[identity profile] mistresswanda.livejournal.com
Thursday, February 18th
The Dormouse, Later in the afternoon

Waking up to this cold, grey, drab weather did not improve my mood after the night I had.  Firstly, it made getting of out bed near impossible.  But I did, because I have a business to run.  Dragged myself downstairs in a comfortable, soft, eggplant coloured tunic sweater, ignoring the way to brought out the dark circles under my eyes, and opened...

only to find the customers seemed about as surly as I felt.  All they did was complain about the weather, or about the Carnival, or about Mab or about whatever petty little thing they could find to complain about.  I found it very hard to try and think nice things about the customers to my daughter today.

So I mostly ignored what I could, smiling and nodding on auto-pilot as I refilled cups and served mini muffins, diligently working on a knitting project to keep from being engaged in too much conversation.  Granted, I am not much of a home-body, and I haven't really tried kntting since my grandmother threw up her hands and called me hopeless, but how hard can a blanket be?  It's a square for heaven's sake!

It's quite late in the afternoon when the last of them shuffle out, turning their collars to the wind.  I call out a 'goodbye'; not minded to move for I have managed to find a comfortable position and the movement of the knitting needles is oddly soothing as I hum something without a title under my breath.  It seems like I have been doing this forever, so I stop and hold up the soft sage coloured blan---

"What the hell?"  I whisper in confusion.  It's supposed to be a square, or at least a rectangle or...
it has one arm sleeve and resembles a octopus... a flatened out octopus.

"Oh for fucks sake can I do nothing right???"  I yell to no one, flinging the abomination across the room and bursting into tears all over again.

(Open to Romana)  
[identity profile] mistresswanda.livejournal.com
Thursday, February 18th
The Dormouse, Later in the afternoon

Waking up to this cold, grey, drab weather did not improve my mood after the night I had.  Firstly, it made getting of out bed near impossible.  But I did, because I have a business to run.  Dragged myself downstairs in a comfortable, soft, eggplant coloured tunic sweater, ignoring the way to brought out the dark circles under my eyes, and opened...

only to find the customers seemed about as surly as I felt.  All they did was complain about the weather, or about the Carnival, or about Mab or about whatever petty little thing they could find to complain about.  I found it very hard to try and think nice things about the customers to my daughter today.

So I mostly ignored what I could, smiling and nodding on auto-pilot as I refilled cups and served mini muffins, diligently working on a knitting project to keep from being engaged in too much conversation.  Granted, I am not much of a home-body, and I haven't really tried kntting since my grandmother threw up her hands and called me hopeless, but how hard can a blanket be?  It's a square for heaven's sake!

It's quite late in the afternoon when the last of them shuffle out, turning their collars to the wind.  I call out a 'goodbye'; not minded to move for I have managed to find a comfortable position and the movement of the knitting needles is oddly soothing as I hum something without a title under my breath.  It seems like I have been doing this forever, so I stop and hold up the soft sage coloured blan---

"What the hell?"  I whisper in confusion.  It's supposed to be a square, or at least a rectangle or...
it has one arm sleeve and resembles a octopus... a flatened out octopus.

"Oh for fucks sake can I do nothing right???"  I yell to no one, flinging the abomination across the room and bursting into tears all over again.

(Open to Romana)  
[identity profile] al-shairan.livejournal.com
“The silence often of pure innocence persuades when speaking fails.”
- Shakespeare


Monday lunchtime, near the sheriff's office, on Main Street

This has proved almost too easy. The clouds are rolling in, air heavy with the promise of rain, and I stand in my Danika body wearing an old coat with the collar turned up against the cold, jacket short enough to show a few inches of a tidy, worn work dress and a calflength of wool stocking. My shoes wear the signs of good, honest farm labour, and my blonde hair is frizzing round my face in the damp air. I look very distressed.

"Did - was there really a man arrested for... for beating on a girl?" I say to an old woman gossiping with her friend on the street. My fingers flutter together anxiously.

"Oh yes," she says, "it's a horrible thing. They think also he did in a girl as worked at - well, the brothel, my dear," she says, lowering her voice over that salacious detail, eyes gleaming with prurient interest. "They think he chopped her up."

