ɢɪᴅɢᴇᴛ (
gidge) wrote in
bottleneck2015-06-21 03:51 am
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no subject
"The Setites always look for your weakness." Ouija explains vaguely after a moment, "Not necessarily to hurt you with it. A friend will support you, but a good friend will show you where you err." And Ouija's weakness had, ironically, been their all-consuming hatred of their clan, such that it became a blinding, pernicious addiction. The Setites' relationship with addicts was poorly understood by out-of-clan members, it was a tool with many uses.
That song soothes them, even if it isn't being sung magically with Birdie's Discipline. There's something ceremonial about putting on a record, something ritualistic, and the hiss and audio quality don't hurt. Meanwhile, Edward's love of music is the same love that cuts a flower to put it in a vase under fluorescent light.
They take the record, holding it like someone who's well-versed in handling delicate, hard-to-replace objects, absently joking, "You neonates and your cutting edge technology..." But their voice softens mid joke. She's sweet, there's something about the whole vibe of this that feels delicate and important.
They look over at her, and grin, at that sentiment. "Thank you."
no subject
She bumps her shoulder against theirs, an awkward sway on the beanbag. "Well, you've seen plenty of mine at this point. I appreciate you not pointing them out yet."
There are the obvious ones about Denver and a Sire in torpor and music, but also there is simply this. The way she opens up so readily, artistic integrity getting intermingled with emotional honesty to the point that she trusts more quickly than she ought to. How the bubbly joy of flirtation just for the sake of it turns into fondness even quicker.
Ouija, in particular -- The way they look at her with what might be genuine concern, how they keep promises, carefully worded to give her escape routes at every turn. How they listen to her sing, plainly as she ever does, and seem to be satisfied with just her voice and talent alone. No Presence, no Melpominee, just a song she shares. It makes her want to trade in her title as an entertainer for a while and simply sit and listen to them, to any stories and lies they might want to tell, let herself be an audience to their observations and their faith.
Meanwhile the record plays on, Monday mornin' couldn't guarantee that Monday evenin' you would still be here with me.
Birdie smiles, at the way Ouija handles the record, the comment, the thanks.
"You're welcome." A pause, and she reaches out to touch the corner of the record in their hands. "I would've played it, but I don't want to look too vain."
no subject
The bump is cute. They are reassured by the bump.
"There's always a time for it. I like to wait until people ask for my advice." Ouija's voice was soft and quiet, a gentle thing, in that moment, "And I'm in a glass house," They added, incapable of not ruining the moment with a silly joke.
She is adorable, she is fierce and she is sharp in all the best places, and soft in others, like a classic example of the predator/prey line they all must walk to survive.
"You won't look vain. You'll look like you're entertaining your guest with fine music." Ouija looks down at the record, and then adds, "At some point - I hope you'll make a copy, just in case. But for now, please play it for me?"
no subject
That the bump is reassuring is good, because she leans again. Though it's not a bump, this time. More a lean, a lingering brush of her shoulder against theirs.
"I won't throw rocks if you won't," said smiling and soft and a little conspiratorial. There's already plenty conspiracy going on already. Then, a little more seriously, "Maybe when we're in Vegas I can get a full assessment."
Not quite yet, not quite now. Not when she's moving to stand and take the record back from Ouija's hands.
"There's others out there still," as she turns to take the Mamas and the Papas back off the turntable. "Not sure what condition they're in, but I'd had a hundred made. Probably a couple in private collections."
Not unlike Edward's, or even her own. Hidden away and secret. Birdie fiddles with the records, putting away one and putting on her own, gently dropping the needle down before she heads back to the beanbag as her own voice comes through the speakers -- different, human, somehow younger and smaller than how she sounds now.
It's mostly covers, only two songs that she'd written herself. Standards, like 'House Carpenter,' sandwiched in with the ones that had been new then but are standards now, like 'Little Boxes.' It starts, though, with 'Thirsty Boots.'