something about his tone implied that the topic was unpleasant, uncomfortable. She let it be, and focused on cleaning up the small mess his younger sister had left behind. She did look up, but just for a moment, and seeing the softer expression (which she took for relaxation, nothing more) made her smile.

Emily stood up from her crouch and padded her way over to the trash can. She brushed the crumbs carefully from her fingers, and then washed her hands at the sink. While she was drying her hands, she turned to lean face him and leaned her side against the counter.

"They're in Taiwan right now," she said, as if this was an entirely normal occurence. Emily folded whatever towel she'd used to dry her hands with, and placed it beside the sink. If Jarod noticed, and he often noticed, its fold was perfectly parallel to the sink. She was particular, too, in her own way.

"I... honestly didn't think about the carbs thing," she confessed, looking up at him apologetically. "If you don't want the cookies, I'll take them to the flatmates." Emily was still perturbed with them, so they didn't get proper names of their own.

[Jarod Nightingale] "No, I want them." The cookies, that was. "But I warn you, if I get dropped by my agency for weight-gain and have to take up prostitution to pay the rent, it'll be all your fault."

He grinned, then leaned forward and kissed the top of Emily's forehead affectionately. His lips lingered there, warm and soft, and his breath brushed against her hair. "Honestly. Thank you."

When he pulled away, he turned and started walking into the living room. "I take it they move around a lot. Judging by how many cities you've lived in." He could recall quite clearly Emily's reaction that first night when he'd tried to ask her about this particular subject. "Where in Taiwan?"

He sat down on the couch and pulled his feet up, back pressed into the joint where the arm rest met the back cushion and arms draped loosely across his knees. It was a casual pose, but somehow still managed to look graceful and perfectly posed. He had an odd knack for that. Infuriating, some might say.

[Emily Littleton] Her eyes closed when he kissed her, and Emily stilled for a moment. Came to rest. If he hadn't known her better, Jarod might think that her breath had caught in her chest. Emily was just very good at being still. Quiet. (But not stealthy [an entirely different game]). She pulled that moment in, tucked it away in a deep, visceral part of her mind. It would be a long time, possibly (probably) never, before she stood in his kitchen, barefoot, like that again. Before he kissed her, like that, again.

Emily padded along behind him on the balls of her feet. When he dropped down into the sofa and assumed his somehow regal slouch, Emily scanned the living room and decided the better of sitting next to him on the couch. Jarod liked his legspace, she remembered. Instead, she sat on the floor beside the couch. Near enough to touch (tease [torment]) but not in his way. She was comfortable like that, too. Perhaps Emily was descendant from a long line of people who secretly wished they could sit on the floor, but were forced into stiff British furniture anyway.

"Taipei City," she replied, once she'd gotten settled in a way that left her casually within his arm's reach. "I'm not sure beyond that, though. Thankfully someone's coming to pick me up at the airport." The way she said it made it sound like Emily had no idea who that might be, and wasn't particularly interested in figuring it out before she arrived.

[Jarod Nightingale] Jarod watched Emily sit on the floor and tilted his head slightly to one side. A curious expression. It was... duly noted, how and where she chose to sit. For a moment he let it be. Instead, he mused on things like Taipei and family and awkward social gatherings. And the complete absence of warmth and comfort that Christmas usually left him with, contrary to its public persona. Not that it mattered, really. It was just a day, like any other.

"When are you leaving, exactly?"

Because he wouldn't want to keep her if she needed to pack. (Or perhaps, conversely, because he didn't want her to leave just yet.)

[Emily Littleton] "I have a red eye out, Christmas Eve."

Emily shrugged a little bit. Travel was travel. She'd spent several birthdays in airports. Christmasses wasted watching the snow pile up outside of the terminals. It didn't bother her any more. She actually prefered to travel on Christmas, because so few people would. There was a special sort of solace to be found at 30,000 feet. Isolated. Broken off from everything for a period of hours. Emily would use this trip to think a few things through. Like Jarod.

But that was not now. Now was sitting near him, but not tangled up in him. Talking to him like she imagined normal people talked to one another. Not about magic or innuendo but about the quiet, tiny details that made up the rest of one's life, Awakened or otherwise.

"I may be the only one wishing against a White Christmas," she jested lightly. But she was hoping against snow. Starting the adventure off with runway delays was... brutal.

She looked up at him quizzically for a moment. Fondly. "So if you're not going to see your family," she didn't make the mistake of saying home this time, "What are your plans for the holidays?" It was a light, take it or leave it kind of question. He could answer flippantly, like she most likely would have on another night or at another time, if he wanted.

[Jarod Nightingale] [Man+Subterfuge - *innocent whistle*]

[Emily Littleton] (Perception + Subterfuge -- Oh this game again?)

[Jarod Nightingale] He had, in fact, said that he wasn't sure if he was seeing his family. It was interesting that Emily had took that to mean a more-than-probable negative. Perhaps she'd already gotten used to the idea that he was the kind of person who never did things unless he wanted to do them. Doing things for selfless reasons seemed entirely an alien concept in conjunction with the persona he tried to put out.

She wasn't leaving until Christmas Eve. Well then, he didn't need to be so terribly concerned about letting her go just yet.

"There was never snow on Christmas, when I was a kid. I have to admit, though... I much prefer having it. Don't think I could move back to a warm climate." Between the various cities he'd lived in since graduating high school, he'd long-since adapted to Northern temperatures. Almost as if he were a native. It was in his blood, after all. On one side of the family, anyway.

But she'd asked him a question, hadn't she?

"I'll probably just stick around here. Christmas isn't really... something that I do."

[Emily Littleton] "I can appreciate that," she said, nodding a little. Emily shifted, leaning back against the couch and tipping her head back so it rested against his leg. Her eyes were closed and she looked thoughtful... no, restful. It was different, somehow, than content. And Jarod, for all his aloofness, could read the subtle difference though he might not know what to make of it.

She could appreciate it, but Emily didn't say whether she could understand, adopt, or approve of his isolationist plans. Her eyes flickered open again, leaving her looking up at his ceiling. Musing something quietly in her mind, something that slowly wound its way into words. (Since we're sharing...)

"We used to spend Yule and Christmas," so they were two different things to her, "At my grandmother's in Manchester." The city she'd left off of the list she'd given him, way back on that first night. "For several years straight, almost like a tradition when I was young. I don't remember why we stopped," she said, though Emily could have remembered if she tried.

She closed her eyes again, and breathed out the memories like nothing more than spent air. "Anyway... I wanted to apologize for the other night, with my roommates." The abrupt shift of topic left no wake in her expression. "It is strange, having someone over to my place. I haven't really had a my place I would want to share with anyone, save the Manchester House, but it's not exactly somewhere I can bring you... now."

The little word at the end curled oddly. It drew her eyebrows together for a moment, then released them. Now. Because the house had changed? Now. Because now was a bad time? Now. Because Emily did not go back? She left it, unexplained and mildly unhinged from the rest of the sentence, but it was not a syllable she wished (needed) to elaborate upon.

[Jarod Nightingale] Jarod shook his head gently when Emily offered her apology. No apologies necessary. "Really, it was fine. You were fine. Don't worry about it. Besides, we had fun, right?" The incident had ended rather well, from his perspective. As evidenced by the faint twitch of a smile.