"Oh," I say, and I faint very neatly to the ground. It's not long before I have half a dozen people round me - offering water, saying they will take me to the Dormouse, fussing with my coat collar to let me breathe.

"I should've said something," I say, and I burst into tears. That gets me sat down on a bench, an old woman's arm around my shoulders, and a very handsome young man crouched at my feet. "I should - "

"What is is, dear? Do you know something about what happened to those girls?"

I shake my head tightly.

"I know - I know - him," I say quietly. "He - We went out a couple of times, and he was - he was real nice to me, and -" The old woman gives me a handkerchief. "You know, I ain't really dated much," I say, shamefaced, "cos my momma's sick a bunch and I'm busy out on the farm, and he just - he was real nice, and when he -" I turn my face away, and I can feel the vibrating tension from the boy at my feet, his desire to be a hero. "He - I thought it was my fault," I say, and then there is a furious chatter rising from the little crowd, and the conversation spreads in ripples.

"Some carnie's been carving up our girls," one man says fiercely. And there is discussion of me and of Melania - ah, yes, that explains some of what I saw in her - and how we're hard working girls, salt of the earth girls, and who is this monster and why hasn't he been strung up? What the hell is wrong with this town that a murderer and molester can be caught redhanded and he's cosseted in jail? And did you hear that he attacked that nice Mrs Beddau (I wonder if at any other time Glass has been described as nice) when she went to visit him in prison? He should be put in the old stocks in town. People would show him how they felt, alright. They'd show him very clearly indeed.

I manage a brave, trembling smile for the boy at my feet, and he springs up, ready for something, anything, if it will make me look at him like that again. And I nestle in against the arm of the old woman as the crowd grows larger and voices grow louder, and I wait for the storm to break.

[OPEN]
[identity profile] al-shairan.livejournal.com
“The silence often of pure innocence persuades when speaking fails.”
- Shakespeare


Monday lunchtime, near the sheriff's office, on Main Street

This has proved almost too easy. The clouds are rolling in, air heavy with the promise of rain, and I stand in my Danika body wearing an old coat with the collar turned up against the cold, jacket short enough to show a few inches of a tidy, worn work dress and a calflength of wool stocking. My shoes wear the signs of good, honest farm labour, and my blonde hair is frizzing round my face in the damp air. I look very distressed.

"Did - was there really a man arrested for... for beating on a girl?" I say to an old woman gossiping with her friend on the street. My fingers flutter together anxiously.

"Oh yes," she says, "it's a horrible thing. They think also he did in a girl as worked at - well, the brothel, my dear," she says, lowering her voice over that salacious detail, eyes gleaming with prurient interest. "They think he chopped her up."

"Oh," I say, and I faint very neatly to the ground. It's not long before I have half a dozen people round me - offering water, saying they will take me to the Dormouse, fussing with my coat collar to let me breathe.

"I should've said something," I say, and I burst into tears. That gets me sat down on a bench, an old woman's arm around my shoulders, and a very handsome young man crouched at my feet. "I should - "

"What is is, dear? Do you know something about what happened to those girls?"

I shake my head tightly.

"I know - I know - him," I say quietly. "He - We went out a couple of times, and he was - he was real nice to me, and -" The old woman gives me a handkerchief. "You know, I ain't really dated much," I say, shamefaced, "cos my momma's sick a bunch and I'm busy out on the farm, and he just - he was real nice, and when he -" I turn my face away, and I can feel the vibrating tension from the boy at my feet, his desire to be a hero. "He - I thought it was my fault," I say, and then there is a furious chatter rising from the little crowd, and the conversation spreads in ripples.

"Some carnie's been carving up our girls," one man says fiercely. And there is discussion of me and of Melania - ah, yes, that explains some of what I saw in her - and how we're hard working girls, salt of the earth girls, and who is this monster and why hasn't he been strung up? What the hell is wrong with this town that a murderer and molester can be caught redhanded and he's cosseted in jail? And did you hear that he attacked that nice Mrs Beddau (I wonder if at any other time Glass has been described as nice) when she went to visit him in prison? He should be put in the old stocks in town. People would show him how they felt, alright. They'd show him very clearly indeed.

