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Lily Evans ([info]just_lily) wrote in [info]silverage,
@ 2011-07-24 15:45:00

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Entry tags:!log, don draper, lily evans

Armed and Ready
Who: Lily, Don
What: job hunting
When: Sunday, noonish
Where: a diner around town
Rating: Low
Status: Complete




When Lily had procured a room and some general knowledge about the place, she'd retreated to her new quarters, and thought. She'd thought about every scenario, likely and unlikely, in regard to her presence here. She did take into account everything that Lee and told her, and everything she'd learned at the information desk, and she still didn't like the picture it was painting.

She had posted a note, and despite multiple trips to check the board, she hadn't seen a response yet. Maybe he wasn't here. Maybe no one from her world was here. She felt horribly alone at the thought of that. She reasoned she'd make friends here easily enough; that had never been a problem for her. But it was the other bits that had her concerned. If she was here, she wasn't home, which meant she was missing, and James was probably going crazy. That, strangely, was her primary concern. Not her own welfare, but the fact that because of this, James was going to do something stupid and get himself killed.

Still, there was nothing she could do about that, at all, so that left her focusing on her own predicament. Her own predicament included finding a job that paid enough for her to get her own place, or at least half-rent on a place she could share with someone, and to feed and clothe herself. She wasn't horribly concerned with extras just then.

She had managed to convert what money she'd had on her to American currency, and between inflation (or deflation, she supposed, depending on which direction one looked at it from) and the exchange rate, she had enough to comfortably see her through the first week or so, if she was prudent about it. She still had her wizarding money, and she figured she could get a good price for the galleons and sickles, and maybe even the knuts; she wasn't sure what the value of bronze was -- but she assumed silver and gold were pricey enough.

Turning those in seemed too much like accepting that this was permanent though, so she'd hang onto those until she had to. Either way, it meant she was relatively set for money, at least for a little while. If she was fortunate, a little while was how long she'd be here before they managed to get her back home.

Lily had found a copy of the morning paper and had spent her time going through the classifieds in addition to the jobs that had been posted at the welcome center. She wasn't sure how many marketable Muggle skills she had, but she could type well enough and she was a friendly sort so she could get some sort of secretary or sales job or something in that area. She was also looking at any places looking for roommates, though she reasoned she'd do better finding a place with someone else familiar with the situation than just some random native. At least then the presence of her wand wouldn't be such a stretch to explain.

That was also long-term planning, and right now she was still balking at that. So she'd settle for finding a job, and work on saving up some money, and ... go from there. Armed with a plan, Lily set out into the world.

_________

The streets were becoming more familiar, and it was easy enough to navigate the ones in the grid pattern. She'd stopped in to fill out applications at a few places nearer the welcome center, and she thought she'd branch out a little further after lunch. It was pleasant enough out, if a touch warm for her tastes, and she was getting accustomed to the flow of the crowds.

Spying a diner ahead, Lily decided that now was just as good a time to eat lunch as any, so she wandered herself inside and found a seat near the window so she could watch people while she ate. Once she'd ordered, she fixed her emerald eyes on the people passing by the window, wondering if she'd see anyone familiar and doubting it. Still, a woman eating alone was probably interesting enough to catch someone's attention, so she reasoned the odds were good she'd have some form of company before she was done eating.



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[info]madison_avenue
2011-07-26 02:21 am UTC (link)
He had? Damn. He'd never had a great memory, but the past few weeks saw it deteriorating with every passing day. He hoped he was just still a little drunk. Despite this minor panic over his less-than-stellar short term recall, he kept his smile.

At least, until she mentioned her wedding. He adjusted as she mentioned she was engaged, exhaling smoke through his nose. He said nothing at first. Marriages - at least, no marriages that he had ever known - never seemed to work. His father's, Roger's, his own. All of them leading to somebody's heartbreak. Well, that wasn't entirely true. If he hadn't ever married Betty, he never would've had his children, which were more precious to him now than ever now that he never saw them as much as he wished. But aside from Sally and Bobby, his marriage had brought him nothing but anguish in the end. And this girl seemed more than hesitant to get hitched - downright frightened, even.