She told him about her childhood. About home. In an odd way, it felt more intimate than kissing. This slow reveal of the pieces of history that made Emily who she was. And for all that it seemed such a casual, easy subject... he knew that it wasn't. Because this topic was nothing close to casual or easy for him either. (And yet, here they were. Talking about it.)

"My old neighborhood... it's one of those places where everyone is sort of required to spend thousands of dollars every year getting a professional light display put up on their property. Dad always got one of those manger scenes, and my mom... she hated it. She hated anything religious, really. One year she went out with a baseball bat and just completely destroyed everything. That was... a memorable holiday." And despite the bittersweet nature of the memory, he laughed gently, pulling his knees in closer to his chest.

"Anyway, I guess she rubbed off on me a little. And then, after she died... things were just... weird."

He looked away. At the large glass doors that led out to the balcony. At the lights from the city outside.

[Emily Littleton] When he spoke of his mother, Emily did not offer her condolences verbally. She did not lift her head, look at him with eyes brimming with sympathy. Instead, she remained quite still. The only part of her that moved was her hand, which reached up, up past the opposite shoulder, up far enough that she had to turn slightly. She reached back to lay her hand against whatever part of him was there. A knee, most likely, or some other part of his pant leg.

(I'm here.)

Emily sat with him for a moment, with her hand resting on him meaningfully. Not with sympathy or sadness, but simple human compassion. Affection.

(I'm here.)

He looked away, out the glass doors of the balcony. She counted the time that passed in the space of heartbeats, exhalations, not sweeping movements of a clock's hands. If he could feel her heartbeat from across the room, Jarod could certainly feel the steady thump of it in her chest here. Near enough to touch. Near enough to reassure.

[Jarod Nightingale] As strange as it felt to talk about it, it was similarly disquieting to have Emily there, with her reassuring presence and her hand resting on his leg. Jarod had to fight the urge to pull away and break the contact. It felt almost too intimate, in a way that made his stomach knot. But despite that... she could not have given him anything more. Anything better. How many people had offered saccharine sympathies that made him want to snarl and rip the world apart?

I'm sorry for your loss. She's in a better place, now. It'll be okay. Everything will be okay.

Lies.

This was better. This was honest. After a long stretch of silence, Jarod moved one of his own hands and let it settle on hers. Gentle contact shared.

"Anyway, I just... if I acted strange at all, last week, that's why. December 14th was the day it happened. I mean, it was a long time ago so... it's really not a big deal. But I know I get a little weird around then, typically." It was roughly the equivalent of Emily's own apology earlier. Though his was a little more awkward. He wasn't used to such open honesty, or apologizing in general. He certainly wasn't used to having to try and explain away an inexplicable desire to simply hold another person for a prolonged length of time.

[Emily Littleton] She let the the quiet hang there, suspended, for a little while longer. Then Emily tangled her fingers with his, squeezed briefly. She slid her hand out from under his and pushed herself to her feet in one fluid movement. Emily, now standing beside the couch, leaned down and kissed his forehead. It was an exceedingly gentle gesture. The some of affectionate display reserved for very small children, or sleeping loved ones.

"Of course it's a big deal," she said softly, but firmly. "She was your mother." Emily's eyes met his, but only for a moment. They were dark blue, slightly stormy, and immanently calm. He did not find reflected sadness there, only open acceptance.

She straightened up, pulling away from the intimate moment as gently as she could. "I'm going to put the kettle on," she said, assuming he had a kettle. He made tea, so clearly he had a kettle. Emily said this unequivocally, and clearly. Not so soft. Not so gently.

And then it was her turn to walk out of the shared space, leaving him to follow if he wanted. Or to stay.

[Jarod Nightingale] She was your mother.

But he didn't continue this line of conversation, because... really, he couldn't have even if he'd wanted to. And inevitably it led to questions like how? and why? and then to memories of terrible therapists who sat and stared at him like they expected him to fall to pieces at any moment. Or his grandmother loudly insisting to his father that he was simply... broken. (Not this son. He won't be normal, now. May as well focus on the others. The ones that can still be salvaged.)

Anyway, like he'd said. It was a very, very long time ago. Another life. Another reality. It all felt distant. Like a dream.

And now Emily was kissing his forehead and offering to put the kettle on, and it all felt just a little too... maternal. He held still for a long moment and watched her walk away towards the kitchen, and there was a very flat expression on his face. Like he wasn't entirely present. Finally his eyes seemed to refocus (and yes, Emily would find the steel kettle sitting on the back burner of his stove), and he cleared his throat gently.

"Tell me about your Grandmother's house."

[Emily Littleton] This was the first time Jarod had seen Emily in a kitchen space, truly. Seen how naturally she moved into it, how precisely and yet fludily she lifted the kettle by its handle, filled it, and returned it to the range top. Each subset of movement was almost an after-thought. Those same movements, in nearly the same spatial relationships, had been practiced time, and time, and time again. Emily barely had to think in the kitchen, and what thoughts did come flowed over (through) her like water.

"Hmmmm," she replied, thoughtfully, over the sound of running water. "It's quite old," she said, and Jarod knew that old in Britain meant something entirely different than old in Chicago. "And as far as I know, she lived there her entire life."

She looked down to flick on the burner, and then faced him. Leaning against the counter with her arms folded over her middle.

"There's this truly impressive staircase," she said with a fond smile. Emily looked down, and to the right as she reached back into her mind's eye for descriptors. "At least it seemed impressive when I was seven. I'm sure it would be rather plain to me now." A pause. A breath. "The third stair from the top squeaks, and I never could remember."

Home. Emily's fingers strayed upward, up to toying with that thin silver chain. To tease the locket out from under her sweater. Home. Home. Home. It's heart beat in time with her words, kept to the same cadence. And the more she spoke, the clearer its resonance became. Home. As if the locket, or whatever it housed, was as intrinsically linked to the Manchester House as Emily was.

"I spent a lot of time there in the winters. When I was young." She didn't say I lived there. "But I kept mostly to two or three rooms," Emily paused, and realied this might sound odd. So she added, in the spirit of sharing. "I was ill often in the winter." An explanation.

Home said her voice, and not in the things-wished-for or things-imagined sense. Home said the heart that she wore around her neck. Emily tucked it back under her sweater. Shrugged lightly.

"Mostly it was a big, old house full of doors I wasn't supposed to open -- but did anyway -- and secrets I never quite learned." There were still mysteries to solve there. Things that called her back, though Emily rarely answered.

Time had passed. Tiny beads of perspiration had gathered along the edges of the steel kettle. Soon it would shriek, and they would both twitch in that way that particular people did when something shrill and slightly unwelcome entered their aural space.

[Jarod Nightingale] She spoke, and he listened. It was a more comfortable position, listening. Absorbing. Learning.

For a long time he remained where he was, but towards the end he unfurled his limbs and stood up, pacing near-silently towards the kitchen to join her. He arrived right when the kettle started to hiss and steam. Before it whistled. But his taste in tea usually tended towards the varieties that needed slightly less scalding water anyway. He reached over and took the kettle off the heat before she could do so herself.

And all the while the locket hummed. Home. Practically alive with memories. Jarod reached out and ran his finger along the silver chain (playing with fire), but he stopped short of pulling the locket out from under Emily's sweater. "Sounds like it meant a lot to you." More than sounded. Felt.

His eyes raised up. Latched onto her own. "Hang on a second..."