I manage a brave, trembling smile for the boy at my feet, and he springs up, ready for something, anything, if it will make me look at him like that again. And I nestle in against the arm of the old woman as the crowd grows larger and voices grow louder, and I wait for the storm to break.

[OPEN]
[identity profile] romana-zindel.livejournal.com
Sunday, early afternoon, February 7 Main Street, and then in the Whitechapel Inn I pulled my hood up around my face as the afternoon wind blustered. Dragging my trunk behind me, I squinted around. Vision had never quite been my strong suit, but of course Pa had seen to it that I hadn't had cause for super-sharp eyes. The town seemed to be a bit deserted, shops seemed open but not many people were out buying. I frowned. It was a Sunday, wasn't it? Didn't town folk go out and buy pretty things on Sundays 'stead of going to church? Ma had made me swore not to slack on my religious obligations but I could already see that going to have a tea at, what was it called, the Dormouse, would be tons more interesting than reading my red leather book. Now, where was this place? The Whitechapel Inn. Ma had told me that Whitechapel was the name of a sleazy part of London before the disaster, but the inn was decked out proper, and to ask for the Vicomte when I got there. Valmont, his name was. Well, May (that's my sister, she's left at home 'cause she's a bit too much of a whipper-snapper to come with me) said that he was probably loads more good looking than Pa or our neighbor from five miles down the lane, Mr. Tarny, because he was a Vicomte and we have to capitalize his name and that I should write her and let her know right quick after meeting him and tell her everything about him, especially if he's married. I've a hunch that May wants the Vicomte to play the lead in her dizzying fantasies, which is just how May is. Haven't ever been one for all that pink-colored fluff, myself. I don't even really like talking to people if I can help it but Pa says that since I'm set up to be a waitress I'd better learn quick. My trunk's getting heavy and I just want to find the place already, I've been walking all day. Finally, a few store fronts down, I spot it, and I speed up. Tossing myself inside, I take a deep breath for a minute and straight my shoulders. Can't have me lookin' like a vagabond when I've come here for work, now can I? 

[status: open!]

[identity profile] romana-zindel.livejournal.com
Sunday, early afternoon, February 7 Main Street, and then in the Whitechapel Inn I pulled my hood up around my face as the afternoon wind blustered. Dragging my trunk behind me, I squinted around. Vision had never quite been my strong suit, but of course Pa had seen to it that I hadn't had cause for super-sharp eyes. The town seemed to be a bit deserted, shops seemed open but not many people were out buying. I frowned. It was a Sunday, wasn't it? Didn't town folk go out and buy pretty things on Sundays 'stead of going to church? Ma had made me swore not to slack on my religious obligations but I could already see that going to have a tea at, what was it called, the Dormouse, would be tons more interesting than reading my red leather book. Now, where was this place? The Whitechapel Inn. Ma had told me that Whitechapel was the name of a sleazy part of London before the disaster, but the inn was decked out proper, and to ask for the Vicomte when I got there. Valmont, his name was. Well, May (that's my sister, she's left at home 'cause she's a bit too much of a whipper-snapper to come with me) said that he was probably loads more good looking than Pa or our neighbor from five miles down the lane, Mr. Tarny, because he was a Vicomte and we have to capitalize his name and that I should write her and let her know right quick after meeting him and tell her everything about him, especially if he's married. I've a hunch that May wants the Vicomte to play the lead in her dizzying fantasies, which is just how May is. Haven't ever been one for all that pink-colored fluff, myself. I don't even really like talking to people if I can help it but Pa says that since I'm set up to be a waitress I'd better learn quick. My trunk's getting heavy and I just want to find the place already, I've been walking all day. Finally, a few store fronts down, I spot it, and I speed up. Tossing myself inside, I take a deep breath for a minute and straight my shoulders. Can't have me lookin' like a vagabond when I've come here for work, now can I? 

[status: open!]

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