Wild
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OOC: Backdated to February 8th
<Clover> The Year of the Red Monkey. The Chinese New Year wasn’t exactly an obscure holiday, but Clover still took great care to select the perfect day for her surprise. No, it wasn’t a surprise. She owed Jesse the day. She’d given him the masks they both needed to make the evening one of mischief. For him, the night was one of spontaneity; for her, it was one of careful choosing.
The night promised fireworks, fireworks that had been tucked into the large front compartment of the black backpack, accompanied by the spray cans that filled the main section of the bag. When Clover had planned the evening, Jesse had been depressed, lost amongst the beginnings of his suicidal phase. The two had never had the opportunity to follow through with her plans, not then, but she hoped to make up for her failed attempt. She hoped to remind him, to remind him about the silent promise she’d made, the one that involved an evening of spray painting the streets and buildings of Harper Rock. And the fireworks. Perhaps she meant to surprise him with the fireworks, even though he told her not to surprise him anymore. Clover rarely listened to him, especially when his choice of words left her angry. Yes, the fireworks were a surprise.
Dressed all in black, she planned on blending in with the shadows, calling upon her strengths to go from place to place, to avoid detection and suspicion. As she pulled the backpack out of the closet, she made sure the compartments were zipped, each one secure, and slid one arm through one of the straps. She slung the backpack over one shoulder and then bent down to sort through some of the items that had been strewn on the floor of the closet. Whether Jesse knew it or not, she’d gotten her own mask, a tiger mask. When her fingers brushed against the plastic, she moved aside some of the clothing and held the mask in her hands. Already, the mask had flecks of red paint. Clover had tried her hand at painting. Never again.
Finding Jesse’s mask took a little more time. She had to search throughout the room. He hadn’t planned on going out, whereas she’d moved her mask ahead of time and buried it at the bottom of the closet, putting it at easy access. When she discovered his set of masks, Clover chose the fox mask. She slipped her own mask on and went to admire herself in the mirror, but she stopped halfway. For the second time in a month, she’d made the mistake of going toward the mirror, as if she had a reflection. The silence in the room felt heavier, as if the inanimate objects sympathized with her. They understood. They knew what she’d meant to do.
After her mistake, she took quick steps out of the bedroom. The rest of her journey focused on the mirror and her lack of a reflection. The problem wasn’t her lack of a reflection so much as what her reflection meant. Her reflection represented herself, her sense of self, and without her reflection, she felt as if she were less of a person. Perhaps she should have told Jesse. As she entered Serpentine, she cast that thought aside. Clover wandered into the building, her mask still in place, the fox mask still clasped in her right hand, and went in search of Jesse.
<Jesse Fforde> Jesse was in consultation. Not face to face - he’d made that mistake before. People would come in and he’d sit with them for an hour or more trying to sketch the perfect thing. He’d be nice as pie and smile a lot, but that smile always came across as a leer. As something sinister and horrible. They’d pay him, and then they’d leave. They’d take his design to someone else, probably. Get someone else to etch into their skin. It was a waste of time. The never wanted to come back to the man with the creepy leer. They didn’t want that man anywhere near them with that needle.
Instead, Jesse’s advertisements always vaguely hinted at how modern his parlour was; how funds could be transferred electronically and cash didn’t have to be brought in hand. How consultation could be done over the phone, via skype or facetime. He’d discovered that it had nothing to do with the way he looked, or the way he sounded; it had everything to do with some invisible aura that radiated from him. It was the only explanation. He wasn’t complaining, generally - it just wasn’t very good for business.