Entry tags:
Hair done, nails done, everything did
Who| Molotov Cocktease and you?????
What| Just a touch of R&R and maybe also some bloodthirst. They go hand-in-hand.
Where| Glamor Nail
When| Week 2, Day 4
Warnings/Notes| Drinking, lookin' fly, copious nail polish fumes that can be annoying
Molotov was actually... marginally disappointed. So far, the only real violence she'd seen was at the Cornucopia, with the explosions -- everything else seemed fairly tame. Maybe it had to do with everyone hiding all the time, making nests in their various little corners of the mall until they were forced to actually fight.
But she didn't want to start a war while she was so severely outnumbered. She'd heard about a few injuries starting to occur, and she figured that would start knocking down the numbers soon enough. There were things to occupy the time, of course -- hoarding supplies (she'd had to upgrade from a backpack to a duffel after the sponsor gifts started rolling in), hoarding food from the daily frenzy in the food court, threatening everyone who got close to her. She was still on the hunt for a pair of thigh-high red boots, but she was making do with a few pairs of black heels for now.
By now, she's managed to pick out the stores that garner the least amount of attention, mostly because they don't have real supplies in them, only bric-a-brac useless for fighting. But that didn't make the stores completely worthless, now did it?
Blaires Accessories turned out to hold a wealth of flashy jewelry, Molotov's favorite kind, and she picked up some massive gold heart-shaped hoop earrings and a bunch of rings. There were hairbrushes and decorative hair bits, and she commandeered a mirror to tie her hair up in a black scarf with red hearts. Some off-brand red lipstick and black eyeliner (both spot tested on the back of her hand for potential skin-burning effects) helped her feel like she wasn't an uncivilized cavewoman.
Next door, though, was what she really wanted.
Glamor Nails may reek of chemicals, but Molotov is a vain woman, and the scent of nail shops is nothing foreign to her. She takes her time painting her nails red, but her real goal lies toward the back of the shop, in the big leather chairs attached to the foot baths. She's not aiming for a pedicure so she doesn't fill the basin, but when she finally drops her kit bag next to her and leans back in the chair, it's with a low groan and an almost orgasmic, "Oh."
The massage on these things is powerful as hell, which is good because Molotov has enough tension for five people in her back, and she's got bottles of gin to aid in this relaxation. So now she sits in the nail salon, nearly melted in her chair, with alcohol and a boxed salad from lunch on her lap.
Now this... this is a death arena that Molotov can get used to.
What| Just a touch of R&R and maybe also some bloodthirst. They go hand-in-hand.
Where| Glamor Nail
When| Week 2, Day 4
Warnings/Notes| Drinking, lookin' fly, copious nail polish fumes that can be annoying
Molotov was actually... marginally disappointed. So far, the only real violence she'd seen was at the Cornucopia, with the explosions -- everything else seemed fairly tame. Maybe it had to do with everyone hiding all the time, making nests in their various little corners of the mall until they were forced to actually fight.
But she didn't want to start a war while she was so severely outnumbered. She'd heard about a few injuries starting to occur, and she figured that would start knocking down the numbers soon enough. There were things to occupy the time, of course -- hoarding supplies (she'd had to upgrade from a backpack to a duffel after the sponsor gifts started rolling in), hoarding food from the daily frenzy in the food court, threatening everyone who got close to her. She was still on the hunt for a pair of thigh-high red boots, but she was making do with a few pairs of black heels for now.
By now, she's managed to pick out the stores that garner the least amount of attention, mostly because they don't have real supplies in them, only bric-a-brac useless for fighting. But that didn't make the stores completely worthless, now did it?
Blaires Accessories turned out to hold a wealth of flashy jewelry, Molotov's favorite kind, and she picked up some massive gold heart-shaped hoop earrings and a bunch of rings. There were hairbrushes and decorative hair bits, and she commandeered a mirror to tie her hair up in a black scarf with red hearts. Some off-brand red lipstick and black eyeliner (both spot tested on the back of her hand for potential skin-burning effects) helped her feel like she wasn't an uncivilized cavewoman.
