It was all very—established. The blood thief wondered exactly how long the Necropolis had been offering this service, but the setup of the area suggested long enough. Stepping aside as Robin both introduced himself and pulled back the curtain to the booth, Mackenzie smiled at her boorishness.
“Mackenzie,” she offered in turn. Sliding into the booth, she cast a curious glance at their surrounds as the curtain closed. There was no denying they were still in the club, but somehow it felt as though they simultaneously weren’t. It was all so very lush, a fine upgrade from the sewers or Mark’s hollowed apartment. It made her nervous, and she had no doubt that anxiety made her more rigid than usual.
“I have no preference,” she replied, turning towards him as she tucked a leg beneath her in an attempt to get more casual. It was as much the inability to keep the truth to herself as a need to avoid potential inconvenience that she added with an unconscious flush of her cheeks, “The relationship I had with my previous donor was explicit in nature. Perhaps the wrist might avoid embarrassment.”
Not that he was unattractive in the slightest, now that she could pay closer attention to him. There was a boyish charm about him that was not altogether displeasing in spite of her basal preferences. Diverting her gaze to the curtains, she began to shrug her jacket off, finding no need for it here. When her arms were bared, just the white singlet loosely clinging to her torso, she returned her attention to him, more than happy to follow the lead. If there was something she didn’t like, she would speak up; everything about her suggested she would too.