Well, no matter. It was none of his business.

"Well, aside from not being able to find a job, how's the city treating you?" he said, picking up his mug, though not drinking from it. His craving wasn't for coffee anymore. Really what he wanted was another glass of rye - boy, that couldn't be good. "Seen all the sights yet?"

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[info]just_lily
2011-07-26 02:39 am UTC (link)
"Well enough," she replied. "Most everyone I've met has been helpful." Not that she'd met a lot of people, and she'd certainly witnessed a few less than polite interactions as she roamed, but everyone she had met had been polite.

"I haven't honestly had much time to sight see yet. Between finding a place to live and just ... acclimating to the idea of here, I've had my hands full. Perhaps I'll have a chance next weekend," she reflected. She did want to get the necessities squared away though, before she looked into playing at all.

She also had to work on completely convincing herself that she was stuck here, and she was reluctant to do that. There were things going on at home she needed to be part of, and it grated on her to be stuck outside her time, her reality.

"Would you recommend anything?" She inquired as she shifted her emerald gaze back to him.

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[info]madison_avenue
2011-07-26 02:52 am UTC (link)
Don smiled, and pretended to think for a moment.

"Well, of course there's all the tourist spots," he finally said, after a liberal sip of coffee that was getting colder by the minute. Where was that waitress? "Empire State, the statue, Central Park."

He took a drag on his cigarette, his eyes flickering from Lily's eyes (green) to her vibrant hair. He hadn't ever cared much for redheads - brunettes and blondes were usually his type - but something about Lily was different. It was probably her youth, and he shook his head at the thought. She couldn't be more than twenty two. He was at least fifteen years older than her. What was he doing, lusting after her? He really MUST still have been drunk.

"But then there's the places for locals. Greenwich Village. Battery Park. Lutece," he murmured smokily, not that she'd know that Lutece was the ultimate spot for a wealthy date night. "Drop the hint to your fiance about Lutece," he added, not knowing or caring just who or where her fiance was.

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[info]just_lily
2011-07-26 03:02 am UTC (link)
She nodded, making mental note of his suggestions. She'd at least heard of a couple of them, and she was likely more pleased by that than she should have been. The places for locals were all place she didn't think she'd heard of. Maybe she had, but out of context it was escaping her.

"Oh," she said when he mentioned dropping a hint. "No. I mean, he's not ..." She inhaled slowly. "He's not here," she said firmly as she pushed away the sorrow. She'd make up some lie, tell it to herself and then tell it to other people. Maybe she'd get away with it, if she minded her phrasing and didn't act like she was lying. She never could lie well though.

That, at least, was a truth. As far as she knew, James wasn't here. Even if he was here, right now, he'd be four. "But I'll look into the other places, when I have a bit of spare time to kill." Maybe she'd find someone to go with her, some local she might call a friend. She thought about asking Lee, but she didn't need company. She could entertain herself perfectly well alone. While she was somewhat leery of making herself a target, she reasoned she could defend herself just fine against normal people.

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[info]madison_avenue
2011-07-26 03:18 am UTC (link)
He wanted to accompany her. He wanted to take her to Battery Park, see her gazing out at the ocean, tuck that red hair behind her ear and look into her green eyes as -

"Stop it. What is the matter with you?"

"I'm sorry. I assumed your fiance was nearby," he said, extinguishing his cigarette in an ashtray. He pulled out another just a few seconds later, not offering one to Lily this time. Probably better that she wasn't smoking, anyway. It had a way of making a woman look...older.

"Start with Central Park. In the daytime," he paused, sending this point home. No unaccompanied girl should be walking around at night, no matter how confident they were, "-it's wonderful. Quiet."

After a moment, he scribbled again on the notepad. "Johnson - a new day."

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[info]just_lily
2011-07-26 03:28 am UTC (link)
"No," Lily repeated, but she hadn't come up with her brilliant (or even passable) lie yet. "He's ... he's ..." she made a gesture with one hand as she tried to drum up something passable that wasn't 'he's dead' -- which was not passable at all, nor anything she wanted to even consider. "In England," she managed. "Working." That bit was a lie, and her eyes flicked down as she bit at her lower lip. James didn't work, because he didn't have to. He had his inheritance, though she supposed what he did for the Order could be considered work, of a sort.