And then he was away again, leaving her to fend for herself in his kitchen, should she desire to search out his tea cabinet. He walked down the hallway and disappeared into the bedroom, eventually reappearing with what looked like an envelope in one hand. When he returned, he paused on the other side of the granite island, then set the envelope down on it and slid it across to her. It was card-sized, and had Emily's name written gracefully across the front.

"Since you're leaving, I'd better give this to you now. Don't open it until Christmas."

[Emily Littleton] Jarod didn't do Christmas... and yet. Emily picked the envelope, inspected it curiously. She tipped her head just slightly and fixed him with a quizzical expression. But she would not open it, or even consider opening it, until Christmas. This likely meant she'd be seeing whatever was inside that envelope at a cruising altitude of thirty-plus-thousand feet.

"Thank you?" she said, a bit bemused. Not knowing the contents of the envelope, and this was Jarod giving her a sealed envelope, she couldn't quite be sure what response to offer up.

Emily set the envelope back down, gently. She toyed with saying the other thing she had meant to tell him tonight, meant to slip in before their conversation got derailed by memories and disclosures.

Since you're leaving...

The kettle was hot, and they could make tea and continue having a quiet, intimate evening with each other. It's possible that Emily had planned that, before she'd made her way to the kitchen, before ...

I want you to know,
That it doesn't matter
Where we take this road
Someone's gotta to


"I'll open it on the flight," she said, and Emily was pulling back artfully. She had practice in disentangling herself, and moving toward the (ready) exit without appearing to flee. "It's getting late," she said, casting a glance at clock in the microwave, on the stove -- whever his kitchen clock was. "I should head out."

Since you're leaving... (I'm already gone.)

[Jarod Nightingale] He didn't do Christmas. Or self-disclosure. Or relationships. Or... any of this, really. Things had been slightly off-kilter in his life for a few weeks now, and there was no particularly logical explanation for it. He could do things like ask Emily where she lived or give her a card because... ultimately it didn't mean anything deeper than the obvious sentiment behind it. He felt like seeing where she lived. He felt like talking to her. He felt like giving her something. Sometimes even he could get tired of the assumption that enjoying a person's company must mean something vastly more important to a person like himself than it did to anyone else, simply because of the nature of its rarity.

It simply was what it was. Giving someone a card wasn't supposed to be this huge gesture. He made the rules, and he could break them if he wanted to.

(So why, then, did it indeed feel as if somehow he'd lost his footing for a moment? Those steps, always so perfect and so certain - they slid now. Balance faltered.)

But only for a moment. After all, none of this really meant anything.

Jarod turned his head and watched Emily walk (flee) towards the door. His eyebrows went up slightly, and he uttered a far-too-pleasant little laugh. As if the whole thing was rather amusing to him. "Tease. Offering to make me tea and then taking off. Whatever am I going to do?"

But she wanted to go, so he wasn't going to stop her. Even if he did see faint etchings of fear at the edges of her well-crafted mask. (Perhaps even because of it.) Instead he simply remained where he was. No movement made to hug her goodbye. No expressions of regret at her sudden departure (other than the aforementioned jab about the tea.)

Instead he smiled, and said, "Have a nice trip."

[Emily Littleton] There's a moment, when she's slipping on her shoes, when that too-pleasant laugh hits home and it aches. It catches her breath in her chest, recalls the feeling of newly bruised (broken) ribs. And she imagines that she's hidden it carefully away, that there's no way this beautiful stranger could know the cold, metallic tasting panic that pinged at the back of her throat. The near keening feeling (sound) of her heart hitting the pit of her stomach. (Too late, too late).

No, Emily doesn't imagine it. She knows it. They are not the same, not on this point. So the too bright smile she tosses back is just cheeky enough, just playful enough, to cover the gap that sprang up so quickly between them. "Oh... I'm sure you'll think of something."

The lilt in her voice emulates, but doesn't truly echo, that of his younger sister's. It's coy, without being cloying. Emily is a little older than Maia, substantially less brazen, but she is practiced in this Art. This oh, so bittersweet science.

"I'll see you when I get back," she said, but there is no certainty to it. No promise. Emily isn't sure she's coming back. (She's never certain she's coming back.) If it had been anyone but Jarod, she wouldn't have said it at all.

There is a fissure in this mask, a tiny window to let him see in. It comes just before she closes the door behind her. In the softness of her eyes, and the (longing) sadness that has suddenly claimed them. In the too long pause that could not be accidental, before the door clicks quietly shut. And she's gone. (I'm already gone.)

She would see him when she got home. She wouldn't see him when she got home. She wouldn't come home. This isn't home. This is home.

Emily had only left his apartment, not even yet left the building, not quite yet left the City, but they were returned to an uneasy state of quantum relationships. Until someone picked up the phone, showed up on a doorstep, reached out on a snowy night, until one of them bridged that strange, sudden space, they either would or would not see each other again. Uncertain. Unstable.

Emily watched the illuminated numbers count down to the ground floor, waited for the doors to part and let her go free. She wished Charlie a good night. It wasn't until she got back to her car that her hands began to shake.

17 December 2009

Where she sleeps

[Emily Littleton] Jarod could be damned persuasive. Emily had known from the first time she'd met him that he was wildly manipulative, charismatic, dangerous. She'd known that his debonaire charm would lead her astray the first time she went home with him. She had never imagined that the trouble they'd be headed for, hand in hand, was her flat and its gaggle of roommates.

She'd all but pleaded with him to stay this course of action. She'd offered to show him her lab instead, with all its shiny robots, servo motors, fascinating tools and snazzy computers. Where she worked, where she studied, where abstract pieces of the extant world became part of her grey matter, filed away and understood in alarming detail. He didn't bite. Jarod, in his insistance on seeing where she "lived" had missed the bigger opportunity to get to know Emily.

She had roommates, she insisted. They were uncouth, unkempt college roommates. He wouldn't like it. Jarod had insisted. At some point she'd stopped making excuses and taken the fine, but you've brought this upon your own head tack with the argument.

At last she acquiesced, but the set of her mouth was less than entirely pleased. Emily led him not onto campus, but to a house a little ways away. The streets here were cluttered with cars, as the college kids lived too many to a house and took up all the available street parking. It was a decent neighborhood, in that no one was actively peddling sins and stray thoughts on the corner. It needed some maintenance. Here and there a streetlight flickered angrily, neglected and unmended. Their house was similarly maintained, and no holiday decorations festooned the exterior.

As they approached the front door, Emily looked over at him one more time, giving him one more out if he wanted it. The lights were on inside and he could hear voices, muddled and muffled from behind the door. More voices than the house would usually support. Emily had pulled out her keys, but she tested the door instead. It was unlocked.

She shoved the door with her shoulder, having to force it a little. It was either out of square or had swollen due to fluctations in temperature or humidity. As the door bumped free of the friction and swung open, the luke-warm air inside the house spilled out and what had been barely contained voices flooded out immediately after. She looked over at Jarod, lifted her eyebrows meaningfully, and stepped in.

The living room floor beside the door was a sea of shoes, boots and socks. Emily slipped off her shoes, but didn't leave them there. She set them on one of the lowest stairs of the staircase to the upper level. The living room held an odd assortment of hand-me-down seating, and a brick-and-board entertainment center. Someone's computer was plugged into the TV, playing music videos. Further in, people were gathered in the kitchen or milling about with red solo cups (booze [farewell to finals week]) in their hands.

