Harry Lockhart (
captain_fucking_magic) wrote2011-11-15 11:50 pm
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Round Two
Harry's still rather new to this whole Milliways business, and it takes him a good while to accept the fact that he went through the front door from Perry's house, and has now gone back through that same door to find himself in a completely different house.
He's going to ignore the whole other country business all together. For now.
"That's, uhm... What the fuck?"
OK, he wasn't sure what was going to happen, but this was not it.
He's going to ignore the whole other country business all together. For now.
"That's, uhm... What the fuck?"
OK, he wasn't sure what was going to happen, but this was not it.
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"Uh. Sure," he says. "What's on the menu?"
If he seems a bit stiff and impersonal today, well... he's got a reason for it.
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She laughs, a little nervously.
"Is it just me, or is this a little more awkward than I thought it was going to be?"
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"I, uh. I met someone today. Before you showed up, and I... well, I learned some things. About me."
And his girlfriend. But that goes without saying.
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And there he is, looking like a blooming six year-old in an enormous shirt. Maybe it's the shirt. Darren wore the shirt that one time, didn't he?
She doesn't say any of this, but sits next to Murphy again, and scratches his ear.
"Alright, I'm listening."
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"Did you ever have that one person who, you know, got away?" he asks. "I ran back into mine, over Christmas. She hasn't given me the time of day since, but I, uh..."
How the hell do you explain that you met your not-quite-future-self, who gave you a bit of inside information?
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"So... You're waiting for her to call you? You'll just come home and there'll be a trail of rose-petals to your couch, or maybe the bed if your scary room-mate isn't home?"
She immediately feels bad. But she feels like she knows this tune, or one very similar to it.
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But, you know. All the awkward now.
"But, hey. If it doesn't go as he said..."
Or, rather, if it goes as other!Harry implied.
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A little bitter, but she feels she's got the right to be.
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He looks like he's about to say something for a moment, but only shrugs instead.
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"Well, you know what you have to do now, of course. Call her."
Not quite as satisfying as a few of the options she had lined up, but probably the most honourable.
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"Listen, you're not, like, a last resort, ok?" he says. "I just... I didn't think I had a chance with Harmony."
Hey, at least he's not coming out at her.
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"Well, that's nice for you, anyway." Mary shrugs. Anyone else, she'd say it wouldn't work, but who knows? She sets down the wine glass. Possibly later, she will eat the rest of the ice-cream in the fridge and finish the wine, but right now it seems rude.
"Do you want to eat something? I haven't had dinner yet."
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"Not that I'm gonna turn a free meal. I mean, if you're not gonna kick me out. Which I wouldn't blame you if you did. But, sure. If you're offering."
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Mary grins a bit. It's not often she has the upper hand with a boy.
"You're nice, and you make me laugh. And you feel like an arse. Which you should, but I don't see why that should get in the way of having a pretty good evening. And I found Iron Man."
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Hell, he'd kick him out.
At the mention of Iron Man, he realises that she's probably getting her revenge on him in a needlessly elaborate way.
"Oh, God. Yeah, all right."
He's in for one hell of an embarrassing night, isn't he?
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"Alright. Take-away menus on the fridge, you pick." Mary goes over to the telly, and fiddles with the telly. "Oh... Or should we go and pick something up? I have to buy milk. Have you ever seen London?"
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"Don't have a passport," he says. "Not that, you know, I can't. I just never bothered. I'm pretty sure I can if I wanted to, though."
Basically, no. He's never seen London.
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Mary looks down and stifles a giggle. Everything about this person is ridiculous. "And you'll need shoes. What size are you?"
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"Ten? Ten-and-a-half. Depends on the brand, usually."
He's frowning at an Indian menu, trying to work out what half of the stuff on it is.
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"Ahaha. Here we go. Darren must have left them here." She returns with a pair of cheap canvas shoes. "Someone did, anyway. They might fit, I'm not sure what the conversion thing is."
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"Oh. Uhm. OK."
Hey, at least she's not yelling at him. This day could have gone much worse.
He takes the shoes and puts them on. They're a bit big on him, but it probably doesn't help that his idea of tying them is just pulling the laces tight and letting them just dangle.
What can we say? He's a bit of a child sometimes.
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Mary picks up the Indian menu.
"Do you want curry?"
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He tucks the laces into the side of the shoes, though. Easier than tying them, apparently.
"I don't know. Is it good?"
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That's a lot of questions at once. 'Yes' seems like a safe answer for most of them.
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