"Of course," she replied with a nod. "I ... well, it isn't the most brilliant thing, to be wandering about alone at night. Even if I knew the place well." She didn't even go out alone at night at home, though that was when the Death Eaters like to be most active.

She wondered if she should leave him to his work and get on with her own, but she was enjoying the conversation and she supposed if he was tired of it, he'd indicate as much. "Do you go there often? To the park? Is there anything especially interesting I should keep an eye out for?"

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[info]madison_avenue
2011-07-26 03:48 am UTC (link)
Don inhaled, shaking his head. "I haven't been to the park in..." he cleared his throat, and exhaled another cloud of smoke, "Well, it's been a long time. Things might have changed since I've been last,"

He avoided asking the question he desperately wanted to ask, and instead gestured towards the empty table in front of Lily. "Have you eaten at all?" he asked, motioning towards the waitress. He might as well get another cup of coffee. He had nowhere else he wanted to be - least of all his apartment, empty and quiet as it was.

She refilled his cup without a word, and he took a sip. "I hear the zoo's nice," he finally responded, scratching his chin, finally realizing how badly he needed to shave. Jesus. He must look like a hobo.

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[info]just_lily
2011-07-26 03:58 am UTC (link)
"You should come with me then," Lily pointed out. "You can show me the things you recall and point out anything that's different." She paused, her head canting to one side. "If you aren't busy, that is. I wouldn't want to impose."

She did nod to his question, gesturing to her mostly empty plate. "Lunch, anyway," she murmured. While the waitress was filling his cup, she decided she'd like some desert as well, so she ordered a slice of pie and a glass of milk to go with it.

"Oh, that would be lovely," she murmured. "The last time we went to the zoo ..." she trailed off thoughtfully. "I was nine or ten, and Tuney and I squabbled over which of us would get the blue balloon." Lily smiled faintly. "She got it in the end, but only because our parents bribed me." Realizing she was reminiscing about things that could too easily descend into a sad place, she shook her head as she rested her hands on the table.

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[info]madison_avenue
2011-07-26 04:10 am UTC (link)
Don took a moment to consider this. Of course he wanted to. He had wanted to since he had seen her, really. Spend time with her in the sun, walking together, getting to know her. But really, was it right? Was it appropriate? Would he take advantage of her frankly naive offer? She didn't know him from Adam.

"I'd love to take you to the park, Miss Evans," he murmured, switching to the honorific, "I don't know the climate in England right now, but New York City's in the middle of a crime wave. For future reference, asking strange men you've just met in a diner in a city you don't know very well probably isn't a good idea."

He took another puff of his cigarette, and smiled warmly. "But since I can never say no to a girl with an accent, I'll accompany on the condition that you don't do this again."

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[info]just_lily
2011-07-26 04:16 am UTC (link)
Lily flushed slightly, her lips pursing at the chastisement, gentle though it was. She very badly wanted to tell him that her life was in danger nearly every day and she'd never before let that dictate what she did and where she went. She took reasonable precautions, of course, but she didn't hide. She also figured telling him that she could handle herself just fine would come off as cocksure arrogance -- which, it may well be. She didn't know the threats here. The ones in her world, yes, she knew those well, but she didn't know everything about this place.

So she had to concede that he at least had a point with that. It was a reluctant concession, but one she made all the same. "Depends on the part of England, but we've our own breed of crime where I live. But I see your point, and I agree to your terms. I'll be more careful about asking strange men who seem perfectly nice to escort me in broad daylight." There was the tiniest edge to her words, but only because she didn't like being told to be careful. She had enough of that at home, and she knew James and Sirius and Remus meant well enough, but she was tired of it.

"When are you free?" she pressed, eager to slide away from the topic of her disregard for her own safety.

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[info]madison_avenue
2011-07-26 04:26 am UTC (link)
Don wanted to point out that often the men who seemed perfectly nice were often wolves in sheep's clothing, but he was taken somewhat by surprise that she had called him "perfectly nice". It was the first compliment he had gotten from a woman in...well, he couldn't remember how long it had been. He savored it as best he could, even if it was just coming from a kid.

