Jono Starsmore (
furnaceface) wrote in
fandomtownies2012-05-18 09:06 pm
Entry tags:
The Perk, Friday Evening
Another week, another excursion back to Jono's own reality, to do more training with the New Warriors. The moment he returned to the island, he decided that he was going to do something that didn't constitute work. And so returning home to the Boards right away? Right out.
He'd found himself a table by the window this evening, and was nursing a cup of coffee as he looked idly out at the people passing by on the street. Fandom's idea of 'bustle' was far less hustle than New York, but that was refreshing, really. After a few days of alternating between Jubilee's astoundingly hard-ass training regimen and making faces at posters glorifying the Initative while trying to stay out of notice in plain sight, Jono could really handle a bit of hustle-free bustle.
And maybe some cream in his coffee. Whoever brewed this batch put enough grounds in to make it strong enough to sit up and bark.
[Open Perk! Hi!]
He'd found himself a table by the window this evening, and was nursing a cup of coffee as he looked idly out at the people passing by on the street. Fandom's idea of 'bustle' was far less hustle than New York, but that was refreshing, really. After a few days of alternating between Jubilee's astoundingly hard-ass training regimen and making faces at posters glorifying the Initative while trying to stay out of notice in plain sight, Jono could really handle a bit of hustle-free bustle.
And maybe some cream in his coffee. Whoever brewed this batch put enough grounds in to make it strong enough to sit up and bark.
[Open Perk! Hi!]

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It was a simple mission, really; that much was obvious from how efficiently she articulated it to the Perk barista.
"Coffee."
See?
Mission thus accomplished, she flopped down in a seat not far from Jono's and offered him a nod.
Taciturn girl, April.
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Jonothon offered the girl a return nod, lifting his cup and pulling down the collar of his coat a moment later so that he could have a mouthful of what had to be the most bitter coffee he'd drank in recent memory.
"Barista must be new," he offered, as a sort of wry explanation for the face he made a moment after taking that mouthful. "It's usually better than this."
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Then she set the cup down quite calmly, and turned to fix the barista with a terrifying death-glare.
"He needs to learn," April informed Jono in a monotone. Not so much to ward off any potential judgment as to simply explain the death glare. It was pretty scary, after all. Merited explanation.
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He didn't know who in the world she was, but Jono had already decided that he really rather liked her attitude.
"Suppose he'll bear that little lesson in mind the next time he decides to triple the amount of coffee he puts into the brew?"
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That part, she said just loudly enough for the guy to hear. Because April was charming.
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With a look like that, who wouldn't be?
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Or Chamber. Or Decibel. He was really collecting the alternative titles these days, it seemed.
"So, what brings you to the island, April?"
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And Pawnee was a boring, boring place.
After a pause that indicated that she wasn't accustomed to two-sided conversations, she asked, "You?"
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"Something like that. Not so much a summer job as a ticket out of London when I needed one the most. But it keeps me busy. Out of trouble, or... something."
No. No it didn't. Not by a long shot.
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"Whoo."
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So, essentially, the island wasn't all that bad because... he could... leave.
"The bars aren't too terrible, either."
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That was indeed a very small part of her job description and Kitty should never have mentioned it to her.
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"So, uhhh, hi," she said, giving him her best 'completely casual' smile.
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"Hayley," he replied, not so much casual as carefully neutral. "In the mood for a bit of Friday evening caffeine, are you?"
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Casual smile, casual smile, casual smile.
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Jono? Was not exactly what anyone would call a good influence. And he never had been.
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She could've just said hi and moved on, but she wanted to stay.
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Still neutral. So, so neutral.
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"Not that I fill much of anything, these days. Except orders over at Luke's."
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He idly ran the tip of one finger along the rim of his coffee cup, though he didn't take his eyes from the woman sitting in front of him. The weekend when the daughter they'd never have arrived had done a fair bit to ease his worries about her, but that didn't mean he trusted her. Not enough to look away.
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"It's work," she said. "The boss is nice, the customers are nice, but it's... well, it's a living." She sighed and stared down into her coffee. "Quiet and steady."
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Said the one with a pretty hefty chunk of technology under his coat at the moment, there to help facilitate those insane excursions he tended to make to his own reality in order to punch things. Punch them with his voice.
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"Mm, we should all be so lucky," he murmured, breaking that hell-bent eye contact in order to frown down at his coffee cup.
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