Post by Oliver Dorner on Jul 27, 2014 21:29:56 GMT -5
there for all to see, entranced---
burned by the flame.
burned by the flame.
Haus De Musik was crowded and extremely disorienting on a Friday night, having hooked a very popular band into performing on stage. Competition in this area of town was always fierce, but Haus not only held its own, it thrived. Every pump of the bass sent those standing by the stage into a frenzy so ear shattering that Oli was tempted to rip their vocal chords out of their throats with his teeth.
It would have been easy.
But he didn’t, and he never would, because Oliver didn’t know how to hurt people even when especially hungry. Instead, he just grew pouty and sulky until someone eventually pulled him out of his reverie and offered a snack. Boom goes the base, boom goes Oli’s eardrums. Then again, the chaos was minimal in comparison to the nightclub down the road. Perspective is everything, or so they say. For Oli, the difference between the two were too trivial to bother with. His head hurt because his ears hurt, and Oliver’s ears hurt because he had yet mastered the art of audio focusing. Everything was much louder and vivid for vampires; something he had learned in school, but certainly didn’t understand like he did now. He could have sympathized back in the day, but never empathized. Last year Oliver had no problem in this scenario. It still wasn’t his scene, but now his friends were beginning to notice the change in his attitude every time he got dragged out in the evening for a night of “partying and debauchery”. “Why is it that Oli never gets completely wrecked like the rest of us? Have another drink!”
Oliver didn’t have the usual boy-next-door friends. His friends discussed the philosophy of existentialism, symbolism as an art form, and “is red really the new black, or is it fashion designers’ attempt at making red a relevant medium?” The same people who, at the same time, drank cheap vodka, did body shots off of each other’s abs, and maintained a war cry of “suck that, motherfuckers!”
The life of a twenty-something, in a nutshell.
Tonight they sat at a table, in a corner in the far left of the building a bit out of sight, yet continued to contribute greatly to the audio level of the room with their shouting. They were a little pretentious that way. One more round of shots and they were out of alcohol, and since Oliver looked to be the only one sober enough to maneuver around the rest of the people in the room, they elected him as the official shot-collector. He gladly got up from the table with a roll of his eyes and headed for the bar, though plenty of people were milled about it. He waited his turn, eventually ordering something for himself instead of his friends. Oliver needed a break, and it was going to take them a good long while to notice that he was still gone, if they ever did through their inebriation. When the young bartender finally nodded his head in his general direction, still multitasking thirty (okay, give or take) different drinks, Oli took that as a sign that he was next in line. “Fuzzy Navel Cocktail,” he ordered, evidently more than okay with ordering what was classified as a “girly drink”. It was an extremely fruity drink and lighter on the booze, which he preferred anyway. He stretched up onto a barstool as soon as one became available, ignoring the giggling and extremely drunk girl sitting next to him he waved at him with her fingers. Not her hand, just her fingers. The drink slid across the counter and Oli grabbed it smoothly, placing the straw in his mouth as he stared off into the abyss.
It was then that he realized just who the bartender was. He had changed a little, but not much. He’d filled out nicely, but he still had that boyish face, just like Oliver. Oli tilted his head to the side as he sucked on the straw, staring directly at Gideon Crumb serving all the customers. Eventually the area began to clear out because the big act was back from their break and ready to perform a new set. Actually, what happened could be more equated with a mass exodus as they all ran (and stumbled) to find a good place at the front of the stage. Oliver didn’t move. He wanted to see how long it would take for Gideon to feel eyes burning into him, and how much longer after that to recognize who they belonged to. It could be a game. The longer he sat there with one hand supporting his lazy head, the more blatantly obvious it was, but that Gideon Crumb was incredibly focused. Oliver took a deeper swallow of his cocktail until it made a loud slurping sound against the ice.