Out into the snow, the temporary shelter of the overpass, the heavy down jacket the only thing between him and hypothermia, in search of a party. He had the address written - oh so cool, like a goddamn barfly or something - on a matchbook, but when he got to the right neighbourhood he got utterly turned around and wound up in a convenience store full of hip young things (it was that part of town) all looking for their own individual parties. That's why God made cell phones right? Everyone was on the phone to someone who knew someone who knew where the party was - he was pretty sure some of them were probably talking to each other. He was no better.
"Y'ello."
"Dude, where the fuck is this party?"
"Oh, hey man! Are you here?"
"No that's..." he pressed his thumb into one eye-socket, his forefinger into the other, he should never have called Travis. The guy already sounded hammered. "I'm asking you where the fucking party is. Why would I be calling you from inside the party?"
"Shit, I don't know man, I'm pretty tanked already."
"Trav. Focus. Where is the party? I'm at a... convenience store with a yellow sign."
"Oh dude, you're like here already. Go out into the parking lot and look for the old cool looking building with the... like spire. That's it. You're at the store? I need potato chips man. I need them so bad."
"You got it, see you soon." One less idiot on a cell phone steaming up the windows.
- - -
In the queue that stretched almost to the back of the store with an alarmingly large sack of potato chips and a six-pack of beer that wasn't completely terrible, but that almost all of his micro-brew loving buddies would be guaranteed to turn their noses up at. Of course he noticed her. He was a guy, he was single, he had noticed every single girl in the line, especially the one with the cute, square glasses and the pixie cut right behind him.
"Ah... hey." And now she was talking to him.
"Hi."
"Sorry to be like this, I'm sure it's going to sound terrible, but I heard you talking on the phone over there..."
"Oh God, I know, I sounded like an utter asshole, you don't have to... At least I was in good company right?" Hands in pockets he slung an elbow at the clutch of wool hats and panelled coats yelling down their phones facing the magazine rack.
"No, I mean yeah. No-one looks good talking loudly on a phone in public."
"Right?" He kept eye contact, he resisted all temptation to look down. He was casual, he was cool - he just wished his peripheral vision was able to take in more details than that she was wearing a very puffy looking white coat and that legs were somehow involved. A lot of legs (meaning that there was a lot of leg showing, not that she had more than two).
"Well anyway I was meant to be going on a date tonight, and that went wrong in the most ridiculous way..."
"What happened?" He was smiling. There was something about her that made him want to smile straight off - the way she kept half looking off when she started a sentence, then immediately remembered that she should be looking at him and kind of re-centred herself. If was very, very cute. She was at least six inches shorter than him.
"Would you believe when I rang the buzzer I was interrupting him, mid coitus, with his not-so-ex?"
"Oooh," he laughed.
"They came to the door together - wrapped up in a blanket."
"They did what?"
"I know!" she looked away properly now, her brow wrinkling, her hands coming up out of her pockets to emphasise the unfairness of it. "Who acts like that?"
"You were well out of that," he reassured her, hoping that this was going where he thought it was, and if it wasn't that the line would maintain it's present, glacial pace so that he could talk to this girl for as long as possible. Her face was pretty, but not thin. It had a softness to it that couldn't help but make her look - for want of a better word - kind. The glasses and the hair were perfect, they gave her a sharpness that she would have been lacking otherwise. He really wanted to stop time and really give her a thorough once over, but it was getting very quickly to the point where that wasn't all that important.
"So I'm having a sucky night. I live round the corner and I was just going to go home and mix myself a vicious nightcap of some kind and curl up with Val Kilmer..."
"Val..."
"...Don't judge me - and then I heard you speaking on the phone, and I thought: what the hell."
"Wow," he grinned.
"So?" She looked up at him, and he only kept her hanging on for a few seconds.
"Would you like to go to a party with me?"
"I'd love to!" Her smile, a light that illuminated her whole face and made her cheeks perk up adorably, was really something.
"So I'll buy this and... wait what were you getting?"
"Oh I wasn't going to buy anything," utterly casual, "I just got in line to talk to you."
"Wow."
"Yeah. Can I chip in on those beers?"
"Sure thing."
- - -
She left the store before him, and he offered up a little prayer of thanks. Legs were, most definitely involved, though a little differently to how he'd originally thought. She was wearing a denim skirt that was - well if it wasn't a mini then it was minimal, and it hugged her ass so well that he almost didn't get past it. Above it the white puffy coat with the fur-trimmed hood that he'd clocked before, and below it, like the cherry on the sundae, amazing, knee-high, black and white striped socks. They were running the risk of being a little too goth, but the blue sneakers and the denim were saving her, and they made her legs look... wow.
She wasn't slim, but the curves she was blessed with were... faultless. The kind of guy who wouldn't turn his head to look twice at her was the kind of guy who had been brainwashed by the media into thinking all wrong about what makes a girl cute. In his head he didn't know how to describe her because she wasn't what she would call 'plump' or... anything as trite as that, but she wasn't thin. Ah, why was he thinking like this? She was what she was - plain cute. She waited for him outside. He scanned the ring of buildings surrounding them.
"That one."
"Whose party is it?"
- - -
As if that was important.
He didn't recognise the lofty guy who pulled the door open for them, and in the packed apartment there didn't seem to be more than half a dozen faces he could place at all. One of them was like a six-foot vertical stripe of shellac. T-shirt, tattoos and jeans that were painfully tight to even look at - he was sinking into the middle of the couch. He waved drunkenly as they came in.
The kitchen first, to deposit the beer, that was usually how these things worked, but here they had stalled in a throng of bodies in the living room, right in front of Travis. He threw the potato chips at the skinny punk, who let them fall into his lap.
"Danny! Danny, who's your friend?"
"Trav, hey. This is..." there was something about not knowing the name of the girl he was bringing to the party that made him want to laugh with joy. It hadn't even occurred to him to ask. He indicated her with both hands, as though introducing tonight's special guest.
"Holly." There were people sitting cross-legged on the floor between them and Travis so she just waved in response to the hand he held out.
"Travis. I'm young Daniel's sexual mentor."
"That so?" A raised eyebrow and a sidelong glance. He melted.
"Speaking of which," Travis was a few more than three sheets to the wind, "didja get me those chips Dan?" Dan made a finger-pistol and put a hole in the bag where it lay in his friends lap. "So you did."
- - -
First alcohol.
Then out on the balcony of all places. It was cold but somebody had said hell to the electricity bill and hefted out two sizable electric heaters that made it possible for two or three people to lean against the railing, hogging the warm orange glow that they produced. When the three people who had been out there came in Dan and Holly took their chance.