"Little's home," a sandy-haired young man called toward the back of the house in an over-loud voice. Clearly tipsy, or worse. Then he saw Jarod, and added, ineloquently, "Whoa... she's got company."

[Jarod Nightingale] Whatever Jarod's motivations had been for insisting that he saw where Emily lived, he wasn't about to be put off this time around. Part of it was practical. (It really would be better if he knew where he knew these things... for her own protection.) But it was possible that the very fact of this being something that she fought so hard to keep from him was the very reason he felt he needed to see it.

He could be a bit sadistic, in a delightfully pleasant sort of way.

He had, of course, been prepared for a sight rather like the one that met his eyes when he pulled up on the street and stepped out of his car (which, in its own right, was likely to draw attention here if anyone saw it.) Just because he lived in luxury now, didn't mean he wasn't familiar with the typical college-student lifestyle. So he was on his best behavior as he eyed the house and followed Emily in through the front door. Despite the cold, he'd left his coat in the car (possibly because he didn't trust what might happen if he brought it inside), so he was dressed in a pair of black pants, with a matching suit-jacket and a white buttoned shirt underneath, hanging open casually at the neck with a few buttons left undone.

Probably not quite the same sort of get-up that the rest of the party-goers would be wearing. He followed Emily's cue once inside and removed his shoes next to her own, glancing around the place with open (and slightly smirking) curiosity. "Roommates having a party?"

[Emily Littleton] "Oi!" Emily had chided in response to the slightly tipsy greeting. She tossed the co-ed a look of mock frustration (or was that actual frustration), before turning around to make sure Jarod got in the door safely, and didn't spontaneous combust by letting his pristine socks touch their... questionable... carpetting. Emily wasn't sure when it had last been vacuummed, or if that mattered any more. The flooring might have attained sentience since she last heard of it being cleaned.

The blonde had piqued the attention of whatever (mob) crowd had gathered. A chorus of voices called out to welcome her ("Em!") and her guest ("And Friend-of-Em!") more or less in unison. Well, to be honest, less.

"When aren't they?" Emily muttered quietly to Jarod in response. She was not comfortable with this, with him being here, or the party. It rankled her, and that unsettledness slid beneath her skin. Maybe because he'd seen so much of her so recently, or maybe because Jarod was keenly aware of things he ought-not-notice, he could all but feel the shift when Emily started toward the kitchen. He could feel how far she'd withdrawn inside herself, when she looked back over her shoulder with a cheeky grin and asked him if he was coming with.

The kitchen was festively decorated in red, red, and booze. The roommates had bothered with some cookies, crackers, and what looked like it might have once been sandwiches, and then gone on to booze, booze and booze. Everyone in the kitchen was somewhat red-faced, bright-eyed and otherwise uninhibited. Everyone except a short, keen-eyed blonde who tracked Emily intently when they entered.

Emily pretended not to notice. Her smile was bright, her body language affable. She was pretending, valiantly, to be a-okay with all of this. "Wow!" she said to one of the other girls there, another brunette (caramel colored [green eyes] nice smile) "People." She looked around the room, quickly, not letting her gaze land on anyone.

"Happy... ah... Wednesday, then," she said, as if celebrating Wednesdays were terribly normal. "I'd like you all to meet my mate, name's Jarod," a small flourish, pointing him out, as if he wasn't painfully obviously the new person in the room. "And Jarod... I'd like you to meet... well, people." A broad gesture, indicating the room.

"Lessee. We've got ..." she pointed at each in turn, reciting first names or nicknames (the loud blonde was Duck, for an undisclosed reason) from memory. The blonde took her eyes off Emily just long enough to give Jarod an apprising look. Then back to Emily, Emily's left arm, Emily's seeming okay-ness after the previous night. The blonde's name was Marissa, and she did not say hi to Jarod or wave like many of the others.

Duck offered him a drink. Duck offered Emily a drink, but Marissa took the cup out of his hand before he could pour for her.

"Ah, right. Thanks 'Ris," Emily added quickly, before Duck could argue. "Still on those meds," she clarified, looking somewhat sheepish. "No mixing!"

Jarod, though, knew she wasn't taking anything of the sort.

[Jarod Nightingale] Even the smallest glance was enough to register just how painfully much Jarod stood out amongst this crowd. He was older by nearly a decade, for one. He was dressed far too nicely, for another. And even in the most luxurious of environments, Jarod stood out. Tall, blue-eyed asian-american halfbreeds who looked like models weren't exactly a common occurrence. But rather than be bothered by the way he stuck out, Jarod simply behaved as if it was of no concern to him. (Aloof, as usual. As if he lived up on a pedestal somewhere and was looking down at all the mere-mortals with reserved amusement.) The place was dirty. He could see it. He could smell it. And yes, it bothered him, but not enough yet to send him fleeing. He was too curious. So as they threaded their way into the kitchen, his only outward reaction was that he was rather careful not to touch anything.

Then Emily introduced him, and all of a sudden his demeanor changed. An absolutely radiant smile traced its way onto his features, and he glanced at Emily with a glitter of teasing humor in his eyes, responding to her introduction with an absolutely dead-on perfect London accent. "Oh, am I your mate now? I didn't realize." He dropped the accent just as quickly, turning back to the assembled group and noting each face in turn as Emily introduced them. A light nod was offered to the group in general. "Nice to meet you."

(See? Best behavior.)

When the booze was offered their way, Jarod gave a shake of his head, as if to imply that he didn't really have time to stay and get drunk, though the truth was really closer to: I'm not drinking cheap college-party booze. His eyes passed between Marissa and Emily, noting the exchanged looks and the interaction.

(The whole thing was rather oddly fascinating, really.)

[Emily Littleton] Jarod mocking her diction elicited laughter from more than one of the gathered. A pair of girls on the far end of the kitchen retreated into shared whipsers, titterings, which ultimately gave way to more laughter.

"Speaking of," someone said, rummaging around on the counter for a moment and then bringing forth a post it note (worn [been there for awhile]). "Your dad said to call the Embassy and renew your..." he squinted at the handwriting. "Fffff-something expert's license? Before your flight. If you can. Whatever that means."

Emily nodded. She didn't say much more than, "Thanks." She didn't want to elaborate on what a foreign expert's license is, why she'd have one, or where she was going. Jarod more than likely knew what the government paperwork was for, anyway. Her housemates, however, had only ventured outside of US borders for a collective three weeks.

After a few minutes of affable helloes and points of order, the Others started to go back to whatever they'd been up to before. Emily was quickly left out of all but Marissa's intent attention. She lived with these people, but they were not her pack or coterie. They were just people. Mundane people. Unawakened and largely uninteresting to her.

Jarod continued to be a point of interest. Some of the gathering bypassed talking to Emily all together, so they could (coyly) get to know him better. Ask about that impeccable accent. (That impeccable ass.) They wanted to know how he'd met "their" Emily (though the possessive was not spoken with any fondness). Some wanted to know more, and barely veiled their queries in entendre.

While the mob attention was focused elsewhere, Emily started collecting cups and pouring out their contents. She began shoving empty bottles into the box for recycling. Anything to keep her hands busy, and attempt to straighten up. If Jarod was more than passingly polite, the group would eventually separate him from Emily, leaving her to have a taut and unpleasant looking conversation in hushed sentences with the blonde, Marissa. If that went on more than a minute, Marissa would grab for Emily's arm, Emily would pull it away before Marissa could touch her, and what had been a controlled but intense moment would end in a slammed cupboard door, and awkward hush across the room, and Emily muttering, "Sorry."

