Stood on the edge, wanna go deeper
- Eddies
- 12,224
"So it's five hundred for the fourth..."
"And four hundred for the third, yep," Lace finished, weighing the two amounts between her hands. The smaller bag held a small sour candy in the middle, her genius of an idea to keep them looking similar. They almost weighed the same, too, making her demonstration more sleight of hand than her fellow student should be able to guess. Then again, Marc Diggsy wasn't exactly known for being the sharpest protractor in math class either.
"Well, four is bigger than three..."
Lace just nodded, as if she was following Marc's train of thought. Her eyes were following the cook of the Noodle House instead, curling her palms around the bags before she set them flat on the counter in front of her. The cook was headed to the seats farther back from them with two steaming bowls, but the green-haired teen didn't want any wandering eyes on her transaction anyway.
"Five for four and four for...you just had to make it complicated. You know numbers aren't my thing, Lace."
"Oh, I know a lot more than that," she laughed. It hadn't been hard to put two and two together when Marc asked if she wanted to get some noodles after school, that much was easy math. He thought it was clever, never doing business on school grounds, and cleverer still for not sharing why he wanted so much from her. "Like how Rory told Yurika she was going to have her mind blown at your shindig tonight."
"Yurika's coming?!"
And there it was. Lace didn't mind not being invited really, she got some attention just for being on the cheerleading squad. It was girls like Yurika who could steal the show, and the hearts of half the schoolboys watching. When she jumped, they leaned in, and if she would ever say jump, there wouldn't be a single male sole left grounded. With her plain looks and small chest, the only way Lace could turn heads was in the short uniforms they wore for cheer in the summer and it was far too cold for that now. Sometimes she could manage it with the green dye in her hair, which she tossed in a nod to egg on Marc's beating heart. "And I bet you don't want to disappoint her. This could be your chance at braindance love, Marc."
She said the last part with a hefty dose of sarcasm, but Marc's sheepish grin registered none of it. Those mental cogs of his were turning, they were almost visible to anyone looking on. Which no one was, with passersby behind them and other customers around the noodle stand too focused on their food to watch a teenage boy glimpse his dream come true in real time. Even Lace found she wasn't as entertained as it could have been, keeping one eye on the cook who was supposed to be focused on making their food and not darting over their way.
So maybe Marc did have one cheerleader on his side, even if it wasn't her.
"So, what's it gonna be? Just enough for you and Rory, or..."
"No, I want the four. I mean the five. You know, the one with more."
Now she almost felt caught in the act, and if Lace hadn't been helping his little mental exercise, she might have questioned if he had cottoned onto her fractions scheme. Instead, she pushed the sour pill bag Marc's way, offering him a knowing smile. He seemed to take it as she'd hoped, reaching into one pocket to pull out a roll of old-fashioned bills. Real money!
It was Lace's turn to be so enthralled for a second, she didn't notice the cook approaching this time. When he set down their bowls, she covered the bag as quick as she could, keeping her head down to avoid whatever withering look the noodle chef might have had for her. At least he didn't mention anything out of the ordinary, and after leaving them alone Lace was sure to finish their business quickly.
The teenager ate slowly, savoring the deep flavor of the ramen broth. It was far better than the packaged stuff, and the noodles weren't limp or crunchy either. Lace could deal with the heat in her bowl, and the same under her collar clawing pointlessly at the back of her head. When Marc left his heart was lighter and her pockets were a little heavier, what was so wrong with that?
OOC: Open to anyone who might stop by the noodle shop in Japantown, or might be working at one.
"And four hundred for the third, yep," Lace finished, weighing the two amounts between her hands. The smaller bag held a small sour candy in the middle, her genius of an idea to keep them looking similar. They almost weighed the same, too, making her demonstration more sleight of hand than her fellow student should be able to guess. Then again, Marc Diggsy wasn't exactly known for being the sharpest protractor in math class either.
"Well, four is bigger than three..."
Lace just nodded, as if she was following Marc's train of thought. Her eyes were following the cook of the Noodle House instead, curling her palms around the bags before she set them flat on the counter in front of her. The cook was headed to the seats farther back from them with two steaming bowls, but the green-haired teen didn't want any wandering eyes on her transaction anyway.
"Five for four and four for...you just had to make it complicated. You know numbers aren't my thing, Lace."
"Oh, I know a lot more than that," she laughed. It hadn't been hard to put two and two together when Marc asked if she wanted to get some noodles after school, that much was easy math. He thought it was clever, never doing business on school grounds, and cleverer still for not sharing why he wanted so much from her. "Like how Rory told Yurika she was going to have her mind blown at your shindig tonight."
"Yurika's coming?!"
And there it was. Lace didn't mind not being invited really, she got some attention just for being on the cheerleading squad. It was girls like Yurika who could steal the show, and the hearts of half the schoolboys watching. When she jumped, they leaned in, and if she would ever say jump, there wouldn't be a single male sole left grounded. With her plain looks and small chest, the only way Lace could turn heads was in the short uniforms they wore for cheer in the summer and it was far too cold for that now. Sometimes she could manage it with the green dye in her hair, which she tossed in a nod to egg on Marc's beating heart. "And I bet you don't want to disappoint her. This could be your chance at braindance love, Marc."
She said the last part with a hefty dose of sarcasm, but Marc's sheepish grin registered none of it. Those mental cogs of his were turning, they were almost visible to anyone looking on. Which no one was, with passersby behind them and other customers around the noodle stand too focused on their food to watch a teenage boy glimpse his dream come true in real time. Even Lace found she wasn't as entertained as it could have been, keeping one eye on the cook who was supposed to be focused on making their food and not darting over their way.
So maybe Marc did have one cheerleader on his side, even if it wasn't her.
"So, what's it gonna be? Just enough for you and Rory, or..."
"No, I want the four. I mean the five. You know, the one with more."
Now she almost felt caught in the act, and if Lace hadn't been helping his little mental exercise, she might have questioned if he had cottoned onto her fractions scheme. Instead, she pushed the sour pill bag Marc's way, offering him a knowing smile. He seemed to take it as she'd hoped, reaching into one pocket to pull out a roll of old-fashioned bills. Real money!
It was Lace's turn to be so enthralled for a second, she didn't notice the cook approaching this time. When he set down their bowls, she covered the bag as quick as she could, keeping her head down to avoid whatever withering look the noodle chef might have had for her. At least he didn't mention anything out of the ordinary, and after leaving them alone Lace was sure to finish their business quickly.
The teenager ate slowly, savoring the deep flavor of the ramen broth. It was far better than the packaged stuff, and the noodles weren't limp or crunchy either. Lace could deal with the heat in her bowl, and the same under her collar clawing pointlessly at the back of her head. When Marc left his heart was lighter and her pockets were a little heavier, what was so wrong with that?
OOC: Open to anyone who might stop by the noodle shop in Japantown, or might be working at one.
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