corraichā:
āMaybeā āāĀ He mused as he pouted his lip feigning thought. Despite being a man of oath even he couldnāt escape the mortal coil of conceit. He was a liar. A well accomplished one. But one couldnāt blame him when faced with his circumstance. Listening to her considering her⦠field of work painted her not that different than the common man;Ā āāJust doing whatever to get byāā, if it paid well, who could possibly blame them? Who but he. He considered it the thought of modern slaves. Profiting utmost from their position, probably too afraid to risk it all for change⦠Or wasnāt she? He had to discover that, for he felt a drive in her unlike any other.
Yet another charismatic smile scorched his visage. One that spelled provocative without a single word being uttered.Ā Ā āSave me the bullshit.ā He spoke with a blunt, merciless tone. Such reasoning perhaps worked for the common fan, but he was unlike any she came across.Ā Ā Ā āSuch passion, you canāt fake that. Money surely canāt motivate that. You sing becauseĀ THATS what you do. Thatās who you are meant to be.ā Just like he, was meant to be free.
Ā Ā Ā A TOUCH OF ANGER mars her countenance as he counters her. SHE FEELS DELIBERATELY MISINTERPRETED ; the one time she doesnāt over - explain, and it results in this.
Ā Ā Ā ā I didnāt deny, ā Nora states, tone frosty. ā that I liked singing. Youāre right in that it is my passion, and Iām very lucky to be able to do it for money. Youāre the one who just asked me why IĀ ā wasted my time ā with entertaining -- and I told you I do it for money. ā Her expression is stony. ā I canāt live off of singing to myself in my apartment. ā
Ā Ā Ā She sips at her bellini. ā I want you to tell me why youāre really here, Mr. Jericho. I find that as I get older Iām getting less and less tolerant of just talk. ā Words in a circle, conversations meaning nothing. ā Itās late, you know. Iād like to get home. So you ought to make this quick. ā














