http://schisming.livejournal.com/ ([identity profile] schisming.livejournal.com) wrote in [community profile] tampered2011-01-30 12:40 am

⚚ closed; in progress

When; Saturday night
Rating; PG-13, for ...safety. And probably language.
Characters; [livejournal.com profile] schisming and [livejournal.com profile] fatespoken, with a special appearance by [livejournal.com profile] gilthart
Summary; UHH. MAGICAL EMBOLISMS?
Log;

Occasionally on certain evenings where Sage is at work, Elliot is obliged to find some other way of occupying himself. Given the rate at which their humble abode is...filling up with dogs, this doesn't really present a problem - they are, he has reflected, going to have to move - but sometimes Elliot craves the novelty of a different atmosphere, and when he feels up to all that 'leaving the apartment when not absolutely necessary' encompasses, he's inclined to take advantage of it.

Bars are tricky animals for a person who doesn't seek socialization by rote, however; they are places ostensibly meant for talking (in various degrees of lucidity), and they are sometimes especially places for talking to tall, brooding strangers. Elliot has tucked a fat volume of Flannery O'Connor's short stories into his coat pocket, as he has found that the presence of giant books tends to ward off attempted conversation, except when it doesn't. But then if he wanted to feel really entitled to bitch about people talking to him, he would in fact have just stayed home. And if home currently had beer, he might well have! Be that as it may, he has currently claimed a bar stool in one of the City's fine drankin' establishments, concentration half on the trials and tribulations of traveling bible salesmen and their one-legged conquests, half on steadily emptying a bottle of some imported nonsense.

Although considering his locale, pretty much everything is imported. Unless the City has its own beer! That would be something.
fatespoken: (rumination)

[personal profile] fatespoken 2011-02-01 02:29 am (UTC)(link)
Coincidences do happen, and secret, hole-in-the-wall bars can become the habitat for invasive organisms called casual acquaintances. Amory Felix has come here, alone, to tempt his demons, slotting himself at the end of the bar. He takes slow, long sips of the coke that serves as his drink. Cheap filler, like water in bathtub gin, acting only as a stopgap to counteract that constant nagging need for liquor. He wants just a drop of rum, an ounce, only enough to lick the bottom. His mind begs, pleas with annoying repetition, sticking sharp fingers into the folds of his brain. He'll take anything at this point, but the only fix he's got is to stare at the rows of alcohol on the back shelf of the bar. Whiskey, rum, cognac, vodka... he counts them off, thumbs pressing harder and harder into the glass.

"Hey, you. Gawker. You want anythin' else," the bartender asks, flinging a towel over his shoulder, as he drags an eye across Amory. Doesn't look drunk, possibly drugged.

"No, thank you."

He responds like a robot, an old habit of airs inflecting his tone. Believe it or not, Amory has trained himself to come off as caustic as he usually is. Adopting speech patterns of his college associates in an effort, as they say, to 'fit in.' (Says the man who claims he cares little for external opinions.)

But that's neither here nor there; the true matter of interest right now is that Amory Felix's sacred corner has been invaded. Elliot Argento has taken a seat next to him, either oblivious or indifferent to the fact that a network acquaintance, one of those hostile organisms, is situated beside him. When Amory reaches across the bar to grab a little square napkin drink, his elbow accidentally collides with the hermetic mage's arm.
fatespoken: (Default)

[personal profile] fatespoken 2011-02-03 04:34 am (UTC)(link)
Amory can relate, Elliot. Well, to an extent - likely Elliot's metaphorical sensory organs of magical perception (tucked under the intestines) - are more keen than Amory's which pick up signatures like sand on wet skin. For instance, sitting next to Elliot is akin to sticking a hand into a thunder cloud, or rolling several miles on a carpet. It's distinctly Elliot. Not that he wants to feel Elliot, but Amory Felix never gets a choice. Wounds, sicknesses, all that nasty miasma, are also grains of sand. To heal one must know what to heal, and Amory can read them like ink blots on a page. Indistinct shapes, heavy thumps against his brain that make dealing with sick customers a varying degree of discomfort. Call him a hypocrite, if you will.

His stay at the hospital? He had barely remained sane. (Hyperbole.)

"I have a policy," he responds, gradually, holding back on his words as if still deciding whether or not he wants to communicate with Elliot. He could always imagine his nonexistence. Yes, that could work.Imagine an empty stool. "I don't drink at work."

A sip of his coke follows that declaration, as his eyes dart quickly from Elliot to a more focused study of a crack in the bar's glass wall paneling.
fatespoken: (glancing to side)

[personal profile] fatespoken 2011-02-05 06:41 am (UTC)(link)
He's ceased the habit of irreverently knocking back shots ever since that wonderful instance when he blew out his manager's memories. But even prior to that, Amory hardly drank on the job. He maintains an ironclad sort of professionalism while working, a principle of division where personal feelings are mutually exclusive from a singular self-directive: do your job and do it fucking well. Present yourself like a fool in your workspace and it's an abasement.

The last bit of coke is cleaned off in a single sip. Amory's come here for peace, for that comfortable median between solitude and solidarity, where warm bodies exist only as presence. Elliot's conversation is unwelcome, and not because he's irritating or offensive. He's more bearable than not, actually. An interesting figure midst the crowd of gray, passing faces, bolstered by his obvious intelligence. But Amory does not have the patience for conversation, whether it be with Ghandi, Einstein or Elliot Argento. And so, he drops a few polychromatic coins on the counter and stands up to leave, making a quick grab for a lemon from the bartender's metal plate.

"I'd ask what those parts are," he pauses, briefly, to close a few buttons on his coat, "But I have to go."

Elliot shouldn't take this brush-off too seriously. The main reason for his departure, which must be crashing likes waves against his magical perception, is the beginning of a cold steeling pain, magic with claws and teeth. His limited patience has been distilled to vapors, and the words home, bed, pills are supplanting all other candidates within the judgment center of his brain.

"Later."
Edited 2011-02-05 06:49 (UTC)