Avatar of v o r n a l
  • Last Seen: 4 yrs ago
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    1. v o r n a l 5 yrs ago
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4 yrs ago
Current Hi friends, I’ve messaged those who I’ve been role playing with. I may be gone for maybe another month? I’m struggling with irl issues and it’s haulted my writing. Many apologies. ):
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4 yrs ago
Hi friends, I’ve messaged those who I’ve been role playing with. I may be gone for maybe another month? I’m struggling with irl issues and it’s haunted my writing. Many apologies. ):
4 yrs ago
Hey guys! I'm getting replies out shortly, just struggling with writing and connecting to characters right now. Thanks for your patience.
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4 yrs ago
Replies coming soon!
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4 yrs ago
I’m still here, doing a lot of cleaning.
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The other man was rather annoying and contradicting. Hadley knew better than to believe his words until his body language changed, which was why he kept a strong grip on the glass in his hand. Luckily the man was all talk and no bite. Hadley's shoulders relaxed as did the grip on his glass. A frown was tugging at his lips causing his expression to look more irritable because of the other male's comment. No, it was he who wasn't worth the trouble.

"What a dick." Hadley suddenly said as the guy disappeared into the crowd far away from him. Good. The more distance the better in this case. After the man was out of sight, Hadley turned to Chloe, seeing her giving him thanks with a smile, "My pleasure."

"No kidding. Some people cannot take no for an answer." He drawled before sighing, shrugging off the tense atmosphere.

"How about tequila? Or Rum or Whiskey." Adrian called over the bartender, "Lady's choice."
Their parent's death was sudden and unforgivingly painful. It was a different sort of pain, not like the pain of falling and scraping your knees, or the emotional pain due to strained friendships or lovers. It was the sort of pain that left your mind blank in disbelief and your chest feeling completely and utterly hollow. The tears would always come before they were felt. They flowed down russet cheeks constantly, showing no signs of ceasing. No amount of endearing terms of affection and sympathy could take away the deep gorge left in the heart of the siblings who were orphaned in a matter of minutes due to a car hydroplaning.

The younger sibling, once boisterous and bright, now clung quietly to her older sibling's hand, gripping so tightly that she was sure she was cutting off the blood flow to his fingers. She feared that he too would slip from her grasp as her parents had. They wouldn't even get to see their daughter walk across the stage for graduation, she was nearly half-way through her senior year.

The older sibling stood tall and strong, although his eyes were bloodshot from having crying while others, most importantly his sister, were at unawares. Everything had fallen to him. The body preparations, the funeral, the caskets, the tombstones, his teen sister. All of it was left to him. Livie, try as she might, could not do too much to help lighten the burden. She was still just a kid, after all, hardly an adult. She hadn't even finished high school.

After the shock of their parents' sudden death, the panic of not knowing what to do followed when it came down to arrangements for his childhood home and his baby sister. The will his parents had left behind stated that if they had died before the house was fully paid for that the children would sell it and use the money from it to take care of themselves but, if the house was fully paid for when they died, the children could either keep it or sell it. It was theirs. The house wasn't paid for though, and the fact that there was no way Ethan could afford the payments to buy the house for him and his sister was the straw that broke the camel's back.

Olivia, affectionately called Livie, had found him in the kitchen of their family's home after the funeral had ended gripping a fist full of hair and choking down sobs. He thought that he'd apologized to her a hundred times that night but she only silently shook her head, there was nothing he could do, nothing she could do, and nothing anyone to do. "This house is nothing but a house without them. It's not home to me anymore. Home is where my family, that being you, is." Livie had said, which had surprisingly managed to calm her brother down enough for him to get a grip on the situation at hand.

It had taken a month for the siblings to take care of the arrangements for their parents and what they had left behind for them to handle. That one single month had felt like an eternity and it was an eternity that Olivia had cared to never reside in again, at least not any time soon. She understood very clearly that death was a part of life, that things did not last forever but, the ending of two lives that she had known since she came into this world had come too soon.

Taking a deep and letting it out, Livie opened the passenger side door of her brother's truck and looked up at the apartment complex where her brother lived, where she now lived. They were the generic apartment complexes that you could find all over the city, all over the state even but, it was where she would be calling home from now on.

She helped her brother unload her things from his truck, two boxes, at most, at a time. Whatever they could not bring into the apartment was going to be stored in their personal garage that came with the apartments. Halfway through hauling up boxes up two flights of stairs, Livie had paused on her trip back down. Baby hairs from her long ponytail that was now falling from the top of her crown, were slicked back out of the girl's face as she roughly re-tied her highlighted blonde hair back into a more firm bun. She let out a sigh and leaned back against the stairs behind her on the lowest stair step where she sat.

