lulu and rinc had fallen in love at a table in a dingy kitchen playing cards. since he’d left her life, every morning, like clockwork—in prison, in kitchens that weren’t hers, in a goddamn submarine—she’d played solitaire until she won, on the first try, or the twelfth (she wasn’t always lady luck).
she'd pound caffeine, usually lacking sleep. she didn’t think about him. she meditated instead. seven below the eight, six below the seven, five below the six. straighten the stacks. it was how she shook the night terrors; there were simply things no amount of hazardously potent coffee could snap her out of.
up until tucking tail and running, in motostoke, she’d always been surrounded by gamblers—in one way, or another. maybe that was part of
his allure. maybe that was part of
her weakness. and maybe that was unhealthy, but who was she really, if not too fucked in the head to realize.
maybe it had turned her into a bit of a gambler as well, even if she never played with money.
regardless of what it all was, something kept her knuckles at her side and not off on their way to attempt to disrupt his good looks.
someone was following her, huh? what a conclusion to arrive at only to leave someone behind.
“oh, aren’t you perceptive. well, sénon,” giving the same inflection he had used every time he’d spoken her name; and for all intents and purposes, now, it was more her name than not, and the reminder that it wasn’t inflicted a stinging from her past,
“i’m about to fuckin’ die. i’m processing.” she then leaned in a bit, even though he’d been looking away, to hiss at him,
“how’s that for transparency?” and then, if he’d looked, he’d have found on her face a toothy smile was more pirate than pretty in essence, and contained the underlying darkness of a hardened criminal she’d previously attempted to conceal from him.
“cheers, mate.” she raised an empty cup on her way in the opposite direction, the concealed cattle mark on her shoulder nearly checking him on her way past.
★
after a smoke, she’d been headed back to the bar to grab another drink, when she saw his flaming red hair in the adjacent open kitchen.
of course he worked there. she turned on her heels and went for her room, where alcohol, though less fittingly luxurious,
did exist. fuck that.
★
after a few shots had settled in her belly and hours had passed, her stomach rumbled hard enough that she had no other choice. with a deep sigh of reluctance, she’d slunk from her room back to the food spot. then, to her bitter misfortune, she found him to be the only remaining cook that side of the watering hole.
she pulled herself onto a stool at a bar-top for people who desired to ensure no one spit in their food, and ordered something from a passing cocktail server. then, feeling somewhat tipsy and inflammatory, she called at him,
“FYI, i came to be served food, not lectures.” her expression was flat.