she had to admit, in the back of her stubborn mind, that his edgy straightforwardness was refreshing.
lulu’s stare narrowed a hair again, their eyes deadlocked in a sort of standoff. was he catching on? hm. she supposed she could live with not being great at this kind of thing. the man had already been spending, anyways. it was only necessary to coast through this for the sake of appearances; they would see her walking next him, doing her job, and she could take the credit for whatever he spent on his own. it was not her goal to go above and behind on this mission. she’d give pushes when and if needed.
“i’m just being friendly.” there was a lilt to her voice, and she tried to manifest an innocent look, but it fell sort of flat in a toothy smirk that looked more sleezy than anything with a cheap cigarette hanging out of it.
her brows raised when he ordered the shots, caught by surprise. trying not to miss a beat, she told the bartender,
“tequila.” as though challenging him in some strange alcoholic way by pledging loyalty to a different booze.
typically, she would have slammed the shots, and probably carried on having a good time, but she was on a job. she strained mentally for just a second or two before holding a single finger up to the bartender once the red-haired man had turned his back. she would allow herself
one with the excuse that her breath should smell like it, and that it was a necessary detail for the job. she downed it and stamped out her cigarette, her eyes on his back.
as she made her way over to the table, an agave fire descending through her core, she watched him with a predatory closeness, and perhaps a tinge of curiosity. catching his scene from afar and the murderous glare he’d received, she snorted and grinned.
dumbass.
she was waiting at the table for him when he arrived, having slid into a seat already, elbows resting on the wood of the table comfortably, coin purse sitting in her lap.
nice shot, saw that was what her face read, but she said nothing amongst the voices of the few other gamblers that surrounded the table.
when he tipped the cup at her, she raised a brow.
“ooh,” her voice rising and falling,
“big spender.” lulu had a voice that constantly sounded like it was fucking with you, and she either wasn’t aware of it, or couldn’t turn it off. hopefully, her perceptive prey would find it somehow endearing.
“thanks.”her hand reached in and retrieved a chip and slid it onto nineteen. it was the number of her old cell block. it likely held no luck, but the house ensured she didn’t need much. the pins had her back.
others placed their bets, and the wheel was soon spinning. instead of barking at it like a few of them did, she turned to the still nameless man, raised a hand on her elbow and crossed her fingers lazily. there was no telling for sure she’d win, but she’d sure have much better chances than anyone else.
both of them would, at first, probably until everyone else decided to leave the table, at which point they’d face off. that would be the plan.
the dealer’s finger ran expertly over something as his hands gripped the side of the table inconspicuously, and the smallest pin jutted out from inside the wheel, dropping the ball in a favorable corner. lulu looked back at it and chewed on her lip a tad, suddenly feeling an unexpected rush. it was better doing this with someone else’s money.
by some luck and skill of the dealer, the ball fell into nineteen. though she remained mostly cool, a jolt of delight coursed through her and she was suddenly decidedly enjoying herself. she looked over at him, grinning smugly.
“see? lucky.” she proclaimed, holding her hands up in a 'what did i tell ya?' kind of gesture, giving herself way too much credit.