"Don't tell me you've quit, we have six more boxes Livie and then we're done." Ethan encouraged as he passed her going down the steps to grab two more boxes.

"My arms feel like noodles." The blonde groaned, her head falling back as if she'd completely given up, "Just give me five minutes." She swatted her hand in front of her, ushering him to leave her be.
for quick discussions
It was interesting that Chloe had a "no shots" rule, as it followed close to his own rule not to push his alcohol limits in public. On their way to the bar Hadey saw another familiar face. It was the bartender from earlier who was dressed more casual than he had been at the bar he tended to. Of course, Hadley was letting the two chit chat, not seeing the harm in it as long as the man didn't have any hard feelings against Chloe for flat out denying him earlier that morning.

Due to the music, it was hard to hear the two's conversation, but as he waited in line at the bar he noticed it had gone sour. When the man had tugged on Chloe, Hadley realized he needed to step in immediately. Now, Hadley was far from the confrontational type. He did not enjoy the thrill of a potential fight but that did not mean he would not assert himself in a situation that obviously needed to be defused, and quickly.

Fortunately, he had just heard the tail end of their conversation and knew how to interject just as he'd stepped out in front of Chloe, separating the two. "She's already made it clear that she has no interest in you. Take the loss and move on." There was a demeaning look in his eyes that matched the tone of disgust in his voice. If the guy tried anything well, Hadley's grip on the glass from his drink from earlier tightened, he'd make sure he'd get in the first and last hit.
Nothing Chloe has said seemed to phase Hadley, in fact he had laughed at her response. She was quick witted with her sarcasm. Honestly it was a lost art of communication but Hadley found it refreshing that she knew that lost art well. “I have to agree with you, far too revealing. I would prefer to wear something more flattering like a fit and flare.” He dead panned but there was a hint of amusement in his time due to the smile he wore.

Finishing off the Gin and Tonic he acted as if he was actually contemplating how much more he had to drink before he felt drunk. “Four more.” The statement came out so bluntly it would’ve been hard to tell if he was being serious or not. Either way he wouldn’t let himself get too far gone, not in public. Not to the point where he had no grasp of himself.

Though sometimes he was envious of people who let themselves go to the wind so easily, it seemed like fun. Chloe’s friend being an example, he was sure she was in the crowd somewhere. When he looked around he didn’t notice Adrian in sight either. Something told him they’d surface later when it came time to leave. Hadley shook his head , “ I’m sure no worse than another.”

“I’m going to have another drink, or two. Maybe a few shots if you’re interested?” Hadley raised a brow at her, a small smirk forming on his lips as if he were challenging her. He was told to loosen up after all so why not?
Chloe and her red-haired friend must have been close due to the playful nature in which she spoke of the other girl. It seemed Chloe might play the more level headed role for the duo but just because she wasn't in the crowd seeming to enjoy herself more than one could enjoy themselves at an event like this, didn't mean anything. Ah, she hit the nail on the head with him in her questioning his choice of night activities. Hadley gave her an apologetic smile, "Unfortunately for Adrian, no."

He was glad, however, to hear she wasn't the clubbing sort either. They had something else in common then. The more she spoke, the more he felt himself clicking with her. She was easy going and easy to talk to. There had even been curiosity that had peaked in him when it came to her that made her all the more interesting. "I couldn't agree more." Hadley said, having to lean closer than maybe he would've normally as it was getting harder to hear over the singer, seeing as they were in the climax of the song.

The man raised a brow, a smile coming to his lips. Now she was sounding like Adrian when he was trying to convince him to explore the nightlife with him. They both were gently coaxing him out of his box. "Adrian said something along those lines earlier today." Part of the reason why he had come to Mexico was to come out of the deepest part of his comfort zone, to get away from what was familiar and stagnant. "It took him the better part of an hour to get him to convince me out, "

"But you're both right," At that point, the band began to quiet down as they went on to pause only to transition into another song, "Besides it appears that stepping out of that box can be quite rewarding." What he meant by that was kept to himself. It was his way of saying he was happy to have ran into her again.

Adrian had come up to the two with a woman, maybe late twenties, trailing along behind him. "Hey, I'm going to get another drink, or two, " The brunette, dressed rather scandalously in a tight black tube dress that covered her just enough for her to be decent, giggled. "I'll meet you later? Say an hour?" Hadley nodded, he knew the man couldn't go any longer than an hour with out taking a time out for a cigarette. Not that he could blame him. He used to be just as bad until he managed to slow down a couple of years ago.

"Try to get him to loosen up a bit, yeah?" Adrian spoke loud enough over the music for Chloe to hear, before winking at the two of them and leaving them to themselves once again. The brunette smiled at the two before being pulled along by Hadley's friend. She had to have been a local.