"Tomorrow afternoon. Let's say one?" he took a fresh piece of paper out of his notebook (not an easy feat, considering how many rejected slogans he had scribbled in it) and wrote down her name, underlining the "Lily".

"Where are you staying, if I may ask?" he murmured, extinguishing his second cigarette. He considered pulling out another, but he was having a hard time breathing these days as it was. No sense proving those health alarmists right.

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[info]just_lily
2011-07-26 04:34 am UTC (link)
She nodded to his suggestion. It wasn't as though she had anything on her schedule as of yet. Unless by some miracle she found a job and had an interview that day, she didn't even think it would interfere with her job hunting.

"There's a place called the welcome center," she said, reciting the address of the place. She'd memorized it because it had seemed extremely prudent to do so, and now that came in handy. "I'm staying there, until I get on my feet and find my own place," she explained. She wasn't sure if he was familiar with it -- or what it likely made her, since he hadn't seemed to have picked up on that yet -- and she wondered if he'd change his mind because of it.

"I can meet you somewhere though, if that's easier," she added. Then again, if he had his own car, it might not be a bad idea if he did swing by to pick her up.

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[info]madison_avenue
2011-07-26 04:48 am UTC (link)
"I know it," he replied simply. It was only a few blocks from Sterling-Cooper and, from there, only a few blocks away from his apartment. He had begun taking taxis and the subway to work, letting his car sit in some dank storage garage just above 145th. Since he wasn't going to Ossining anymore, he didn't see the need for it.

"Why don't you meet me at Sterling-Cooper," he said, writing down the address for her, "And I'll get us a taxi from there. Ask for Joan Holloway,"

She had been acting as his temporary secretary ever since - once again - he had lost a secretary, this time to poor attendance. He blamed the crime wave. Some of the girls were too frightened to even leave the house.

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[info]just_lily
2011-07-26 05:00 am UTC (link)
Lily took the offered paper, reading the address. She supposed if she couldn't find it on her own, she could ask, but she had a map of the area and she could work it out. It sounded vaguely familiar, like she'd passed it at some point. She reflected on that as she folded up the paper before shifting in her seat so she could tuck it into her pocket.

"I will do that," Lily assured him, glancing up with a smile to the waitress who brought over her pie and milk. She did feel a bit like a pig, but she had been walking all morning and she had every intention of doing a bit more walking this afternoon in her pursuit for employment, so she wasn't going to worry too much about how much she ate right now. She should enjoy it while she could afford it.

"Bite?" She offered him, brows arching a little as she gestured to the plate to indicate what she meant -- though what else he might take it to mean, she couldn't fathom.

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[info]madison_avenue
2011-07-26 05:09 am UTC (link)
Don raised his eyebrows. She was almost making this too easy. Gentlemanly, he declined, though he couldn't resist pulling out yet another cigarette. He tapped on the outside of the case, a habit he had picked up in Korea.

He scribbled another thing down on his notebook - simply the words "pie + Bryer's".

He gestured at her pie. "You really ought to have some ice cream on that," he announced simply, calling over the waitress. He did not wait for Lily to protest, and ordered a scoop of vanilla ice cream for the pie.

"Trust me," he said, taking a puff.

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[info]just_lily
2011-07-26 05:14 am UTC (link)
"You're being a bit contradictory," she informed him with a smile. "Don't trust strangers, trust you ..." she trailed off as she pushed her hair back; some of it was slipping out of the band she had it up in. She should redo it, she supposed, but she could catch that later.

She nearly continued with a joke about mixed signals, which she might have if he weren't such a stranger and she had a better idea of how he'd take it. She really didn't want her mouth to get her into any trouble -- it had the bad habit of doing that on occasion -- and trouble came in so very many forms.

She had to caution herself that just because she'd survived this long unscathed didn't mean she knew everything about this place or its people. It was a different time, and as far as she could tell, a different reality, and she really should mind her step. So she waved off the attempt at humor before she forked off the tip of the slice of pie while waiting for the ice cream.

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