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Susannah Alexandra Hattington-Hallmeyer ([info]vintage_fraud) wrote in [info]halcyon_halls,
@ 2008-11-04 15:05:00

Previous Entry  Add to memories!  Tell a Friend!  Next Entry
Entry tags:mircea, sasha

Week 21: Monday
Who: Sasha and Mircea
Where: Isle of Bacalao Hotel
When: Late Afternoon
What: Tea, talk, and a spot of blackmail business.


To Sasha’s delight the Bacalao Hotel not only had a tearoom, they had a wonderful one. It was elegant without being excessively lavish, neat without being dull, well-lit and surprisingly spacious. There was none of the beribboned stuffiness that covered similar specimens like a bad case of mange.

Sasha’s requested table near a window and got it without trouble. The waiter pulled out a chair without hesitation; Sasha made a note to leave a good tip. She liked having doors opened for her—in more ways than one. It’s a tough world, Tori used to say. Enjoy whatever few courtesies survive it. Besides a window table offered an extra bit of privacy.

And Sasha’s upcoming conversation with “Mircea Grey” was not a public matter.

Unless he doesn’t come, hissed the cynical gremlin-voice in her mind. She ignored it. He’d come if only for curiosity’s sake. The universe had yet to invent a better bait than human curiosity. Except who said he was human…

Oh, whatever. He’d come.

Not interested in giving her doubts time to flourish, Sasha signaled the waiter. Ordering a pot before her guest’s arrival would be rude—even if she could empty it solo—but a cup of the day’s special, Orchid Oolong, would suffice till then. Ordering food posed a similar crisis of manners; Sasha’s stomach and manners warred briefly before compromising on Devonshire cream and hearty scones. It’d be like spitting in a canyon as far as Sasha’s ogre appetite was concerned, but, hey, at least it’d put something between her teeth. The waiter also didn’t blink at being asked to fetch water for Dreizen, which earned the man another juicy brownie point on Sasha’s meter.

(She remembered the time they tried baring Dizzy, then still a clumsy puppy, from the Savoy’s tea room. She’d staged hysterics until Josiah had words with the manager. In the end, both puppy and girl got in. there’d even been a placating “donation” of complimentary apricot tartlets.

Sasha was never one to waste a tantrum.)

Sipping tea, her posture uncompromised and her face calm, Sasha made a pretty picture in the afternoon light...as was the point. The 40’s style dress and 30’s pumps were modest yet posh, matching the discreet garnet twinkle in her ears, the gold watch and bare fingers. Her hair was loose, her makeup simple. She looked, Sasha knew, like someone’s pampered niece, small and young and flush. Well-heeled, as Josiah would say in his ever-so charminlgy out-of-date way.

Josiah would have nothing charming to say about his runaway protégée meeting with a man of Jack Ransom’s repute—good thing we’re not on speaking terms then, eh, Hatter?—but it was Ransom’s reputation that Sasha was counting on. Supposedly, the man turned a tidy profit during his time. Whatever his motives (and oh how Sasha’s own curiosity itched to know that) Ransom was familiar with the business, the spider web of connections and hazards that Josiah once taught Sasha to navigate. The world she lost connection to without him. The world she needed now.

All good things to those with will, Sasha recited silently. Slathering cream on her scone, she settled in to wait.

He’d come.



(Post a new comment)


[info]marimeruv
2008-11-05 10:57 am UTC (link)
Mircea had received the note and his curiosity had instantly been peaked as had his sense of imminent danger. Sasha was correct in thinking that he'd show merely for curiosity and after that note, who wouldn't be curious? He'd dressed in a manner befitting a clandestine liaison, all dark clothing and nondescript fashions, and he'd made his way out of the school, preferring to walk rather than be chauffeured by a curious taxi driver.

Drivers could be baited and bribed into revealing the locales that they'd delivered their charges to. Mircea wasn't having any of that. If no one knew where he was going, no one could be cajoled into giving him away. Trusting no other living soul had been the way that Mircea had survived thusfar and he wasn't about to alter a good thing.

He didn't bother fixing his appearance, so the dark and nondescript man that stepped into the Isle of Bacalao hotel was met with little interest. He didn't look like anyone important, so he went largely unnoticed as he walked through the halls to find the tea room. Snorting softly, as he hadn't been inside of a tea room in years (something about so-called civilized behavior chafed him a little), he stepped through the open door and regarded the young lady and her Doberman sitting so primly with a cool glare.

