A/N
: Hello everyone; Imma be real, this story ended up being a lot more plot-heavy than I had initially intended. Next chapter will probably be pretty action-packed, but I'll try to get back to the smut somewhere in there. Also, I'm not super crazy about how this turned out, but I'm about to move cross-country, and I wanted to get this posted before I left.
At any rate, let me know what you think. This story will probably end up being five chapters all-together, after which I want to do more smut-focused one-shots with these characters. I also have a non-fantasy story in the works, so be on the lookout for that.
Enjoy!
--
The Lycaean Aria Music Festival was the biggest event in the music industry, at least within the Expanse, bringing in the most well-known artists from all over the continent. It, along with the Academy, was the driving force behind the city-state's tourism industry, and a guarantee of future success for any up-and-coming musician who played it. As the tradition was to give a spot to only one unestablished group each year, it was literally a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity.
Needless to say, Lisette was having a difficult time keeping her nerves in check. The largest crowds they had ever played for barely filled out the Academy's auditorium. Now it felt like they were about to play in front of the whole damn Expanse. The only thing keeping her from losing it entirely was knowing that her friends would be in the audience to cheer her on.
"...so you're not coming?"
She was in the dressing room, holding her phone loosely to her ear, her face stone-cold as she heard her
dear friend's
voice stammer out what sounded like a heartfelt apology over the tinny speaker. Truthfully, she was only half-listening.
"I'm really really
really
sorry! Something came up with my work, and . . ."
"Something you can't discuss over the phone, I take it?"
"Yeah. Honestly, I wouldn't even know where to begin."
Lisette let out a sigh. "Whatever. Do what you have to do."
There was a pause, during which Lisette's other hand began fiddling with the containers of makeup she had been in the middle of applying. After a while, Evie said, "I really hate this. I was so looking forward to it too."
"Don't worry about it. I'm sure whatever you're doing is more important than some concert."
"Lis, that's not-"
A man poked his head through the door. A brown-haired, light-skinned man wearing a jean-and-blazer combo in the same red and black colors as Lisette's blouse and skirt. His eyes met hers, and he mouthed the word 'meeting.'
"Shit," Lisette muttered into the receiver. "Sorry, I have to go."
"Oh." Lisette could almost picture Evie biting her lip, as though trying to physically stop herself from saying what was truly on her mind. "Okay. Good luck out there. I know you'll do great."
Lisette grimaced. It was the closest thing to a smile she could manage. "Thanks. Good luck to you too."
As she hung up, the man—Elwood—spoke: "Ciel wants to do a quick run-through before the show starts. I think the pressure's getting to him a bit more than he's letting on."
The phone dangled in Lisette's hand as she nodded along to whatever Elwood was saying. She didn't even notice him walking up to her until he had already put a hand on the top of her head, tilting it up so she was looking at him.
"You okay?"
Lisette blinked and nodded her head. "Yeah. Lemme just finish my makeup."
She turned back to the counter as Elwood took the seat next to her and grabbed her brush. "I gotchu. Your hands are shaking like crazy; wouldn't want you to go up there looking like kid who just got into her mom's makeup cabinet."
He started brushing the blush onto her cheeks before she could argue. Instead, she gathered her hands in her lap, still restlessly toying with her phone. "Thanks."
The blush only took a few seconds—it had already been mostly done—so he quickly moved on to eyeliner. "So, who were you talking to?"
Lisette winced at the feeling of the eyeliner pencil scraping against her eyelid. "Evie," she muttered. "Something came up, apparently."
"That's a shame. But, I'm sure she has a good reason."
Lisette let out a sigh, forcing her tensed shoulders to relax as best she could. "Yeah, I know."
El paused in applying the eyeliner as he lowered his head to meet Lisette's eyes. "And you have good reason to be disappointed."
With a half-hearted smile, Lisette shook her head. "It's just always something with her. Even when we're together, it seems like part of her mind is somewhere else."
"Yeah, academics just be like that," he said as he finished off the tips of her eyeliner. Lisette glanced at the side of her face in the mirror with a bemused smile.
"How are you so good at winged eyeliner?"
"My sisters made me practice when I started dating. Told me it would more a much more attractive skill than banging on drums."
"They weren't wrong."
Seconds passed as El started applying a dark gel to her eyebrows. Lisette fidgeted in her chair; she didn't normally do her eyebrows so she wasn't quite used to the feeling.
"Am I being selfish?"
"No," he said after a final touch-up. "You're being a human. With desires and feelings. You'll get used to it eventually."
Finally, Elwood applied a deep, red lipstick. After rolling the thin layer of paste around her lips a bit to get them fully-covered, Lisette asked, "How do I look?"
Elwood packed the makeup away in her bag and looked back at her with the same warm smile he always gave her. "Like a superstar."
--
Evie let out a sigh as she set her phone on the counter, making a mental note to buy the most expensive bouquet of flowers she could find for Lisette tomorrow. Pushing her guilt aside for the moment, she grabbed two small cups from her cabinet and set them on a large serving tray, along with the teapot that had been brewing during her phone call. When she went back out into the living room, carrying the tray in her hands, the strange girl she had met on the roof was sitting on her couch, a blanket wrapped around her still-nude body. Evie set the tray on the coffee table in front of her, and the girl held out a long, thin object, nearly hitting Evie in the face with it.
"What's this?"
It took a moment for Evie to realize what she was asking about. "Oh, that's the remote to the TV."
The girl cocked her head in confusion. Evie took the remote from her and switched on the large, flat-panel TV that was mounted to her wall, to some cheap-looking drama program. The girl's eyes widened; she jumped off the couch and leaned over the coffee table, looking like a child witnessing their first magic trick.
"Woah! T-That picture's moving! How is it doing that?"
Evie started pouring out the tea. "It's just an optical illusion; it's showing a bunch of still images in rapid succession, giving the illusion of movement.
"But then, how is it also making sound?"
"Umm... that's a bit harder to explain." Evie slid one of the teacups across the table. "Why don't you just have a drink?"
"'Kay!"
As the girl took the tea, she plopped back onto the couch, the blanket now loosely wrapped around her like a shawl. Evie made a point not to gawk at her body, though she had a suspicion this girl wouldn't have cared either way. With a sigh, Evie took the other teacup and started blowing on it to cool the steaming liquid. Before she even had a chance to sip it, the new girl had slammed her empty cup on the table.
"Wow, that was delicious! What did you say it was called?"
Evie's eyes darted back and forth between the girl's face and the cup—her cheeks were slightly rosier but other than that she seemed fine.
"Umm, tea?" Evie took a single, hesitant sip, then recoiled in pain—it was absolutely scalding. "How did you drink all of that so quickly?"
The girl's face fell. "Oh, I-I'm sorry, was I supposed to wait?"
Evie shook her head. "No, never mind, it's fine," she said, setting the cup back on the table. "S-So, how are you feeling?"
The girl squirmed in her seat, folding her hands tightly in her lap. "What do you mean?"
Evie had already explained the situation to her, as best she could have—that Corsaea, ostensibly this girl's home, had been gone for centuries and no one knew why or how. Evie had fully expected her to have a meltdown, or to show any sign of emotion, but she hardly seemed fazed by it. "I mean, this whole thing must be a huge shock to you. It would be completely understandable for you to be upset by it."
"Really, Mistress, I'm fine," she said, a smile plastered onto her face. "Could I have some more tea, please?"