If. There was always a chance it wouldn't go that far.

[Jarod Nightingale] Nice though it always was to be admired, Jarod's idea of interesting conversation didn't generally include inebriated co-eds. That said, he was a seasoned party veteran, and knew how to handle himself in a crowd. This was the first time that Emily will have seen him in his social element, if she happened to glance over and watch him while she busied herself cleaning up. Despite the fact that he couldn't have been entirely comfortable (he was still maintaining a safe distance from anything that looked even vaguely dusty or cluttered, which was a rather impressive feat considering that he never gave the impression of actually working towards this goal), he smiled at all the appropriate moments, and otherwise comported himself with seemingly effortless charm.

And he did allow himself to be separated from Emily for a time, going with the flow of the crowd and conversation as it turned to questions of himself and his relationship to Emily. Their Emily, they said, though he doubted as much. He told them that he'd lived in London once, among other places (though he wasn't terribly specific with details) and that he'd met Emily at a coffee shop (which was true) a few weeks ago. If they'd been hoping for juicy gossip, however, he didn't provide any, and if directly questioned about what the two of them had been doing together, he'd simply raise an eyebrow knowingly and shrug.

(Which, of course, would only serve to ignite rumors. But perhaps that was the intention.)

As far as flirting went, he humored the co-eds just enough to keep them interested. Once, he reached out to brush a lock of hair behind one girl's ear, his eyes luminous with wicked humor, but that was when the hushed disagreement came from the kitchen, and Jarod looked over to see the interaction play out between Emily and her roommate with a carefully guarded expression.

When it was over, he broke away from the flock and appeared at Emily's side, leaning in to ask quietly... "Can I see your room?" (Which was probably code for: let's go somewhere private and talk.)

[Emily Littleton] The co-eds were used to dealing with Emily, so Jarod was practically gushingly forthcoming in comparison. He was suave and intriguing. He answered without fully answering... He had a decade on them in this game, and it was showing. One of the brighter ones asked him "Oh, in which city?" when he mentioned meeting Emily at a coffee shop.

The group let him go to her without impeding him. Perhaps Jarod was just too ethereal to touch, to restrain with their attentions. Perhaps it was that he had a certainty to how he moved (predatory [graceful]) that they instinctually avoiding interfering with. Oh, or maybe it was because some was getting ready to pour another round of something.

Emily's body was rigid when he leaned in to speak to her quietly. The tension extended to the lines around her mouth and eyes. Her right hand rested carefully on her left forearm, holding it similarly to how she had that night earlier this week. Before he'd taken care of that conspicuous hurt. My roommate freaked out... she'd said.

She nodded in response to his question and exhaled slowly. Willed her shoulders to relax, by degrees. Emily could not get comfortable in this house, and it had very little to do with what had transpired in recent moments (days).

"Sure thing," she said, with that same too-bright, too-shallow smile in her voice and on her features. Emily tangled her fingers in his (mine [back off]) and led him through the gathering again. Touching him was more for the others, so they weren't followed, so it wasn't contested. Right? It wasn't just to touch him, feel the warmth of his skin. Right?

[Jarod Nightingale] There was an unintended consequence to the magical healing of wounds: most people did not believe that wounds could be healed in this way. Jarod rather hoped that Emily would be able to keep people from prying up her sleeve to take a look at the wound that wasn't there anymore.

She agreed to show him her room, and he allowed her fingers to tangle amidst his own (to possess, even if only briefly) as they threaded back through the crowd. His attention was entirely on her now, though if he was concerned, that much did not show in a way that the assembled party-goers would be able to easily detect. (The hand-holding was plenty indication enough to anyone who really knew him, though Emily might not yet have figured out that he didn't usually do that.)

And to top off the image (and really give the roommates something to talk about), he leaned in close as they walked, as if to whisper something in her ear, but pressed a small kiss there instead, along the sensitive outer cartilage. Anyone looking on would think they were probably going upstairs to fool around. (Well, people Jarod's age didn't really bother with fooling around, did they? To have sex, perhaps, or at least to do something along those lines.)

[Emily Littleton] Yes. The assembled housemates and houseguests would have plenty to talk about. For weeks. And that wasn't helped at all by the way that Emily's smile softened when he kissed her ear, or how her eyelashes fluttered shut for a moment. No, no. Their Emily had never softened like that before their very eyes. One or two of them might have imagined she had the capacity to... but seen it? No, none of them had. Jarod was curious, and curiouser yet was Jarod and Emily together.

Leaving them behind in the kitchen, Emily led him away from the gathering. Away from the pile of shoes in the living room. Up the stairs and into the second bedroom from the left. The room was a moderately sized bedroom for a house of that age, and it was clearly divided into two disparate separate spaces. One side had furniture, clutter, pictures of the blonde (Marissa), her friends, family, a class schedule (and Masters' swimmers practice times).

The other side was sparse, impeccably organized, and clearly Emily's. She had a futon, and it was folded in thirds and placed in the corner. Her bedding was folded, neatly, and stacked atop it with a pillow as the crowning element. Her side of the closet was entirely built in in shelves, with everything from a very small assortment of clothes (his guest room probably had a more complete wardrobe), her school books, and a few odds and ends tucked away without clutter. At the foot of where her futon would rest, there was a small bookshelf, with places to put her laptop, cell phone, etc, to charge for the evening. From what Jarod could tell, Emily essentially lived out of a space the width of a twin bed.

Maybe she hadn't been kidding when she said she'd spent a lot of time in Asia.

There were no pictures tacked to Emily's wall. She had a small, framed picture of her with her parents on one of the closet shelves. A single dried rose hung upside down from a satin ribbon, and this was pinned to the wall with a fabric-covered pushpin. Her side of the room had been vacuumed recently. Even her dirty laundry had been folded into its basket.

Sitting on one of the shelves, plainly in view, was a printed travel itinerary and a small maroon booklet with a gold-leaf design on the front. (Passport [British]).

She stopped, a couple paces into the room, and sort of shrugged as if to say This is it. So, you've seen it. Emily didn't, though, voice any particular sentiment. The party downstairs was far enough away to be indistinct. Finally, the tension in her shoulders began to earnestly give way.

[Jarod Nightingale] It was funny how he could appear so calm sometimes, even when he was anything but. No one would have noticed a rigid set to his shoulders downstairs, but as the pair of them entered the room that Emily shared with Marissa, and Jarod crossed over to the neat half of the room (Emily's half), he did seem to... relax. Just a little, but it was there.

His eyes gave a slow, detailed scan of the room's contents, noting in particular anything that might have seemed even vaguely informative or unique. You could almost see him processing it all and filing it away in his head.

"So what was your roommate so upset about, down there?"

Yes, he'd noticed. He hadn't simply dragged her up here to try and relive his college escapades. His eyes settled upon Emily's. Curious. Perceptive. Perhaps even.. concerned. And he moved to sit down on the edge of her futon as he waited for her answer.

[Emily Littleton] Emily positioned herself so that, if he turned just so, he wouldn't have to see the anxiety-inducing clutter of Marissa's side of the room in any direct way. It could flutter about in his peripheral attention, but that was far less distressing. Maybe he would understand, now, why this was the place that she lived but not Home. Why she carried Home on a chain around her neck, rather than investing it in a place like this.