"Ah, and there he goes." It was obvious Hadley was amused as he knew he failed to hide the smile behind his glass. "It seems I've been traded in for someone more desirable." He mused.

Chloe’s smile gained one in return from Hadley while he noted to himself that she had a smile that could light up a room. There was no doubt that Chloe was very warm and charismatic, surely she had a large social circle. When it came to people like her, others seemed to gravitate to them. Yet this was all just an assumption, he reminded himself. He didn’t truly know this girl and you could only learn so much about a person from one meeting.

“She looks ready for round two,” Hadley commented as Chloe leaned in to ask him about Adrian, who had waved back at Chloe before raising his drink to her. With a nod he leaned in to speak,

“An old acquaintance, Adrian is his name, surprisingly enough he managed to pull me out of my comfort zone.” Standing so close to her he noticed how the dress she wore complimented, not only her coloration, but her curves as well. The man took a sip of his drink, doing anything to distract himself from thinking things like those.

Later that evening Haldey had gotten a call from an acquaintance, informing him that he too was in Mexico on vacation. His acquaintance had suggested that the two of them catch up over a few drinks, maybe even explore Mexico city's nightlife. Interested in the drinks and the time to catch up with a familiar, Hadley agreed but politely declined in the suggestion to explore the nightlife. That wasn't particularly something he was fond of even when he was younger but he would end up giving into his acquaintance's persistence later that night.

Haldey was casually dressed, not as casually as he had been earlier that day in his button-up white collared shirt and tan khaki shorts. No, this time he wore a nice but casual navy blue button-up dress shirt with the sleeves rolled up his arms midway and had the first few buttons of the shirt unbuttoned exposing a bit of his chest. A deep tan leather belt was wrapped around his waist through the belt loops of soft tan slacks, which reached the tops of a pair of casual leather oxfords that matched his belt.

His acquaintance whom he had not seen in over ten years seemed perfectly comfortable with the close proximity of the inside of the bar and the heat that came with it. "Come on, after a few more drinks you'll be alright." His friend had said over the sound of the band.

Typically, Hadley wouldn't be too sure about those words but part of him was hoping they would be true in this case.

"You had me fooled for a minute there, Hadley. I thought you had completely changed since college, but yet you still aren't a fan of huge crowds are you?" Adrian, his companion, had said as he ordered his drink, nearly having to yell to do so.

"No, sadly, some things do not change." Hadley had responded easily, his eyes moving to the band and then over the crowd. For a moment he caught sight of curly blonde hair but Adrian had gotten his attention before he could get a good look to see if it was the young woman from earlier that day. Pushing the thought away, he ordered a drink. Gin and Tonic. That too had not changed from his college days. Apparently, Adrian had taken note, not that he had any room to say anything as the bartender had slid him a glass of whiskey, neat.

"I'll drink to that." Adrian said, some things that didn't change were accepted on some occasions.

As the two went to mingle into the crowd Hadley, pushing through the crowd, came across the same head of blonde curls he'd thought he'd seen earlier. A redhead accompanied her too. "Hey, Adrian, hold up for a moment." His friend had paused, following the direction of Hadley to the blonde he began speaking to. His brow furrowed confused, one of his students maybe?

Hadley had slid over to Chloe, using the excuse that it would be rude to not say hello as they had conversed so easily earlier in the day. When in reality he, unadmittedly, was curiously drawn to her. "Hey! Chloe, I see your celebrations have continued?"
Ah, so she was taking a break from University as well. At first, he thought to say the same, to tell her that he was also taking a break from University and that he was a professor at one. His eyes glanced over her once more, studying her to see if she was anyone he could've seen in passing on campus. How big of a coincidence would it be if Chloe was actually a student at the same University where he was a professor? Hadley wasn't the sort that was good with numbers but he was guessing the odds were slim, slim to none in fact. Yet he refused to test them. That and if it was her first year of college...

It meant that surely she was younger than he thought she was. An uneasiness filled him. To think that he had looked at a freshman in college, a blossoming young woman, the way that he would look at his own wife, or other matured women. That explains why they came to Mexico to celebrate, seeing as the legal age to drink here was eighteen. "Well, congratulations on finishing your first semester of college. Now that you know what it's like, it won't get any easier but at least you will know what to expect." Hadley had a tone of amusement in his voice.

For a moment he'd caught her glance but dared not to hold it for too long. "Now you have the afternoon to yourself, or I should say, at least until the celebrations are to resume, how do you think you'll occupy yourself?" Hadley wondered how the young woman would answer; he wanted to know if she had even given any thought to what she would do with her newfound solitariness.
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