Names We Knew - [Uno/Blitz]
Jan 4, 2015 3:46:52 GMT -5
Post by chelsey on Jan 4, 2015 3:46:52 GMT -5
URSULA LIBERTINE
"Well, I met you at the blood bank."
"HOW CAN I HELP YOU?"
The receptionist's voice is monotonous, reflecting the rather dull setting of the doctor's office. I compose my best "so-innocent-you-can't-help-but-believe-me" smile, revelling in the feeling of shifting back into my old tricks and vices, before clasping my hands before me and saying, "No, how can I help you?" The expression on her face doesn't shift (she might've blinked?), and my palms begin to sweat as I realize maybe I have lost it - when was the last time I've made good on a deal, anyway? And by 'deal,' I mean an actual deal, a deal calculated from simple and direct requests, rather than one woven from double entendres and lustful sideways glances.
Briefly, my mind skips back a few nights, where Percy Altor and I cemented a deal in the middle of all the chaos that was Bastille Styx's club. Get the needed medication he couldn't afford for his sister, and, in return, he'd get my drunken ass back home without a scratch. Stupid, stupid, stupid. If I wasn't drunk that night, this deal would have never occurred, and I wouldn't have been drunk at all that night if I wasn't at that stupid club, and I wouldn't have been at that stupid club if it weren't for -
Okay, but that's not important. Focus, Ursula.
"You see, my little sister's class is holding a fundraiser - a bake sale," I raise up the basket that hangs from one of my arms for added effect, hoping the glazed over receptionist's eyes can visualize the supposed baked goods in the basket, "And, I was just hoping you and your... colleagues would be interested in helping her out. It'd be much appreciated." (Maybe she'll recognize me, that poor Libertine girl with no little sisters to spare, other than Nessie, although she's hardly little anymore. She'll see right through me, I'm too out of practice, I've grown too old to be pawning deals -)
Fortunately, the receptionist sighs and stoicly rises from her desk behind the counter. "I'll ask if anyone wants any cookies," she says tiredly, before disappearing into a door that leads to somewhere I don't care about. As soon as she's out of sight, I hop over the counter and search among the boxes and bottles for the one medication that will cure this frustrating mistake of a deal. My eyes are too focused on reading the labels, and my ears perked up for the sound of the receptionist's incoming footfall, that the sound of the office's front door opening and closing is distant and faraway.