who: @thc-magician
where: the red rose casino
It takes a respectable amount of alcohol to get Emilio drunk at the best of times — but these are the worst of times in every way possible, so he orders an entire bottle of vodka without glass or ice and retreats to a table somewhere in the corner, as far away from company as it gets. There’s neither rhyme nor reason to the decision of picking the Red Rose as the place to drink. The list of reasons as to why it’s a bad idea factually outweighs any reason he should be there, all things considered, but Emilio’s never been good at paying heed to logic.
He hasn’t seen or heard from Rune in weeks; not since he’d quietly snuck out of the hotel room they’d found themselves in following a long night of drinking and Rune’s hands creeping into places they really shouldn’t have. It’d been a terrible mistake on both parts, but perhaps more so on Emilio’s side following Rune’s candour about his name. It’s a favour Emilio has not yet returned, too concerned about the inevitable complications the truth would bring with it. Alexandr is harmless, a small-time criminal stealing and threatening only to make ends meet. Emilio on the other hand is directly connected to the enemy, and with Malachi gone and Eliza at the beginning of a life-long prison sentence, that’s not something he imagines Rune would be amicable towards discovering.
In the end Emilio convinces himself that the Red Rose is probably one of the safest places for him at the moment. Javier doesn’t have the jurisdiction to start any shit at the casino, and there are just enough non-gang affiliated civilians around for the Jabberwocks to leave him alone — for now. Emilio doesn’t intend to overstay his welcome or to piss anyone off, but the bottle’s two thirds empty much sooner than expected, and the seat he’s chosen is too damn comfortable to vacate just yet.
Preoccupied with his own miseries, it doesn’t occur to him that the casino is actually the place he’s most likely to run into Rune until it’s too late. Backed into a corner in the truest sense of the word, Emilio swallows down any words of concern he might have voiced at the tired expression on Rune’s face, and instead gestures to the remains of the vodka with a sweeping gesture.
“There’s still enough for two.”
Rune genuinely isn’t sure which would irritate him more: if Aleksandr had come to the Red Rose to see him, then chickened out to drink in the corner; or if Aleksandr hadn’t planned to see him at all, and this was purely coincidence. Rune could’ve been his usual brand of petty and simply ignored him, pretended not to see him, but at no point has Aleksandr had Rune acting how he usually acts. And therein lies the problem.
Lips thinning at Aleksandr’s offer, unimpressed, Rune takes one look at the level of alcohol in the bottle and walks away. A smarter man might not even come back, but eventually he reappears with a glass bottle of unnecessarily fancy water, sliding it across the table to replace the bottle of vodka. “Let’s trade,” he says simply, then lifts the bottle of vodka to his lips and tilts his head back. The view Rune offers of his throat, bared and smoothly muscled, is entirely on purpose; if the bruises Aleksandr had left when last they met were any indication, he had a particular appreciation for that part of Rune’s body.
Swallowing down the vodka as though it might as well be the water he traded it for, Rune sets the bottle down again between them, not empty but notably lighter. He doesn’t sit yet, sizing Aleksandr up with an inscrutable expression. To be mad at him would be largely hypocritical. Neither of them had reached out.
“You don’t exactly look in the mood for company,” is what Rune finally settles on to say. His tone isn’t even scathing; there’s a hint of concern that sneaks in, whether he likes it or not. Where have you been?
“Why are you here, Aleksandr?” No cute nickname, no games. “If you’re not actually looking for company, it won’t hurt my feelings.” Probably.