Maggie Beauford (
agirlwaiting) wrote2013-02-02 11:15 pm
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It's been about a week since Maggie found herself here in this city instead of back at the station the way she'd originally planned, but she's trying. She prides herself on being the kind of girl who can adapt and change for a new set of circumstances, but she knows it wouldn't be half as easy as it is without him here. Living on her own, though - that's something that takes her back a little, back to the morning she'd spent in that tiny little apartment smoking her way through a pack of cigarettes and trying to cover up bruises as best she could.
She goes to see Forrest every couple of days, though, even as she wonders if she should be coming around more often. She worries about him, living by his lonesome, especially given he's without even a single one of his brothers. She even wonders if it would be a good idea for her to address trying to get a closer room with him, though that seems a bold suggestion to make and one she isn't sure she's even entitled to think about.
It's plain reasoning that brings her to his apartment tonight, despite having received an invitation to a party in the mail. She ignores it in favor of standing on his doorstep dressed all in green with a basket full of food - there's a bottle or two in there as well - and knocking, waiting for the sound of movements from within.
"Forrest? It's me."
If he's in there, he'll answer.
She goes to see Forrest every couple of days, though, even as she wonders if she should be coming around more often. She worries about him, living by his lonesome, especially given he's without even a single one of his brothers. She even wonders if it would be a good idea for her to address trying to get a closer room with him, though that seems a bold suggestion to make and one she isn't sure she's even entitled to think about.
It's plain reasoning that brings her to his apartment tonight, despite having received an invitation to a party in the mail. She ignores it in favor of standing on his doorstep dressed all in green with a basket full of food - there's a bottle or two in there as well - and knocking, waiting for the sound of movements from within.
"Forrest? It's me."
If he's in there, he'll answer.
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He'd turned his television on exactly once, and his laptop was as useful to him as brick, sitting there on his desk. His cellphone he'd chucked in the trashcan his second day in Darrow, though he feared they might require a contact number at work, sooner or later.
Most likely, he'd eventually pawn all that junk off, he just hadn't gotten around to it.
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"Maybe later," she replies, breezily and over one shoulder, before returning to the task at hand.
"Help yourself to a drink if you want somethin'."
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They settled into easy silence for a moment, working side-by-side.
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Silence is comfortable here, and she figures out the new stove easily enough, pencil skirt tight at her hips as she moves.
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"Whatchu been up to, all the ways across town?"
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"Guess I'll need to start lookin' for work soon," Maggie adds, with a glance in his direction. "Must be some restaurant needs a waitress."
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"Your, urm... That little apartment you got... You okay bein' all the ways out there?"
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"It's tolerable, I suppose. Sort of like the room I was keepin' before I came here."
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The rest of what he had to say might've been overstepping just as many boundaries, but he took the risk anyhow.
"I know there ain't nobody after us here, Maggie, but I think you oughta be closer."
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She makes the suggestion idly, attention half-focused on finishing the sandwiches and sliding them off the skillet one at a time once the heat's turned down. When she finally turns, idly wiping her hands on a dish towel, her expression is open. Curious.
"Is that it?"
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With no danger posed to 'em, he couldn't be sure why he was asking. But it was important, and he couldn't seem to hold his tongue.
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She doesn't tell him that sleep has been close to an impossibility these last couple of weeks. That every time she closes her eyes she feels the imprint of dirty hands and smells the stench of too much alcohol on warm breath.
Instead she briefly hums, a thoughtful sound.
"Think it'd be easy to make a switch?"
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He was quiet a moment, busying himself with pouring the coffee, when he finally admitted, "If we ain't gonna be workin' together, I'd at least like you close by."
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"And I don't suspect I'd be very good at operatin' any kind of complicated machinery." She turns back to face him, hands clasped in front.
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Especially considerin' how that wasn't the only reason he wanted her close.
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"Alright," she agrees, quietly, and turns her head to look up at him. "It's what I was preparin' to do back home, anyway. And beyond all that - it hasn't been the same without you."
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She takes a seat in the chair he holds out for her, hands gently smoothing over her skirt to keep it from wrinkling as she opens up a napkin to cover her lap.