APRIL 3RD, SATURDAY, 9:31 PM. A HIDDEN NOOK IN SOMA SOHO. FT. @milo-pierce. ( 🎵)
Jessica has always been very good at playing nice. Some soft skills weren’t as needed in a time of war, with fists and threats making more of a statement in Famine, but the gangs had instituted peace. Peace of a sort, anyway, for now—fraught with tension, perhaps, but ultimately calm. So Jessica made her rounds today, showing a measured magnanimity despite everything that Pestilence had done to Famine since exactly two months ago—ending the truce, threatening them at Ravi’s party, betraying the arrangement that had done all of them good. Today, she stood in front of a hurting Horseman and a wounded Seraphim and showed—with a fresh face, tousled brown hair falling in waves down her back, and a small smile on her face, replaced by a somber look when needed—that she was at her best. That though they were faltering, she, and Famine, hadn’t missed a night of sleep.
But it wasn’t only the Horseman she noticed at Ricardo’s funeral. When she saw an old friend, familiar from visits to the Hippodrome for Famine, she couldn’t help slowing as she passed him, idly asking as she glanced at her watch, “I think we’re overdue for a catch-up, aren’t we?” The details came later via text, Milo’s name listed simply as Milo P. (not yet blessed with emojis) on Jessica’s phone: an underground cocktail bar owned by a friend of a friend in Soho. Directions, in case he couldn’t find it. And the message, because pest is closed :( x Boo-hoo.
It didn’t take long for Jessica to find a spot she wanted, far enough away from the very small crowd of VIPs, and to settle in with a gooseberry chaat margarita as her security waited, eyeing her from the main bar. Then she heard a sound and glanced up, her smile widening as she saw the newcomer. “Milo Pierce,” she greeted, standing and holding her hand out to shake his. Her Panthère de Cartier bracelet glinted in the light, stark against the black of her Versace dress. “You and Pestilence. I never thought I’d see the day.” She grinned, motioning for him to sit. “It’s nice to see you for the first time in... four months, maybe?” Back when life had been easier, and he’d just been yet another man trying his luck at the blackjack tables. “And congratulations. Seraphim looks good on you.”