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Joanie Wicker | The Wicked Witch of the West ([info]wickedwicker) wrote in [info]bellumlogs,
@ 2010-04-02 11:19:00

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Entry tags:dorothy, wicked witch

Who: Madison and Joanie
What: Introducing oil and water
Where: The Mailboxes
When: Late afternoon
Warnings: Uncalled-for bitchiness and probably some language.

There were some points in a person's life when introspection is probably the worst possible thing to do, as doing so would lead to madness.  It was about halfway through tattooing a dolphin on a giggly sorority girl's right buttcheek that Joanie disregarded the Rule of Introspection.  Three hours later, she was still stuck in a fog thicker than pancake syrup.  She vaguely remembered walking back to Bellum, the New York sidewalk stretching into an impossible road that twisted through the Land of Broken Dreams and Eternity as a Tramp Stamp Dispenser.  It was at this point that Joanie began to truly fear what she had come to accept for granted.  Yes, being a tattoo and piercing artist was challenging, fun work.  But did she really want this badly enough to weather five cute animal tattooes on inappropriate body parts for every one meaningful piece?

Her brain's answer to that question was "number unavailable, please try again later."

Pushing a hand through her dark hair that was knotty and kinky from spending all day thrown up in a messy bun, Joanie opened the door into Bellum's lobby and shuffled inside.  Her clunky Goth-chic boots thundered through the lobby as she made her way to the mailboxes.  Maybe there would be some nice mail waiting for her.  Joanie wasn't entirely sure what constituted nice mail - not junk was a start, not bills was an even better one - but she knew that it wasn't going to be there.  No, snail mail had been so drastically undermined by e-mail that now it was used solely for the transport of horrible things that even spambots were too kind to send.

Somewhere in the back of her mind, Joanie's common sense told her to just go up to her apartment and turn on the TV until her thoughts stopped being so vocal.  But the stubborn, less considerate part of her brain urged her towards the mailboxes.  Surely she wasn't being an idiot by staying out in public when she was in a more volatile mood than an active volcano.  No, there was no down side to this.

She leaned against the wall of mailboxes, her shoulder rammed into #803.  Gaze intent on her own, Joanie stuffed a hand into the black bag hanging from her shoulder.  Calling it a purse might have been a bit insulting to actual purses.  It was more like a messenger bag with all the corners cut off, being little more than a satchel with a long strap that let it rest against her hip.  There were no compartments, leaving everything jumbled together in a giant mess.  "Goddamnit," she muttered to herself as she flipped open the flap in order to rummage properly.  The bag jiggled against her side tauntingly as she rooted around inside it, trying in vain to find her mailbox key.  What the hell apartment building didn't have combination locks for their mailboxes, anyway?  A shitty one, clearly.  "Where the fuck is it?"  And suddenly, Joanie's common sense realized why it should have taken up drinking.


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[info]wickedwicker
2010-04-06 03:11 pm UTC (link)
The key twisted in the lock, popping it open with a soft crack. Joanie held the lock tightly in her palm for a moment as if considering this before twisting and sliding the padlock away from her mailbox. Somewhere on a distant planet, that girl was still talking. And not only talking. Apologizing.

She took a deep breath, counting to ten. One. She reached into the mailbox and pulled out an envelope. Two. She closed the mailbox and locked it up, sliding the key into her sack. Three. The envelope was from the bank, probably asking for more money. Four. She stuffed the envelope in her sack. Ten. Fuck it.

Leaning against the mailboxes, she turned on the girl, a mixture of anger and disbelief on her face. "What the hell are you apologizing for?" she said brashly, pointing at her. "Don't apologize to me." Her free hand gripped one of the boxes' padlocks, seemingly using it as an anchor in this reality. "You had a weird night, good for you, the rest of the building had a weird night, and I'll bet half of us wished we had the fucking luxury to just get a god-awful ugly dress!"

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[info]metrogingham
2010-04-07 01:45 am UTC (link)
Well, so much for being polite.

At this point it looked like the girl was ready to deck her for...who knows at this point, existing. Eyes widening, Madison backed away even further, clutching her mail tightly as some sort of pathetic defense maneuver. She would have attempted to correct her on the inanimate object part actually being a person, but whatever happened to the girl that night was far worse than what Madison encountered.

It made her feel sorry for the girl, knowing whatever happened affected her to the point she was unwilling to talk about it with anyone, much less a stranger. However at this point while she may have felt pity, there was no way in hell she was going to express it now. Fight or Flight kicked in instead. "Okay then, I'm just gonna," Madison pointed in an opposite direction of the girl, "go, sorry for bothering you." And with that awkward statement, she hurriedly walked away back to her apartment. She needed a grilled cheese sandwich, that would calm her down.

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