sunnydalealum (
sunnydalealum) wrote2008-10-05 04:52 pm
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Just keep an eye on that card every now and then, he said. You'll know where to go when the time's right.
Beth's entirely aware that probably means it's magic. Which means there's any number of other things it could be doing. Which means she seriously considers not taking it home with her, in case it could be used to track her -- but the only other place she could keep it is at the shelter, and she won't do that. It'd endanger everybody else there, the ones who come in for food, the ones who work there, Peter --
She won't, that's all.
So she sticks it to the fridge with the same magnet Spike left for her back in May, and that's where it is the Monday after Thanksgiving, when she sees that it's changed. There's an address there now, in that same elegant typeface, like it's been there all along.
Aequitas. She's looked it up. Latin for justice.
It's with a certain sense of fatalism that she steps off the bus a block from the address on the card, five days later, and walks toward the building.
(It's also with the same black wig she wore that night, as a sole concession to paranoia.)
Beth's entirely aware that probably means it's magic. Which means there's any number of other things it could be doing. Which means she seriously considers not taking it home with her, in case it could be used to track her -- but the only other place she could keep it is at the shelter, and she won't do that. It'd endanger everybody else there, the ones who come in for food, the ones who work there, Peter --
She won't, that's all.
So she sticks it to the fridge with the same magnet Spike left for her back in May, and that's where it is the Monday after Thanksgiving, when she sees that it's changed. There's an address there now, in that same elegant typeface, like it's been there all along.
Aequitas. She's looked it up. Latin for justice.
It's with a certain sense of fatalism that she steps off the bus a block from the address on the card, five days later, and walks toward the building.
(It's also with the same black wig she wore that night, as a sole concession to paranoia.)
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"Live a little!"
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"Aaaand, loooong, short-short, loooong, short-short--"
And in they go, onto the dance floor, and the music crashes down on them both quite literally, heavy and loud and just the kind of music to send your heart racing right into a coronary event.
Lorne loves it.
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and then it resolves from loud noise into music, like black-and-white brightening into color, and the bass is like a second heartbeat drumming in her chest and pulsing up through the soles of her feet.
It's overwhelming.
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He nods up to the ceiling, where the speakers hang in neat little rows, making up an equally neat grid of sound waves that go only in the direction the speakers are aimed. It's sheer, technological brilliance, and the geek in him loves it.
And it's like they say: Sharing is caring.
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And the music's everywhere and she can feel herself wanting to move to it.
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Leave your troubles outside, as they say in Cabaret. Of course, the Emcee says a whole lot of other things as well, but nothing so fitting as that.
Out there it may be winter, but in here and so on and so forth. Not to mention Lorne is silently encouraging, leading Emma through something less and less like a fox trot and more and more freestyle.
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Just let go, the music whispers. Dance. You can if you want to.
She's starting to follow his lead, starting to move on her own, an unconscious grace sliding into her limbs, a breathless half-smile starting to spread on her face.
And all around her are people dancing, people with unlikely skin tones and unusual numbers of fingers or eyes, people with feathers and scales, people with fangs, we're all just people, even her --
Just dance.
Even her, but --
Just let go.
-- but the thing is --
You know you want to.
-- it's not just paranoia.
Beth stumbles to a halt, her mouth moving -- soundlessly, in the roar of the music.
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When she falters, he falters too, bumping into her smaller frame with a hesitant, apologetic mumble. Maybe he can't read lips, precisely, but the message comes across nonetheless, and he gently guides her off the floor to one of the empty tables.
"Might take a while for your ears to stop ringing, first time around." He pulls out a chair for her. "I'm sorry, sweetie. I didn't mean to... drag you in at the deep end."
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"Sorry," she mutters. "Sorry, I'm -- it's not your fault, it's me."
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"Nothing to apologize for, I promise."
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A watery smile. "And be No Fun Girl for a while."
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"Wanna tell me about it?"
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"There's not much to tell," she says, almost truthfully. "Just a kind of, what do you call it, phobic reaction. That I get sometimes."
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"Too crowded? I know that feeling."
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"But this is okay," she adds hastily, indicating the table where they're sitting now.
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'Kinda' is by far good enough.
"Good. So...time for me to be the validation hussy I am. How do you dig the digs so far?"
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Her smile's back, and it's only partly for his benefit.
"It's ... kind of awesome."
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Yes, he's so tangential tonight, isn't he. Words, like music...few other concepts amuse and intrigue him as much. Stating the obvious, much?
"Thank you, sweetheart. I'm glad you like it." He is. So happy he's brimming with it. "Do you know what aequitas means?"
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She hasn't really thought about the name since first stepping in. For the first time, it occurs to her to wonder why it's called that.
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"Smart and cute..."
But that's in the past, and in the past is where it should stay, or he's certain it'll drag him right along with it. Wouldn't be the first time someone gets lost in the past.
He lifts his head, catching the eye of one of the waiters. They need refills.
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"I looked it up," she admits, half-apologetically.
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Lorne shakes his head and raises his hand to wag not one, not two, but his entire set of fingers at her. "Don't sell yourself short. You looked it up, and that's more than most would've bothered with. All right?"
Getting out his trusty pack of Camel brand cigs, he lights up and takes a deep drag. If he can't have a drink right away, nicotine makes for the best substitute in the world.
"What do you think it means, in this here context? Aequitas."
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He spreads his hands, his small gesture symbolizing the vast expanse of the club, the very essence of it. "In here, anyone can speak to royalty. Humans can mingle with myths, lords dance with commoners, and if you should say the wrong thing, the very spirit of Aequitas forbids holding grudges.
"Justice, because justice is served here without discrimination. You break the rules, you have no place here. Minor transgressions are met with minor penalties, but if you done a really bad thing? You're out."
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