"She's just worried," Emily said, shrugging her shoulders. She frowned, though, and stared at his feet instead of meeting his eyes. "I checked myself out of Student Health and didn't come back." Because she'd been at his place, asleep on his couch, beside him. "She wanted to see my arm. I guess she thinks I won't take care of it."

Emily slid the fingers of her right hand over her sweater, where it covered the newly mended skin. "I didn't want her to find out." Her expression shifted, as if she'd encountered something vile, when she said: "And I don't like to be grabbed at."

Emily hated to be anything resembling manhandled. Even when Jarod was aggressive, he had never pushed that boundary, never grasped for her the way Marissa had in the kitchen. She loathed it on a visceral level.

[Jarod Nightingale] "I'll try to remember that," Jarod mused thoughtfully, and the ever-so-faint glimmer in his eyes was the only indication that he might be thinking of anything less innocent than grasping for her arm. Truth be told, he probably didn't even need to be told. The entire time he'd been with Emily, he'd proven himself extremely (uncannily) good at reading her body signals. As he'd mentioned to her once... he could feel her heart beating across the room. And at the least, as odd as that thought may have been for her, it meant that he knew right away if he was doing something she either did or didn't like.

It meant that he never pushed, or hurt, or neglected. (On the contrary, he was extremely attentive.) In the end, that might have only made things more difficult, though. It was hard, sometimes, to reconcile the physical Jarod with the emotional Jarod (or rather, the seeming lack of it).

His eyes flicked down to Emily's healed arm, then back up to her face. To her eyes. And something... dislodged. His own eyes softened. "You're really tense. Is everything okay?"

[Emily Littleton] "It's just that..." Emily's expression turned thoughtful and she shrugged a bit. "I don't really live here." She finished the thought softly. It didn't upset her, or feel odd to say aloud. Emily spoke it plainly, like a well-worn fact. "Some times, most of the time, I sleep here. I get mail here. I have things here, but I don't think of it like home or anything."

Her eyes flicked over to the closet shelves and then back to him. Emily leaned her shoulder into the wall, folded her arms loosely across her middle. She shrugged again, and regarded him coolly. The tension had flowed away from her surface expressions. It was less immediately evident, but not gone.

"I... don't know what you hoped to find here, but I don't even have kitchen privileges." She chuckled, but it was somewhat empty. Not sorely so. Just empty. Most of the "homes" Emily had known were likewise empty. If Jarod's spatial reasoning was strong enough, he'd figure out that she could get everything she owned into the three cases she could take on an international flight. She could up and leave without so much as shipping anything onward. Emily could be gone in the morning, leaving behind an unusually clean footprint of where she'd once lived.

[Jarod Nightingale] "I hoped to find out where you lived," he responded rather matter-of-factly. As if this was all the reason anyone ought to need. "Or, ... slept, at least." As she'd put it. "Is it really that unbelievably shocking when I want to know the simple details of your life?"

Perhaps it was.

"I'd like to see your lab, too, if you'll show me. Since you say you spend so much time there." But he'd come here first. Which probably had more to do with Emily's own protests than he'd care to admit. Or... maybe simply because it made him feel more at ease to know where she slept. To have some idea of where she might be located at particular moments. (Everything in its place. Like his immaculately clean and organized apartment, where he knew exactly where every single one of his possessions could be found.)

"Besides, I had to let you show me off to your roommates. What kind of person sleeps with a model and then doesn't bother to use him as arm candy?" He was teasing, of course. Attempting to lighten the mood a bit as he leaned back on his elbows and tilted his head to one side, looking over at her with an expression that could only be described as... extremely kissable.

[Emily Littleton] Emily was not one of his possessions. And it would be difficult for Jarod, with his gifts and voids, to have a way to predict where she was at any given time. Fate had brought them near enough, time and again, that either might suppose an almost preternatural predictive tendency... but it was likely on Consquence at work, and nothing deeper. Emily could be found wherever Emily was, which had little to do with where she (often) slept.

"Another time perhaps." It was not no, but Emily was not offering another round of show and tell tonight. "And yes," she stated plainly. "It is a bit shocking that you'd want to know where I live." There was a little pause and then she added a bit, gently, to soften the edge of honesty in that... "You've been to University. London, right? There is nothing special about American college flats, or dorms, I promise you."

She smiled, and it was warmer somewhat. But Emily did not really know why he would want to muddy himself with the mundanity of her life. She wasn't really sure why he had seen her (at all) more than once. It was... strange. On some level, it made her happy. Happy was enough to keep her from asking too many pointed questions.

"So you model?" Emily did not verbally acknowledge the arm candy remark. but she did quirk an eyebrow at his occupation. "Aiya..." she breathed the word out gently.

Pushing away from the wall, Emily crossed over to where he was sitting. She finally bridged the distance between them so she could stand close enough to touch him. Rather than kiss him, and doing anything other than kissing him was difficult when he looked like that, Emily trailed one fingertip along his jawline. Touched it lightly to his lips. Gently withdrew it. "They're never going to let this go," she said, very softly. "But you knew that."

[Jarod Nightingale] She thought it was shocking that he'd want to know where she lived. (Slept. Kept her things.) There were many things that Jarod did and had done which most people would consider shocking, so perhaps it amused him a touch to imagine that something so simple could be so high on the list. Emily mentioned University, and he corrected her assumption with a brief interjection. "Oxford." For school, at least. (An amusing image, perhaps. Jarod wasn't exactly your classic Oxford student stereotype.)

"And... yes, I know. A dreadfully silly and superficial career. My family is forever horrified. But it pays for the apartment, and the car." And he was probably very good at it. He looked like he was about to say something else, but whatever it was, it died on his lips to moment Emily's fingers touched his jaw. He looked at her for a long moment, then he grinned.

"Of course they won't. Admit it... you like knowing you're the source of juicy gossip. Suddenly you're this mysterious person living a life that none of them will ever fully comprehend, and that they all wish they had."

[Emily Littleton] Emily looked at him oddly for a moment. The her mouth twitched, its corners reaching upward, tugging, tugging until she broke into a broad smile. It touched her eyes, brightening them noticeably. And then, Emily laughed. It was short, but she laughed like he had said something horribly funny. And it was only fair, given how often he had laughed at her.

"Oh, Love," she said, tossing out the endearment without even really noticing it, "I have my hands full with being baffled and seeking center. I have no time at all to worry about what they're wishing."

That word, the one she hadn't noticed she'd said, it had an enviable warmth to it. It came from some place deeper than her laughter and was utterly unburdened.

She leaned down and placed a kiss at his hairline. Affectionate. Not entirely chaste, but not segueing into anything more. Her laughter no longer rang in his ears, but it lingered in her eyes for a long moment. Even after she had straightened back up.

"I don't think I have an opinion on modeling as a career," she mused, having thought about that bit of their conversation a little more now. It was an interesting thought form. She didn't have enough information to evaluate model as a valid career course, or enough of an idea of Jarod's metrics to measure it. If it suited his purposes, then it was, for lack of a more compelling argument, valid.

[Jarod Nightingale] She laughed at him, and then she called him Love, and the latter of these was rather more troubling, though it could easily have been of little meaning. (His agent called him "love" on a regular basis.) At the least, he didn't seem terribly offended (or even, offended at all.) But he did get rather quiet and pensive, as if he had a lot on his mind.

