Author's note: This story has race and political conflicts as a minor plot point, from a leftist perspective. If that's not for you, please don't waste your time here. All the story's really about is two people who are deeply afraid they won't be accepted for who they are.
Content warning: ableism, racial micro-aggressions
"Look, Jo," Ultan Cassidy shouted into his friend's ear over the roar of the tiny, little club on Queen Street West. "If you didn't want a bachelorette party, you could have just said so. Dragging an introvert to a place like this makes me think you hate me."
"Come on, Ult," Jo shouted back, her face tipped right up to the side of his head. Her jet-black ringlets brushed along her skin, framing her smooth, russet face. "Everyone needs the excitement of downtown Toronto once in a while! What else would you be doing the night before my wedding? Taking more pictures of plants in the dark?" Ultan pushed his black-framed glasses back up the bridge of his nose.
"If I had to choose between the coyotes in the ravine behind my house or this, I'm picking the coyotes," he replied, just as the band up front launched themselves into the last verse of quite possibly the most shrill song he'd ever heard.
"Oh, be nice for once," Jo's massive hoop earrings tipped back as she tilted her head and rolled her eyes. She pursed her plum-shaded lips as Ultan reclined and crossed his arms, whereas everyone else in the crowd was on their feet. "Okay," she conceded, handing him her keys just as the band was wrapping up and the lead singer started thanking the audience.
"Go wait in the car or have a falafel or something. A friend of mine is up on stage and I want to talk to her. Are you sure you don't want to come with?"
"That honestly sounds like a low-key nightmare," Ultan deadpanned. He considered himself lucky that despite his neurodivergence, he could tolerate a noisy atmosphere and crowds for a while. Not a long while, but long enough to placate his friends.
"Really? She's the drummer and she's kind of cute," Jo drawled.
Ultan squinted at the stage, trying to look past the throngs of people crossing in front of him. The hazy, darkened room didn't help either.
"Redundant Contraption?" he asked, getting distracted by the logo on the bass drum. "That's their name?"
"You didn't even look at the stage
once
all this time?" Jo asked incredulously. Ultan rose from his seat and finally made out a lithe figure standing up from behind the drum kit.
"
She's
the drummer?" It slipped out before he could stop it.
"Yeah, and if you'd actually been watching the show all this time, you would have seen her killing it back there," Jo said, unimpressed. "Wanna meet her?"
She looked to be quite a bit younger than Ultan, with layered black hair that had violet highlights woven throughout, tied back in a messy ponytail. Her light jeans and black t-shirt sat snug against her dusky brown skin, and the way she took a swig out of her water bottle was reminiscent of '90s-style Cindy Crawford ads.
But as she casually pulled off her noise-cancelling protective earmuffs and tucked her drumsticks into her back pocket with all the coolness and poise in the world, Ultan deathly wanted to retreat back to Jo's car.
"No, no," he decided. "You're getting married tomorrow and I was dumb enough to agree to be your photographer. Shoulda just gotten you a toaster like a normal guest." Jo grinned as she fished her tinted chapstick out of her purse.
"Not only are you one of Felix's oldest friends, you're an art professor. I can't think of anyone who'd know the guests or the craft better than you, Ult."
"Adjunct professor," Ultan corrected. "Your fiancΓ© is also an adjunct art professor, might I point out."
"Yeah, but he can't photograph his own wedding." Jo took his hands in hers and gave them a squeeze. "Felix and I truly appreciate it."
"You just appreciate that I'm doing it for free," Ultan said, pulling his friend into a hug.
"That too," Jo murmured against his chest. "You know what an adjunct art professor pays." She pulled back and stood on her tiptoes to look over his shoulder. "Oh, look, my friend's coming this way," she said. Ultan swiveled around to see the beautiful drummer sashaying toward them. "Are you sure you don't want toβ"
But when she turned back around, Ultan had already disappeared into the crowd.
"Who was Bruce Wayne over there?" a familiar English accent called out behind her.
"Samaira," Jo went to hug her friend and boss. "I swear to god, girl, there is no way anyone would look at your office manager incarnation during the day and think, 'that chick can drum like thunder.'"
"Oh lord," Samaira rolled her eyes albeit with a smile. "You clearly don't know anything about drumming. If you did, you would have heard where I botched a couple of fills." She paused to take a gulp of water from the bottle Jo offered her, having finished off her own. "Also," she added, you don't have to say that just because I'm your boss, you know. I hired you a year ago and I relieve you of your ass-kissing duties."
"Ahh rah-leeve you of yoh oss-kissing dyoo-tees," Jo imitated while Samaira almost spit out her water.
"That almost went up my nose, you wench," she laughed as Jo apologised. "Now you get to help me take down the kit." She beckoned her friend over to the drums, where she instructed her on how to take apart the hi-hat while they continued chatting.
"So tell me... is there indeed a wedding tomorrow for which I must squeeze myself into that bloody bridesmaid gown, or have you taken up with Spike over there?"
"'Spike?'" Then Jo remembered Ultan's spiky brown hair and grinned. "I'm actually surprised no one nicknamed him that until now. No, no, that's my buddy," she said, passing Samaira a cymbal. "He and Felix go all the way back to high school, and he's going to photograph the wedding tomorrow."
"Why'd he run off? I mean, I know I'm sweaty as a boar after that session, but I would have kept my distance."
"Oh, it's not that. I'm pretty sure he thinks you're hot, but not in the way you mean." Samaira wrinkled her nose at that sideways compliment, then shyly looked down at the bass pedal she was detaching.
"Maybe you should tell him about my limitations," she murmured, only to be met with a glare from Jo's coal-black eyes.
"You're 5'8". He's 6'2". You're outgoing, he needs someone to pull him out of his cave. You'reβ"
"How old is he?"
"Samaira, seriously?" Jo asked, loosening the wingnut of another cymbal while her friend folded in the legs of the snare stand, blankly looking back at her. "Fine, he's 36 like Felix."
"And I'm 42. I've had two husbands. I have an 18-year-old who's heading into her first year of university at the end of the summer. Moreover, I never,