"Good afternoon, Miss Hattington-Hallmeyer. You requested the dubious pleasure of my company?" Just because politeness chafed him didn't mean he didn't utilize it in times such as these.

(Reply to this) (Thread)


[info]vintage_fraud
2008-11-05 12:41 pm UTC (link)
In Sasha’s experience there were two ways to ensure inconspicuousness; you could either fade into the woodwork like a gnat or…you could act as if you had every right to be where you were. Admittedly, she subscribed to both methods—but not today.

Today, Sasha was a credit to her upbringing.

“Good afternoon, Mr. Ransom; you look like the weather,” she greeted Mircea, smile snapping open. “Was my invitation really so distressing as to inspire…camouflage?”

Sasha tapped glossy nails against her menu’s leather cover, never having bothered to open it. Not like she could read an inch of the thing, after all. “Please, help yourself. Personally I’m torn between the quiche and the goose liver mouse. With a kirsch cherry on top no less.” She made a happy little yum yum sound. It was childish and cute and entirely artificial. “Would you prefer to share a pot of tea or get individual orders?”

The one who sets the pace, controls it. Again, her godfather’s voice in her head. Be masterful, be irrelevant, be impatient or sensible—but never be second.

“Thank you, by the way, for coming.” Her plain brown eyes met Mircea’s frankly. “Not all in your position prove so intrepid.”

(Reply to this) (Parent) (Thread)


[info]marimeruv
2008-11-05 09:29 pm UTC (link)
There was something about Mircea that defied fitting in. His looks were exotic, his austere handsome face getting him more attention than he wanted, at least most of the time. There was something about a full-blooded Rom man that intrigued quite a few women and while at lonely times he blessed his outward heritage, most of the other times he silently cursed it.

Mircea gave Sasha a wan smile before he spread his hands out in mock supplication. "Not distressing, no. I always dress myself in this fashion. It's not haute couture or gold, but I find it works quite well." And it did. The less he was noticed, the better.

Food? He didn't care about food. At least not right now. He may not have been that proverbial cat, but his curiosity was eating him alive. What did she want from him? Furthermore, why was she calling him that name? Raising that dark brow once again, he shrugged. "I do not care one way or another." Folding his arms, he stood there for a moment before making his way towards a seat. He didn't sit down though, not yet.

"You're welcome...though I have yet to see what position I am finding myself in." He waited for her to speak. He wouldn't take a seat until he knew just what kind of a meeting this was going to be.

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[info]vintage_fraud
2008-11-07 10:24 pm UTC (link)
Sasha answered Mircea’s subtle dig at her wardrobe by mirroring his open palm gesture. But while his was a supplication, hers was a display. “What you show is what they see, n'est-ce pas?”

The cream and scones were long gone. Sasha thought longingly of lemon curd and chicken salad. If etiquette had a heart, it’d damn well learn to make exemptions for Good Girls with uncivil metabolisms. Averaging 5,000 calories daily was a hard thing to do gracefully. One of these days I’m just quit caring and eat a hobo…

But.

Tilting her head only slightly so as not to break eye contact with Mircea, Sasha again raised her hand, this time to ward off the attentive waiter heading for the table. He promptly retreated. Really, how did they manage to keep good staff out here in the mythological middle of nowhere?

“Well…” Her smile curved sweetly. “Currently you stand unaccountably stubborn over the subject of lunch. Let me guess: a sandwich once did you wrong?” Picking up her nearly empty teacup, Sasha looked at Mircea over the rim. Her eyes seemed lighter now, more gray than brown. “I didn’t invite you here with harm in mind, nor to rouse anybody’s temper. Like the note said, I have business in mind and would like to learn if you’re fit to handle the work required. Providing you prove interested in the task, of course. Surely nothing I have to say can sound more scandalous than anything you’ve heard before?” Again, the sly eyes didn’t match the voice or smile. “I imagine you’ve heard a great deal of interesting requests in the past.”

Cup met saucer without a clink of sound. Sasha rested her chin atop laced fingers, back to being the pleasant ingénue. “If at any point during our conversation your interest—or your nerve—runs out then, by all means, go. Run. Fly. Skip. But until that moment comes…do sit down, Mircea. You’re giving me a crick in the neck.”

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