Emily told him she didn't have time to worry about what other people might be wishing, and Jarod rolled his shoulders in soft shrug, as if to say that these sorts of details didn't really change his opinion on the matter (that Emily deserved, at least for a moment, to know that she was worthy of gossip - and had a right to enjoy it), and that, anyway... it wasn't all that important. When she kissed him, he closed his eyes briefly, but it was over soon enough, and once again his gaze followed her back up.

"No? Well, that's refreshing." Most people had an opinion, one way or the other. And after a pause of consideration, he glanced briefly towards the closed door, and then back up again.

"They'll be expecting us to stay up here for awhile, which means you have one of two choices: submit to tedious questioning, or kiss me for real. I leave the choice up to you." The corners of his soft lips twitched up just slightly.

[Emily Littleton] "Two choices?" Emily looked down at him with the echo of a smirk tugging at the corners of her mouth. Willing her to smile more completely. "And here I thought you were far more creative than that..."

She didn't wait for him to follow up with some witty new suggestion, or a way to really give her roommates something to talk about. Of the two proferred choices, Emily vastly prefered leaning down to kiss him again. For real. And that's precisely what she did.

15 December 2009

Ring, ring

[Emily Littleton] It was late into the afternoon on Thursday when Emily found a quiet place and pulled out her mobile. She dialed the number from the man in park, feeling it was somehow important to reach out and touch him. Especially as she couldn't remember his name. Curious. Curiouser. Her own number showed on his caller ID -- Chicago prefix. If he'd programmed in her number, it might say Emily. Or Emily Littleton. She couldn't remember if she'd given him her full name or not.

[Wharil Choc]The phone rings once. Twice. The phone begins to ring a third time, and just at the first sound of the digital tone the line opens up.

Somewhere on the other line, another phone rings. Not a cell phone but the distinct double ring of one of those desk-top office types. The ones that people tended to ignore because picking it up wasn't their job. Someone was doing that to this phone. Someone was chattering to someone else. Someone just barely managed to say 'Just let me get this' before that same someone said 'Hello?' The voice was clearer this time, obviously speaking to the caller. To Emily.

The other background sounds drifted away steadily, before they were suddenly cut off b the sound of a door bouncing shut.


[Emily Littleton] "Ah, hello. This is Emily Littleton," she said, and in this moment the strongest influence to her muddled accent is somewhat European. Her Ts are neatly clipped, and her vowels a little broader. She is not from around here, but Wharil knew that. She is also not sure how to ask for the man she is calling by name. It is awkward.

There is only low white noise from her side of the connection. No office sounds. No way to place where she may be. It could be the hum of a server cluster, or the refridgerator, that breaks the abject silence around her.

[Wharil Choc] "Hello Emily." He comes right back. "My name is Wharil. Wharil Choc." And just as before he says it with a flourish of something that isn't English. Isn't anythin european either. It sounds like nature talking. Like the sound of birds and breaking branches. Like rocks tumbling down a hillside. Who-ah-reel comes out in a smooth arrangement of tongue, teeth, and lips. Choc is as abrupt as a falling rock.

"You...probably don't remember me all that clearly. We met in the park. And a couple times before that, but you're even less likely to remember those times. Anyway, I guess you're calling because you wanted to know more?"

[Emily Littleton] No, admittedly, she does not remember him clearly. He shimmers at the edge of thought like a mirage, and the more surely she grasps for the thoughts surrounding him the more certainly they slide away. Emily is not used to facing such fickle remembrances. It is a little unsettling.

"That is quite right," she answered simply, trying not to let the nascent confusion bleed into her tone. She is calm now, calmer than she has felt in many weeks. It is easier to have these conversations now that she has rested. "If the offer still stands, that is."

There is a lilt to the last line, a tone that carries it upward in an audible smile. Warmth.

[Wharil Choc] "Of course it does. Like I told you, you're already in the club. No point restricting membership now."

There's the sound of footfalls in a hollow hallway. Another door opens. Wind and rushes into the receiver, along with the city traffic in the distance.

"So tell me, Emily Littleton. How did this all start for you? At what point did you realize things were...more than what you'd thought they were?"


[Emily Littleton] "Oh..." Emily offered a small, meaningful sigh up at that question. Wharil was, after all, the first person to ask after the how's and why's of her Awakening. It was not something she had any practice explaining, to date, and that made her mouth set in a pensive moue and her eyes darken thoughtfully.

"A little over a month ago," she started, measuring the words carefully as she offered them up. "I was working on an engineering project here on campus, trying to sort out what was wrong with our design." Emily carefully stayed away from jargon that might clutter up the description. "It was late. Three, maybe four in the morning. Late enough that I'd decided to just work all night rather than trying to catch a cat nap."

She paused here, waited, then continued on. "It took me awhile before I realized that I wasn't just thinking things through, tracing the circuits in my mind's eye. I could almost see the electricity running through the circuits and gates..." It sounded mad. Emily had sounded mad when she tried to explain it to her graduate students as well. "I just knew where the weak spots were, the places that restricted or impeded incorrectly. Knew with that certainty science rarely has. As if I'd been especially Englightened." She did not yet know it was a bad word, when capitalized like this.

[Wharil Choc] "Huh." he says simply, apparently as a precursor to an uncomfortably long silence. It did sound mad. It would sound mad to anyone. Anyone that hadn't gone through something similar, that is.

"So you're an engineer. What exactly were you designing anyway?"

[Emily Littleton] "We were working on a prototype system. It's difficult to explain, exactly, with any concision. Essentially we're trying to miniaturize some chipsets, and quantify the physical effects of running exceedingly tiny things at extremely high frequencies." She paused a little, mentally translating from geek-to-human as she spoke. "Very odd things happen to electronics at that scale."

It didn't sound particularly magical. Just very techincal.

[Wharil Choc] "Uhh-huh." came the reply over the line. As was probably expected, it sounded like the expression one made when they understood less than half of what was previously said. More worrying is the quiet that follows. A pondering of way from somewhere classified best as 'completely lost'. This was the guy who was supposed to teach her?

"Uhm...I'll admit right off the bat that...that sounds sort of...out of my league. I'm not a very good technical person. Much less technological."

[Emily Littleton] Emily chuckled. It was a warm sound, resonant and commiseratory. There was no derision or condescension to it. "Oh, that's quite alright. It isn't everyone's cup of tea." The warmth extended to her words, as well. Wharil was surely not the first person who had offered up glazed eyes to the subject of Emily's studies.

"And if it is any consolation... I am not purely a technocrat." She had not yet learned that the capitalized version of that word was naughty. Emily used it in the most mundane of ways. "I also enjoy cooking, very good tea, and read philosphy books on long plane flights. I promise not to bore you over much with circuit boards or physics equations."

[Wharil Choc] "Not a...oh. I see what you mean." Nervousness and sudden comfort in such few words. He clears his throat but moves on. "Philosophy. That's good. It'll serve you well. Like I said, I don't know if I can keep up with you technologically, but there are others in my tradition who can. We call them Locksmiths. Or Lucksmiths. But their real name is Lakshmists.

"Do you know who Lakshmi is?"

[Emily Littleton] "I'm afraid not," Emily said plainly, but there was an undercurrent in her tone that implied that deficit would not remain for long. She was, after all, a University student. She was technologicaly adept. Sooner or later she'd be near enough a computer terminal to type in the word Lakshmi and read anything and everything that came back.

