Mary Anne Bell (
song_tra_bong) wrote2008-02-29 06:08 pm
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The door opens onto a dimly lit bar. Two men in suits sit at a table by the wall, speaking in low voices; they don't look up when Mary Anne and Ramon walk in.
Four men at the pool table in the back do look up, then go back to their game. Their rolled up sleeves show off jailhouse tattoos--tattoos that mean murderers, time served, rank in their organization. Just because they aren't staring openly doesn't mean they aren't paying attention. The fact that no one makes a fuss just yet over Ramon's machine gun is telling.
A waitress in a short skirt goes by with a tray, delivering drinks to the suits by the wall. Mary Anne heads for the bar, taking a seat that's a few stools over from the next man. She beckons the bartender over.
"Vodka for me and my friend," she says in flawless Russian. "And keep them coming. We're out on the town tonight."
The bartender shakes his head. "You picked a hell of place to come," he says, but pours the drinks all the same then wanders down to the customer at the other end of the bar.
Four men at the pool table in the back do look up, then go back to their game. Their rolled up sleeves show off jailhouse tattoos--tattoos that mean murderers, time served, rank in their organization. Just because they aren't staring openly doesn't mean they aren't paying attention. The fact that no one makes a fuss just yet over Ramon's machine gun is telling.
A waitress in a short skirt goes by with a tray, delivering drinks to the suits by the wall. Mary Anne heads for the bar, taking a seat that's a few stools over from the next man. She beckons the bartender over.
"Vodka for me and my friend," she says in flawless Russian. "And keep them coming. We're out on the town tonight."
The bartender shakes his head. "You picked a hell of place to come," he says, but pours the drinks all the same then wanders down to the customer at the other end of the bar.
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Which is sort of like 'you're welcome.'
She lifts her glass.
"To getting some fresh fucking air."
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He raises his glass, then empties it.
It's good to get out of the bar.
'I can't remember the last time I jut took some guys out for the fun of it.'
And to be fair, they were assholes. Well, Anton was at least.
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Well, there was that guy in Texorami, but technically Ramon asked so it wasn't just for fun. Not that she didn't enjoy it.
She takes another swig of vodka, grinning around the rim of her glass. "And it was very fun."
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He laughs, remembering the loook on Anton's face when the knife slipped into his gut.
'If you'd played with Kostya a bit longer, you could probably have made him cry. He was so sure he was going to get to fuck you.'
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"He was sure, alright. Up until I slit his throat, he was sure."
("We could have had some fun, you and I; we still might, after Anton kills your friend.")
"You really think I could have made him cry?"
She might have fucked him, if there had been time to draw the game out that long. Still, she doesn't think that's something Ramon needs to know.
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'He looke dlike he might right after things started going south for him. He'd obviously been looking forward to it - fuck him. Idiot.'
It never occurs to Ramon that Mary Anne would go for scum like that. he'd be surprised if she told him.
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Mostly what it boils down to is he was handsome enough and she liked the attention. She'd have fucked him to keep his attention and see how it changed the game. As it was, things played out differently.
"I thought the whole point was not fucking him," she snickers, topping off both their drinks. She leans back into the seat, letting the vodka and the pounding of the music just sink in.
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'Funny.'
And glances round the club they're in.
'Anyone here take your eye?'
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Still, she's sober enough and sane enough and responsible enough (for now) to know that would be a very foolish thing to do. Instead, she takes a look out at the dance floor.
"He's not bad." She points to a lanky blond with the look of a college kid backpacking through Europe.
"Or her." A girl with dark, wavy hair to her shoulders and a low-cut red top that flatters her curves.
"What about you?" If he gets to ask the married woman who she'd fuck, turn about seems like fair play. Even if the married woman is living by a slightly different set of marital rules than he is.
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'No.'
Or maybe yes, but he can hardly admit and he's also too sober to go into this. The situation with Random is too hard to talk about.
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"Just as well," she says instead.
"I'd be pissed if you abandoned your drinking buddy to go chase a piece of ass."
She taps her glass against the bottle, then drains it dry.
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'Yeah well, you'd better not disappear on me then.'
No telling what he'd get up to on his own. Anyway, he refills his glass too and slumps back in the booth. When the waitress comes near he gets her to go get a bigar for him.
'You're probably more likely to.'
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"Maybe, but I'm not going anywhere. Haven't had a chance to get properly shitfaced with you in way too long; I'm not about to give that up."
Sex isn't that hard to come by; quality time with her best friend is.
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He lights his cigar.
'My fault, I guess. I haven't been around all that much.'
He just figures she'll always be there.
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"Don't worry about it," she says, taking a sip of vodka.
"You're around now."
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He throws back some more vodka because that's the point of this, right? He doesn't want to be sober much longer and is already feeling a nice warmth around the edges.
'Wanna dance?'
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"You read my mind."
She slams back the last of her drink, then stands up. She stretches briefly, feeling pleasantly buzzed; it's harder for her to get drunk now, but not impossible, and she's been pouring herself generous drinks.
Hips swaying as she tries to find the beat, she heads out toward the dance floor.
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It's loud and fast and hot and he loves places like this. Mary Anne is grabbed as soon as he catches up with her and swirled round into the frenzy of people on the floor.
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Soon, she's swaying to the beat, eyes half-lidded--in part due to the booze, but mostly the music itself. It's loud enough to get lost in and she moves with the easy grace of dancers and killers.
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She's getting attention from others too; there are about four guys that he can see eyeing her over. Ramon is amused and takes a step back, wondering whether they'll make a move and what she'll do if they do.
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She hasn't been dancing for ages and is too busy enjoying it to focus on any spectators. It isn't until a hand brushes her hip a little to firmly to be an accident that she looks up. One of the four has finally gotten bold enough to try his chances. She gives him a friendly smile and leans back against him.
She stays with him until one of the other guys cuts in; this process repeats throughout the (thankfully long) song with the remaining two. She keeps her partner changes as smooth as she can, making it look less like boredom or personal preference than just another dance move.
At the end of the song, she moves back over to Ramon, leaning in close to be sure he can hear her over the music. "You didn't come out here just to watch, did you?"
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'There's a lot to be said for watching, sometimes.'
He watches her for a few beats longer, then turns his head away again.
'Come on then. One more dance then I want to get seriously drunk.'
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(I want to hold you close--soft breath, beating heart)
She catches his hand, lifting his arm enough to twirl herself under it before letting go.
(as I whisper in your ear, I want to fucking tear you apart)
If this is going to be her last dance for a little while, she's going to make the most of it. She doesn't bother with any partners this time, just keeps moving while now and then bits of the song's lyrics filter through the noise.
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Hey, it's the last dance for a while, right? And he's never gone so long without touching another person in his life. It's harder for him that he'd like to admit.
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She reaches up and rests one hand lightly against his neck, more because she wants to than out of any real need to steady herself. She can't remember the last time she danced with someone she knew, someone she liked. She'd forgotten how much she enjoys it.
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