The light of Widow, long found unsafe for even Krogan eyes, shone filtered and tinted through the artificial ecosystem of the Presidium and dug like a meathook into drowsy eyes. A soft magenta gleam turned screaming blue sky and beige sun meant to resemble every homeworld's star slightly and any one of them only barely. So often these things which are meant to please everybody please nobody and get by only on the lack of offense which they may cause.
Lack of offense if you weren't migraine-prone at least. If you weren't thirteen hours into your two-hour work session taken before rest. If the coffee you were taking early in the artificially enforced morning was for waking up and not taking the edge off of the malaise before bed. Liara was ticking all of the boxes to be irritated but was grinning and bearing it. She had a pair of sunglasses made for this that she'd forgotten, face buried still in her omni-tool as she stepped out the door. Nobody to blame but herself. She was more used to artificial skies than real ones anyway, at a certain point you made peace with it. Like a planet-sized fluorescent hum.
Granted, she still had her nose buried in the hand terminal of her omni-tool. That probably wasn't helping. That or the strain. Reading over emails word-by-word as if taking them slow and laboring on the details could make them say what she wanted to say. An evolved state of the university-age focus she'd developed like a different personality. The only time she really frowned her frustrations and furrowed her brow. That was half of the headache, the other half was that she hadn't slept in a while. Manic focus, made worse by lack of results.
Red Lotus had just... shown up. Companies weren't supposed to do that. It was near enough impossible for them to do that in this day and age. Nobody worked for them, nobody bought the IPO, nobody knew what they did. Shell companies and investor scams were as old as trading was, but this didn't smell like that. This smelled like nothing. That was a hundred times more remarkable than smelling like shit or smelling like roses. Like a virus every computer in the Citadel had downloaded, making all of them conspire to create a single fake entry to trip people up. She had every feeler in the world and none of them got word in or out.
A hundred emails of "couldn't find anything but it's my top priority" and counting. You couldn't fart without a family member or neighbor hearing it and talking about it, or a camera or wire picking it up. How the fuck did you make a whole company and make a public opening for it without so much as a peep?
She sighed, leaned back, sipped her drink, looked around with slightly lidded eyes. The local place didn't make bad coffee, probably because the beans were local. That usually mattered more than some secret recipe or importing it from a planet famed for it. Best cup you'd get is usually one where the person behind the counter could actually point to the exact patch of dirt the cupful had come from. Relax, step out of your job. You need to start the winddown eventually if you're actually going to, you know, wind down.
Artificial birdsong, her eyes shifting and getting used to the light as she looked away from her terminal, a family with a small child. The kid runs ahead of the human and asari parent and looks back with a laugh, pure Asari blue but with the eyes of the father. Grumpy Turian on a bench scowling at them but smiling behind their backs. These were happy things, wind down. Try to relax the muscles of your face out of the scowl. It'll happen when it happens, can't force it.
Across the plaza a man stumbled out of the low din of a closing bar, he straightened his coat slightly before one of the bouncers followed him down the steps and gave him another shove. He landed a few feet from Liara's table and got up, he opened his mouth to say something to his attacker but spotted the child looking at him quizzically and made an aggressive but non-profane gesture the man's way instead. The Krogan bouncer shrugged and skulked back into the building. The man looked around half-dazed, wheeling and wobbling to bely his drunkenness, before spotting Liara at her table and smoothing his shirt. He sat at her table without asking, looking both ways in an almost performed way and leaning toward her.
"Hell of a morning, isn't it?"
Liara sipped her coffee and set it down. "Isn't it indeed?"
He leaned forward, "Though I get the impression that both of us are on our way to bed, if I may be so forward."
"That seems a bit presumptive of you, sir."
He leaned back. He was older, that unique look of a human man who has stopped denying how his age has progressed. Smooth hairless dome of a head with a wrap of hair around it more like an article of clothing than a hairstyle. Everything neatly trimmed and exercised and manicured into place to create an illusion of wizened age and economic class. Looking to be the smart and responsible father figure to lech on a woman far his younger. Both ironic in the face of sitting at her table, considering she had likely outlived him by three or four times and could have bought the bar that had just tossed him to the side. Drunken confidence that no longer served to mask a deeper insecurity but to accentuate a genuine devil-may-care approach to life. Hot shit, if you asked him to describe himself. But with a certain approach, with the right attitude, his type had an allure. Not quite so sad and deflated yet, but a man who had been told no enough not to take it personally. Usually not her deal, but maybe her good mood meditation had been working.
"Well, I was just in the neighborhood when I caught your eye-"
"You mean you were just being removed from a bar when you fell down near my table."
He shifted a bit, "You saw that, huh? Man can't even drink his wages in peace these days without some Krogan telling him about how they're closing."
"Perhaps if they were closing, you may be drinking more prodigiously than they liked."
He rubbed his hands over his face for a moment.
"Nah, I'm not that far in the bag. Damn company I'm working for has me working these boneyard shifts, I was only in there an hour or two."
She sipped her coffee again. He swore like a matriarch who had decided one day that her child was ready to no longer be spoken to like a child, but who hadn't committed to it in full. He wasn't talking to her like a regal doll, but he wasn't talking to her like they had both crawled out of a gutter. She had half-expected him to make a mark of the first Asari he saw and come in all-randy and all-ready. Drunkenness either got genuinely offensive interest or genuinely interested offense out of humans. Either way, he seemed under control enough that he might not have been lying.
"And what is it you do for a living?"
He waved his hand, "I don't want to bore you."