
a twine of threads
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So... A Guy Walks Into a Bar...
June 02, 2009
If the orangery were far smaller, Loki might have taken it over by now. As it is, he's made himself very much at home in a nook by one of the vast glass windows. The spread around him has grown from coffee and book to coffee, coffee pot, stack of books, current book being read, phone downloading all the day's RSS feeds into sorted lists, and a jacket spread across the back of the chair. He looks almost comfortable; by his usual standards, he has metaphorically kicked off his shoes and propped his feet up on the coffee table. He has been wandering today, wearily, wearily and with the confusion borne of turmoil both internal and external. This time he's a bit slower as he crosses through the orangery, his cane tapping lightly on the flagstones. It signals his approach in a way that voice alone could not or would not do. Loki didn't look up until you spoke. There is knowing someone is coming, and then there's knowing if they want you to know. "Sit," he says, waving towards a free chair at the table. He does not say anything about how you look, or not having seen you for longer than expected. "You want any coffee? I didn't think to bring a second cup." "Nah." Pres sits down heavily, with an inscrutable look at you before he turns a brooding look onto the garden. He slouches in the chair, sticking his legs out in front of him and leaning the cane against the arm of the chair. "Not thirsty. Except maybe for Red Bull and vodka." "By someone in the family here." It's a guess, but now Loki looks a little weary himself. "If I could pull drinks out of the air for you I would, but since I can't, I'll offer to play designated driver at the next opportunity to hit a bar." "Yeah, right about now I've had enough of drinks being pulled out of thin air." Pres gives you a steady look, and waits for a moment to see how you'll react to that before he continues. "The job's a little weird, but I kinda seem to have signed on for it without being asked if I wanted it. I'm not sure how I feel about it. Oh, and I ran into your pal this morning here - I think I pissed him off, but that just makes us even." "They do that. Giving the job without you applying for it. As I recall, when I agreed to work for Gwilym, I was jet-lagged to hell and thought I was answering a completely different question." Loki pours himself more coffee, watching you just as steadily. "It's sort of irrelevant at this point, I figure. I got all of the yelling at him out of my system a while back. If you're up to 'not sure' on how you feel about it, you're already doing better than I was." "Which one's Gwilym?" Pres has not met Gwilym. He leans forward and folds his arms on the edge of the table. "Sure as hell looks like they do - well. I can't say that. Aside from your pal's brief interest in Gilly, she seems well out of it. Thank god one of us is." "Gwilym's--it's hard to explain. He's a charming bastard." Loki shrugs that off as not relevant to the conversation at hand, and just watches you. "I won't tell anyone. I'm getting pretty fucking good at holding secrets for people lately. You think I've told my dad about any of this? He'd have me kidnapped by a deprogrammer by now." "I don't think it'd help." Pres admits it bluntly, looking at you and then away. "It's just - I can't be there for my sisters, you know? When the shark took half my leg, I just - I pulled away from everybody. Not anybody's fault. Just the way it is. And they kept going while I was sitting there trying to figure out how to get back to step one." Loki watches apricot bits fall on the ground, and drinks his coffee. "If you're not okay with what's being asked of you, Pres, tell me. And I'll--fuck. Fuck if I know what I'll do. I couldn't even get out of the job I didn't know I was agreeing to, and I tried. But if you want out of this, tell me, and I will do whatever I can to help." He looks up at you, expression mournful. "I - I don't know. I like him, and that - fuck." Pres sighs, and looks down again, dropping his shoulders. "I really like the guy. I don't get it. Why do I have to like him like this? But there's just something. About him, I mean." Loki sets his coffee down. "Sure. Anything you need." He means it somewhat more than he realizes. Pres stands up very carefully. And then he starts taking off his belt, and opening his trousers. There is a split second of This is awfully public before Loki drags his mind back out of the gutter to wait for--what you need to show him. Though he is still enough himself to check around for any signs of other people coming. Off come the trousers. He's still wearing his boxers, so it's not immediately a precursor to lewd and licentious acts. And so far nobody's coming, though if someone where, well, there's multiple angles they could be coming from. Pres steps out of his trousers to stand straight, giving you an expectant look. It takes a moment for realization to hit. After tattoos that magically appear overnight and other such flashy results, magic with very ordinary-looking results takes a little longer to notice. "...oh." Loki leans back a little, and looks down, then up again. "The next time we go out for