“Where they spin lies into fairy dust”
Indiana stood with his hands on his hips looking around the room with pride. She knew he was a nerd in that moment, an idealistic nerd at that one. But this was another level all together. Looking around the dingy basement room she tracked her eyes back to him and offered him a pained smile.
“Well this is …something”
She commented to the chocolate-eyed man who looked more like a kid in a candy factory rather than a twenty-one year old standing in a broken down building. The room around her looked dilapidated, like it was falling apart at the seams. She didn’t know how he was going to pull this one off. But by the looks of it Indie had a plan in mind for it.
Walking a circle around the open room she shook her head, this was a mess that he’d gotten himself into, she was relatively sure of that. But she knew that regardless of his plans or how badly it would probably burn and blow up in his face, she’d support him just as he’d always supported her.
Indi said as he grabbed her risk and dragged her closer to him, careful to watch the bruises on her hands. She was a mess of bruises.
“Right there? The bar, all gold and red”
He pointed to a wall of peeling paper and she nodded pretending to go along with his vision, she couldn’t quite see it but if he said so than she had to believe that he had an intention for it.
“Poles and a runway in that corner. The stage that makes the girls feel like stars”
Running a hand through her long dark hair she nodded again, still not quite seeing his dream for the space but knowing that the strip joint was a dream that he’d had for years now. Why he couldn’t pick anything other than a strip joint she wasn’t really sure. But his heart was set and she couldn’t do a damn thing to change that.
She wasn’t entirely sure how stripping would make anyone feel like a star and not like they were being exploited for money. But leave it to Indi to find passion in the strange. One of these days they were going to have to have a serious conversation about what was acceptable and what he should have left in his brain. But that wasn’t today.
“You’re still pretty sore aren’t you?”
That much wasn’t hard to deduce by looking at her face. Her eye still had a ring of black and blue around it that went all the way down to her chin. The damage sustained left her with bruises all over her arms as well. They’d really had it out for one another this last time, when the cops had shown up she hadn’t known what to expect or what to say.
She gave him a look that said he shouldn’t have asked her stupid questions.
How could she have not been sore, between the physical pain that could outright be seen, the mental pain of not being able to go home and of knowing how badly they’d destroyed one another. All she wanted to do was to go home to Eliot and apologize. But she knew better than that between Indi watching her every move and his father’s hired bodyguard… that just wasn’t something that was possible.
“Is it stupid that all I want to do is go home?”
He gave her a look that said it was the stupid thing he’d heard in fact. She shut her mouth then, walking over to the wall and wincing as she sat against it and clattered to the floor with pain throbbing to her.
A second later Indi had joined her, carefully slipping his arm over her shoulders and pulling her closer to him like the ever protective big brother he’d been since she was thirteen. Sighing she closed her eyes and let herself relax some against him.
“He’s not good enough for you Atlee. I don’t know what it’s going to take to make you see that. After everything the two of you have gone through…”
Peering out of one eye she found him staring at her obnoxiously. Like she could have cared what he thought about who she should have been with or how she should have been treated. She wanted what she wanted, and it wasn’t as if she hadn’t done the same things to him as he’d done to her. Indi just seemed to forget all of that.
“Need I remind you what I’ve done…”
She trailed off and he shook his head at her, knowing exactly what she was talking about. He’d been told every detail of that February afternoon in the dead of winter. He’d been horrified and shocked but he’d stood by her completely understanding her reasoning just worried about her mental health.
He could say all he wanted. It wasn’t as if it mattered.
Changing the subject was all she wanted. To not discuss Eliot anymore or the hurt that was still blazing from it.
“So does this place mean that you’re going to give me a job on your stage?”
His abrupt coughing starting suddenly as if she’d asked a question that was funny rather than one that was dead serious. Of course she’d known how he was going to react but she also had felt as if it had been worth a shot too. Of course there was no way that he was going to allow her to strip even if he did by some miracle get the place up and running for the public.
“Not in your wildest dreams kid”
She wasn’t a kid, hadn’t she proved that to him enough? Obviously she had not. He wanted her to get some type of respectable job, maybe then she could stop taking up residence on his couch and actually find herself a decent place to live now that she couldn’t quite go home to Eliot.