[Wharil Choc] "You ever go into a hindu-run mini-mart or something and see a picture on a wall? Lady with four arms, usually in pink or blue, holding flowers? That's Lackshmi. She's in charge of trade and fortune and luck, among other things. Unseen or unpredictable patterns that affect peoples lives. The members of my Tradition that follow her have begun looking for those unseen patterns in places other than trade. They've learned to find it in science and technology. And they've learned to us that to shape their world.

"That's...what this is, by the way. What you've awakened to is the innate ability within yourself to change the world. And all you need to do it is a bit of understanding, and your own will. We call it Siddhi. Most people call it Magic."

[Emily Littleton] Emily was quiet for awhile, considering. Her side of the line went almost completely quiet, except for that low background basso thrum. Then she made a small, thoughtful sound, indistinct, and replied.

"I would say that your Lady has had quiet a hand in my life of late," she said, the words brimming with unsaid implications. "At least since I awakened, as you put it. Probably a fair bit before as well."

If one was to believe in Fate, then Emily had a lot of potential data to back up that proof. The same people wandering in and out of her life, time and again, who had never been there before Waking Up. The very nature of her Awakening itself could be taken to fit a search-for-pattern and things unseen theme.

"How do you know?" she asked, after another pause. "Which Tradition you belong to?"

[Wharil Choc] He laughs at that. Not cruelly or teasing. Just a soft amused huff. And then, ever the gentleman, he apologizes for doing so.

"I'm sorry, I shouldn't have laughed at that. It is afteral a valid question. Its just...its like asking how you know what religion you're born into or what Extra curricular club you were born to take. We're all just people, Emily. No matter what anyone else might tell you, we're just people. What we believe in, however, and how that influences us...that's what's different. And yet...the same. That's what the Traditions are. A group of people believe in A, so they go into club A. You've just awakened, so you've still got to make that decision.

"Mind you, some of us are lucky enough to fall in by accident. There are sort of Family Traditions that people just happen to be born into. And then there's little accidents. That's how I wound up with the Euthanatos. Wrong place. Wrong time. All the right circumstances. But somewhere along the line it all just...made sense. So I stuck with it. That might have been my choice. That might have been fate. What better company to learn the difference with than the scholars of Fate and Fortune?"

[Emily Littleton] Emily made a small, pensive sound, but pulled it back quickly. Before arguing. She had called him for help, after all, and questioning him straight out of the gate might not have been welcome. Dozens of questions rested on the tip of her tongue, but she had to choose carefully what she said next.

"I... can appreciate that." Not understand, or adopt, but appreciate. "I suppose I've not had the luxury of just knowing anything that soundly. For me it's more... a group of people believe in A, so I'll study A, see how it works for them, take it apart and put it back together in an A that works for me. But bits of B, C, D, et cetera, will creep in over the years. A isn't enough, however perfectly valid it is on its own, if there are twenty-five other letters to explore."

She shrugged, but he couldn't hear that across the line. All that came across was her attempt at explaining the insatiable curiosity that drove her studies, her intellect. Emily needed to know. She could stay up all night reading the deepest secrets about something she would use, maybe, once in her life. But leaving stones unturned? No!

"Do people ever, ah, rotate through? Like graduate students picking their field of study? Could I ... intern.. with groups until I found one that fit?"

[Wharil Choc] "Hmm. That's a good way of putting it. In fact, with things the way they are right now, that's likely what you'll be doing anyway. I'd love a chance to talk more about the Philosophy of Fate with you, among other things. If your the kind that wants to quantify magic into something...I dunno. More technical? Then i've got a friend you can talk to about that. And, because our lives before awakening is what leads us to the awakening itself, I've got a friend you can talk shop with when it comes to Science. Her name's Henri Beane"

Henri Beane? That name sounded vaguely familiar didn't it? Perhaps Emily had read it in some science journal somwhere? Yes, that was very likely it. It was obvious now. Henrietta Beane. A child prodigy from New Zealand and the youngest person ever to earn a masters degree in Physics. The fourteen-year-old kid genius had disappeared from the public eye 3 years ago. And now her named popped up in Chicago, from the mouth of a man talking to her about magic.

[Emily Littleton] "Henrietta Beane?" Emily asked, the way others might ask if Wharil had just mentioned a rock star casually by name. Then again, given recent developments in Emily's personal life, having those kinds of connections in Chicago probably wasn't too terribly unusual. Rather than turning into a gushing fan-girl, Emily left it at that. Beane was brilliant. Emily could admire that.

"To be entirely honest, Wharil," she said candidly, pronouncing his name exactly as he had, without any American-ness to her accent. "I don't know that I want to run these two parts of my life together that closely. What I do already borders on technomancy, in an unAwakened sense, and I'm wary of narrowing my interests too much, becoming pigeon-holed into one mindset, one way of looking at things. The mind suffocates without new ideas, new challenges."

She had given it plenty of thought. Which was odd, considering that Wharil was the first (as far as he knew) to give her this particular pep talk.

"But I would like to talk to you about Fate, and I would like to learn about the other wonders I have passed by, unseeing, for all of these years."

[Wharil Choc] "That...is a very reasonable and well thought out decision. I'll tell you now though, there's really no hope bouncing around, or remaining outside of the traditions for too long. Things get...a bit more complicated. Those wonders turn into horrors sometimes. And you'll need the support to sort it out.

"I'm not trying to scare you, though. Just...being honest. It happens. You need to know."

[Emily Littleton] There was a little pause. If Wharil had been sitting with Emily, rather than on the other end of the phone line, he would see her reach up and pinch the bridge of her nose. He would hear her exhale carefully, softly, as she dropped that hand down to toy with the locket she always wore. But he was not present, and she had the presence of mind to move the phone away when she sighed, so all he had was another stretch of quiet.

"This, I have heard before," she said, again plainly. "But there are others, who have not yet chosen or may not choose. Are there not?"

Others... like the red-haired woman who kept Court with Emily in the clearing with the Fallen Kings. Like Enid, perhaps, who did not seem to have fallen in with a family of her own. Like Emily, who was not even sure what the teams were yet.

[Wharil Choc] "Never for very long." He answers candidly, unphased by her logic. And then, it seems, its time to move on.

"So, I'm guessing you've still got that business card I gave you? The Bed and Breakfast there isn't really a Bed and Breakfast. It's a chantry. A sort of club house for the awakened. And they've got a pretty decent library there. Can we schedule to meet there some time? There's some people i'd like you to meet, and a couple books I think you should look over."

[Emily Littleton] "I would quite like that," she replied, and the warmth had wormed its way back into her tone. "I should finish my exams by the end of the week, and I'll have some time before classes start up again. Though I'll be out of town for New Year's."

Emily doesn't say where. But it isn't hard to work her schedule around Wharil's, or even to play things by ear with the young Orphan. She's quite accomodating, and eager to learn more about this magical society. To find her family, of sorts, and start fitting in again.

[Wharil Choc] "Lets make it mid January then? Don't figure the word'll end before then." This last bit he says with a cautious bit of a chuckle.

"Until then...stay safe, Emily."

[Emily Littleton] "You, too, Wharil." She smiled, and he could hear it in her voice. "And thank you for taking the time to talk to me. I'll see you then."