bloodyinez:
the past had been as hazy as the present, clouded waves that smashed against eroded rocks, failure to maintain the presence of everlasting friendship — friendship that fizzled and strained with the fallen angel. but in a sense they were both falling. falling deep into the eroded depths of despair and angry beasts that growl and moan, bitter eyes and hungry teeth, yes, they’re waiting.
inez understood that her failures were not the same in comparison to klara’s, but how inez’s were kept under tightly pressed lips and klara’s misfortunes traveled around the office like gossip and wildfire. devilish flames sparking the damnation of someone that could of had it all.
“it has been so long klara,” she mused, turning her body ever so slightly to face the other, thigh crossing thigh, her black dress slightly rising. how time flies in the undeniable world that they both called home, how years could feel like seconds or days can feel like years trapped in twenty four hours. “you sure have disappeared from the circles! the girls miss you so much. though your spot at the poivre table was filled by someone else within the instant, you still come across conversation here and there at the soirées!”
inez sighed, gesturing the bartender to come over so she could order the same martini she was accustomed to when venturing into the depths of midas’s glory. “lemon drop please,” she paused, glancing over at her company, “and whatever she wants. you know what tab it will be under of course.”
she tapped her finger atop the marbled counter, golden flecks embedded into the polished rock. “the midas has a place in my heart all in the same. well that was until the silver veil became known as second place, and now the midas is the hottest spot! which is odd,” inez glanced around once more, the restaurant was still barren excluding the three tables filled, “this place is looking a little dead.”
an unexpected thing, to be met with open arms by something more than her own memories—another sweet moment captured in inez’s words. nights at poivre: the impeccable plates and silverware, the stems of their glassware so delicate and thin, details she hardly noticed at the time so used to the goodness of life—of what money could buy—that now ring louder as she looks back through the filter of a life much less, barely a sliver of its previous ripeness.
she looks over her shoulder first, deciding if she should take inez up on her offer before doing so in a soft voice, “a glass of chablis, please.” they are the picture of Wonderland’s finest—one dressed in white dreams, satin silk, and the other poised in the depth of dark hues, of sharp heels; a picture that the city has done well to ruin in its own ways. “well i’m glad i’ve been missed—“ klara turns to meet inez’s face, a small genuine smile playing around her lips before she turns away, nearly embarrassed at the thought.
(she is no more than a body, even in the glimmer-sheen of her life then she had been wiped out, dashed into millions of pieces that could be picked up and examined by those around the table, turned and looked at from all angles while working over a glass of wine or their house specialties.)
curiosity of a life that continues on without her: “ah, have i been coming up? oh you’ll have to tell me why as i quiet haven’t heard news of you!”
“it’s unfortunate about the silver veil—i think everyone must be a bit worried to be out gallivanting though, don’t you think? i did forget to ask, what brings you hear tonight?” from her mouth, a string of words, they emerge like a flower blooming. a warm, heavy feeling descending onto her skin.
it’s the same—ears pressed to the door, word traveling fast in their small groups but tonight they collide. perhaps she is the last to know, far too long insulated—fed only what she needs to know, the world seen through a keyhole.