drinks, it's coming out of that account of siphoned money. I'm just saying." Pres snorts at that, almost laughing although not quite. He pulls up his pants, replacing the belt and then half-falling into the chair again, closing his eyes. "All I did was take a fucking date off his plate. Next thing I know I'm in this - this modernized Roman villa or some shit, a fucking palace," he curses a lot more when there's magic involved, "and he has wings. I didn't even notice my leg was fixed. I'm still having trouble believing it's not going to - y'know - wear off at the wrong moment." "You're better off not going into politics. You'd end up like my dad." Loki looks around the orangery a moment. Still trying to collect himself. Somehow, it's easier to find calm beneath Balthazar's impending supernova than beneath your worry. He listens quietly, cracking his knuckles with nervous energy, fidgeting a little in his seat. It isn't that he's not interested - he clearly is, his attention remaining on you fully. It's just hard to parse, hard to accept, and yet, he has to parse it, has to accept it. Make sense of it. "Yes. He's exactly like that. I never won an argument with him, not once." Loki has to stop as yet another little fact falls into place with a click against something else. "He actually warned me about getting too near Gruffydd. I'm not sure if the warning is now moot or not." "I dunno, seems like good advice to me," Pres retorts, mouth twisting wryly. He's calmer than he was when the conversation began, though there's still uneasiness and doubt and turmoil within him. "And - yeah, pretty much. I don't know." He chews at his lower lip viciously. "He's evidently already cleared it with his - with his wife. And talking about rooms for me to stay in, and stuff. I don't know. What d'you think?" "I think I'm going to miss seeing you." Loki cuts a fast, sharp smile. "And maybe envy you a little. Make sure they have a fucking internet connection somewhere in that palace, would you? I don't know what Gruffydd's like, but that's a serious job offer. You want it, take it. If he really wants to give you the job, he'll help you work out the weird little details. If Balthazar can be a an official Duke with the paperwork to prove it in this place while also being part of the royal family there, I'm pretty sure they know how to give you some good excuses for your parents." "I think something's been setting this up for a while." It's not the weirdest thing he's heard, though it may be the weirdest in the last hour or so. Loki gives that some honest thought, chin resting on his hands. "Maybe." He's not entirely convinced, but he nods to you, rubbing his face with a sigh. "Maybe. I don't know. But - damn it. I don't even know what I feel and I have to figure out how to talk to people about this? Maybe not everybody, but Maddie... fuck. I really don't want to have that conversation, y'know?" "Ask questions. Even the nitpicky ones or the stupid ones. You don't know what you're in for or how you'll like it until you get all the context that they're not giving you. Not because anyone is trying to keep it secret, but because the whole lot of them are so steeped in this background it never even occurs to them to tell us what we need to know unless they're asked." He laughs a little, at that. "Maybe. Maybe." Pres sighs. "I think I need to go - lie down or something. Fuck, I don't know. My head's a mess, you know? Thanks for letting me rant. Listen. Is there anything maybe I can do for you? I don't know what, but if you can think of anything..." "Not really." Loki absently adjusts a stack of books to line up more neatly with each other. "I can't do much for the facts, but if you want a better chance at getting some rest..." The offer dissolves into a shrug, and he looks away. "It is what it is. We all figure out to cope in our own way. Wish I could do more to help." "You already did a lot. But you know me better than most so it's easier for me to talk to you about stuff. I hate that it feels like I lost you as my best friend, kinda, as it is." Pres' smile is lopsided. "I just don't want to slide any further down the list. Okay?" "You haven't." Loki can't entirely hide the tinge of hurt in his voice. "Go get some rest, anyway. We can haul out of this castle for a while later and get a drink somewhere more normal." "That sounds good," Pres admits wistfully. "I think I'm beginning to forget what normal is." He stands, bending to pick up his cane, then leans over to lightly punch you in the shoulder. "Hey. Still friends no matter what, right? Girls, boys, whatever." "No matter what." Loki does a quick cross-his-heart that's only mostly ironic. "Text me when you want to get that drink. I'll find the most normal pub within an hour's drive." "'Kay. I'm going to go lie down. If anybody comes looking for me - heh. Not that they will - tell 'em you think you saw me about to go explore the west side of the castle." Pres' grin is a quick thing, a glimmering echo of what it used to be once upon a time. Which is still about a thousand times better than what it's been for the past couple of years. "Don't take any wooden nickels, Loki. Thanks." He turns to head into the castle, walking slowly. Posted by rowan at June 02, 2009 08:41 PM |