Next door, though, was what she really wanted.
Glamor Nails may reek of chemicals, but Molotov is a vain woman, and the scent of nail shops is nothing foreign to her. She takes her time painting her nails red, but her real goal lies toward the back of the shop, in the big leather chairs attached to the foot baths. She's not aiming for a pedicure so she doesn't fill the basin, but when she finally drops her kit bag next to her and leans back in the chair, it's with a low groan and an almost orgasmic, "Oh."
The massage on these things is powerful as hell, which is good because Molotov has enough tension for five people in her back, and she's got bottles of gin to aid in this relaxation. So now she sits in the nail salon, nearly melted in her chair, with alcohol and a boxed salad from lunch on her lap.
Now this... this is a death arena that Molotov can get used to.
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"I meant children. I guess I wasn't stereotyping you hard enough." There's something softer in her eye on him now, like maybe she thinks he's a little funny, or maybe it's just that she thinks he isn't enough of a threat to hate. Either way, she's lost all the conniving meanness she had when she was talking about the Capitolites, possibly just because she doesn't have any hate for Tom in the way she has hate for them.
Her cheek resting in her hand, propped on the arm of the chair, she takes another sip from her bottle. "We have time. Tell me about your kid."
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There's a certain fondness and condescension with the way he says 'Americans', as if they're something like housepets (or leprechauns). Regardless, it's just as honest as the fondness when he talks about Theresa, although there's a stir of pain in his chest at that whole mess. And as much as he could say on the matter, you don't get to be a career terrorist with actual family if you give out information about them willy-nilly.
"She's grown now. Doesn't call, doesn't write, after all I've done for her. It's enough to give me a crisis of faith in the human condition."
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Molotov waves her hand dismissively. "Some children are born bad, nothing you can do. If my papa had lived, I would never have even left Russia." She refrains from criticizing his parenting, although her thought is that beating adoration into children usually works, in her experience with being a child. "Probably your wife was soft on her. Spoiled her."
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"My partner in crime is everything but the latter. One hundred percent bulletproof, doesn't need to eat, breathe or drink, can lift a building with one hand." Tom laughs. "Believe me, if he weren't invulnerable his stupidity would have gotten him killed long ago."
There's a note of nostalgia in his voice, subtle as the undertones of a fine cologne. It's there when he laughs, too.
"Hardly. I don't have a wife. I never married, found it entirely too restrictive."
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She actually seems fascinated by this partner he's mentioning, although the stupidity dims her interest a bit. "Is he not human?" she asks, leaning forward a bit. "To not even need to breathe? It's amazing he hasn't taken over the world, even without a brain."
There's a soft puff of breath, huffed out as if he's said something stupidly obvious. "Isn't that the point? Finding comfort in being confined? So boring, it was no loss when my last boyfriend... disappeared. I could hardly stand to look at him anymore by the end, it was so dull. Never let yourself get talked onto a mega-yacht when you are on the run from the government, you just wind up with no options for people to talk to."
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He laughs again. "Oh, god. My lesson was learned on that one long ago. There's a reason my own yacht is packed with enough literature and pet projects to keep me busy for years should we become shipwrecked."
The idea of having no one to talk to but Cain is enough to make his skin crawl.
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"I don't know what you mean by mutant." Magic is common enough in her world -- maybe not excessively so, but enough that she's dealt with it. Firsthand, actually, thanks to that Indian burial ground. "You mean he had an accident that changed him?"
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"In my world, some of us are lucky enough to be born with enhanced abilities due to genetic mutations." Tom sounds smug for a hot moment, then irate. "Which, it seems, was deemed an unfair advantage over the others in the Game, and so they've disabled them."
Temporarily, if they know what's good for them. Tom's entire identity isn't wrapped up in his ability to conjure
frickin' laser beamsfire, but he's still unhappy with something so innate being stolen from him."And yes, others, like Cain, come by them by accident."
