@forlorned, daniel & barbie.
foundation days, day two.
location: main street, disco fever.
the fact that daniel hadn’t seen his father yet and it was day two seemed like an act of god, but since he didn’t believe in god or luck–he figured whatever his father was up to, it would catch up to the son eventually. still, two days of festivities without a single cameo offered him a little more freedom than usual and it had him in a pretty good mood, though he had spent the morning pouting over not having thought of the disco sucks shirt until the day of. at least he wasn’t decked out to the nines like half of charming.
most of the guys from work had been heckling one another about the maidens’ performance and who would or wouldn’t catch hell from their girlfriends or wives for attending it. as one of the few single members of the veterinary clinic, he received a few hisses and boos when he said he wasn’t interested. if anything, he was sure that any one of those harpies would make him for his father’s son in a heartbeat and he’d be forced to shell out four-hundred bucks for a lap dance he didn’t even get to enjoy. not that he would’ve gone for one anyway. maybe it was his father’s fault, but strip clubs always seemed too shady for the younger choi and he wasn’t really interested in finding out if he was right.
when he spotted barbie, he wasn’t really sure what to say to her. there was a nice, largely unspoken bond between two kids with a laundry list of karmic debt thanks to their parents, but he never really knew how to initiate conversation with her even though he usually wanted to. spying a couple disappear behind the small beer garden, he donned a false expression of concern and approached her with a stage whisper of mock conspiracy. “i’m pretty sure i just saw donna summers making out with one of the village people, but could’ve sworn she came here with some frankie valli lookin’ motherfucker.” daniel scoffed in disbelief. “can you believe this night? i’m always surprised by how all out everybody goes like it’s halloween or some shit.”
barbie doesn’t drink, and if she does, not that often, not that much. the occasional glass of wine at dinner, the rare shot of tequila at the office christmas party just to show she’s not a total bore, barbie doesn’t drink often because she’s spent so much of her life following after her own drunken mother. the idea of being like that, of losing control of herself in such a way, it’s horrifying. barbie has done so much to make sure she never reminds others that she’s big barb’s (and ty, late devil’s disciple’s) daughter, trying so hard to distance herself from her mother’s messiness while also constantly cleaning up those messes. she can never really get away from it, though. people will always look at little barb and see big barb, a woman that laughs loudly at slot machines and cries loudly on bar stools. often, barbie can ignore it, compartmentalize, but it’s harder at town-wide functions like this. foundation days are three days where big barb has the whole town’s eyes on her and she loves to put on a show.
barbie doesn’t drink, but tonight she’s got a splash of vodka in her pink lemonade, because she feels that she deserves it on tonight of all nights. after spending most of the day trailing after her mother, and then fighting with her, then trailing again, until she finally lost her as the disco began, barbie decides this will be one of the few nights alone that she’ll indulge and have a bit of alcohol, the exact vice that has big barb in a chokehold and tormented their lives since before barbie can actually remember. it’s a disco, after all, though she’ll never lose control enough to actually dance. in fact, she’s walking away from main street, no longer entertaining the idea of drinking in public. she’ll go back to her apartment, down the rest of her pink lemonade, and probably cry on the couch until her roommate gets home. noisily sipping her drink, she’s slowly walking with her chin pointed downwards, almost touching her chest, when a voice suddenly jumps out at her. a dreaded voice. daniel choi, of all people, to see her look like such a sadsack!
if there was anyone in the world that could understand barbie, particularly her complicated relationship with her mother, it was daniel choi. if there was anyone in this world that barbie couldn’t stand, it was daniel choi. they dated once, and a relationship that should’ve had deep understanding just left barbie frustrated. they were both so closed off, but he didn’t hide his bitterness with sweetness. there was no chirpy tone and bright smiles, daniel wears his misanthropy on his sleeve, and it left barbie with a bad taste in her mouth. even now, with his casual approach and supposedly amusing words, barbie is finding it hard to place that friendly, warm mask onto her face that she’s become so used to wearing, so much so that it might as well be the real her. her voice very slightly slurred, she squints as she speaks, “they’d be fuckin’ lucky to even be in the same room as donna summer.” she knows he doesn’t mean the literal donna summer or frankie valli, but she’s looking for any reason to be rude to him. besides, she loves donna summer. “what are you dressed as then? a taxi driver fanboy?”