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She doesn't say a word.
"And what were you lucky enough to be born able to do?" Molotov punctuates by taking a long drink of gin, then slowly licking her lips before waving the bottle at him. "Ask nice."
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"Conjure fire. 'Spontaneous tactile pyrokinesis and generation' is, I believe, the medical term for it."
Pyew pyew.
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"That's fun. Certainly better than some of the powers I've heard of at home." Which, yes, are almost all ridiculous and pun-based, for whatever reason. "Must be hard, to not have something you've had since birth."
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"I'm sure. Some people really don't have the luck of the draw when it comes to these matters. I once had a cohort who looked like a damn elephant, and that was it. He didn't even have tantric strength." He's totally not going to mention that he needs to be touching plant matter to get it to work, because some things just lend themselves to puns too damn easily.
"I'll manage the tragedy of it."
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"Did he have some use, or were you hanging out with him just because you liked his personality?" she asks as she takes her bottle back, tone only vaguely mocking him. "There is a reason I didn't hire ugly girls to work for me, and the one ugly one in the company was a genius. Never kept her around for her stubble."
Even if she hates to admit that Hunter wasn't a complete waste of space for the Blackhearts.
"My heart aches for you."
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"Regardless, I'm sure you didn't need to keep her around to look better by comparison."
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"Well, I never thought Zara was much of a looker, but no, Hunter was... a complicated case. Defected from the government, had sex change, threw on a catsuit and decided she.. he... whatever, wanted to partner up. Start an agency. He's a man again now, by the way. And in charge of the government office he left originally."
She sighs, knowing it sounds stupid and also knowing that she's barely acknowledged the compliment. She doesn't need to, has never responded to outright praise of her appearance.
"Still better than organized villainy."
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"What do you think about supervillains? I always figured wanting to rule the world was something of a fool's errand." God, who has the time for all that nonsense? You'd hardly get a chance to enjoy your power without having to worry about someone trying to take it from you.
Tom's ambitions might be set lower, but he likes to describe them as 'more refined'.
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There's a pause for a drink, and she shrugs. "I like that approach. Rule the whole world from behind the scenes. Let someone else take the blows and the blame, be the face of it. Like the Koch brothers."
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Finance and power, though. It's probably the safest way to go about things, but might get a little bit boring. Tom thinks he would miss shooting people with his lasers.
"It would be a shame to put you behind the scenes. The Koch brothers, on the other hand." Tom shrugs. "A little old and puffy for my tastes."
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She can't deny it's stupid. There's a reason she's not involved in it.
"They might not be as pretty as I am, but they are smart," she says with a smirk. "I would probably still sneak out and fire a few bullets into bodies, though. Can't forget to have fun."
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"Points for intelligence, but a good brain doesn't make the entire package, no matter what ugly people like to think." He smirks back, cocking an eyebrow. "I'm glad we're on the same page about that one. Power's one thing, but there's hardly a point to it if you're not able to get your hands dirty in a bank heist or anything."
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She shrugs. "What do I need with a bank heist? Give me a garrote and a man who's willing to trade relative safety for the possibility of sex, that's all I need."
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He laughs. "Is murder all you think of? Is your criminal repertoire, dare I say, limited?"
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Her smile is coquettish. "Not at all. Murder is just my favorite. It has style. There's an art to it. And a satisfaction, you can never feel that high just from stealing something. Nothing like it in the world."
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He bats his eyelashes at her.
"Oh, on that matter we might have to disagree. Not that I don't enjoy the occasional murder, but there's a finesse one develops as a thief that you can't quite replicate with a killing. And fraud - honestly, I couldn't decide which I prefer. The looks on people's faces when they realize they've been had is something everyone should get to experience."
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"What makes you think I haven't experienced that? I don't always use bullets to get my way. Sometimes it's just pretty words and the right timing of a hand on the arm." Or, you know, flat out lying. That too.
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