Molly Stearns (
losttheright) wrote2014-12-13 10:59 pm
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It seemed like a good idea. That's how she presented the idea to Lee, anyway, when she first asked if he'd want to go with her to the annual holiday party for the mayor's staff and other City Hall employees. She'd have been going by herself otherwise, and though it's not really like she'd have had a problem with that, this way, she can introduce him to some of the people she knows, ones it might be useful for him to have met if he keeps moving forward with trying to get representation for people not from Darrow. Besides, she thinks a lot of them will want to meet the person who helped her try to keep everything afloat during the week and a half no one can account for, when just about everyone was gone, and God knows she could use some good company to get her through the night. She works day in and day out with these people, and she likes most of them well enough, but she really doesn't want to spend an entire fucking party doing her job.
So it's mutually beneficial, at least as far as she tell, and that's the important part. It isn't, however, why she puts so much effort into it, and neither is the prospect of being around her coworkers all night. They've seen her at her worst, so while she'd want to look nice regardless, she wouldn't necessarily see the need to go all out. Molly isn't entirely sure why she did, but she's glad for it. She's wearing something more revealing than she has in almost a fucking year and a half, and no matter how nerve-wracking that is, it's relieving, too, a step forward in its own right. For that alone, she's sure it'll be worth it, even if she's pretty sure that, heavy coat or not, she's going to freeze by the time she gets back to her building. At least, if the past couple months are any indication, she'll have a pretty damn good way of warming up again after. That is, if she can manage to keep a couple of her friends away from her plus one.
For now, keeping warm isn't a concern, anyway. It's warm enough inside, her hair falling in soft curls over her bare shoulders as she sips at a glass of champagne. The party will start winding down pretty soon, she thinks, but few have left yet, drinks are continuing to be served, and several people are still on the dance floor, and she isn't too eager to leave quite yet. The only thing she is in a hurry for is to get back to Lee, after having been dragged away for a work-related conversation far too serious for this setting. Making her way back to his side again, she smiles brightly. "Hi," she says. "Sorry about that. You weren't too bored without me, were you?"
So it's mutually beneficial, at least as far as she tell, and that's the important part. It isn't, however, why she puts so much effort into it, and neither is the prospect of being around her coworkers all night. They've seen her at her worst, so while she'd want to look nice regardless, she wouldn't necessarily see the need to go all out. Molly isn't entirely sure why she did, but she's glad for it. She's wearing something more revealing than she has in almost a fucking year and a half, and no matter how nerve-wracking that is, it's relieving, too, a step forward in its own right. For that alone, she's sure it'll be worth it, even if she's pretty sure that, heavy coat or not, she's going to freeze by the time she gets back to her building. At least, if the past couple months are any indication, she'll have a pretty damn good way of warming up again after. That is, if she can manage to keep a couple of her friends away from her plus one.
For now, keeping warm isn't a concern, anyway. It's warm enough inside, her hair falling in soft curls over her bare shoulders as she sips at a glass of champagne. The party will start winding down pretty soon, she thinks, but few have left yet, drinks are continuing to be served, and several people are still on the dance floor, and she isn't too eager to leave quite yet. The only thing she is in a hurry for is to get back to Lee, after having been dragged away for a work-related conversation far too serious for this setting. Making her way back to his side again, she smiles brightly. "Hi," she says. "Sorry about that. You weren't too bored without me, were you?"
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"And did I promise that? I don't remember promising that." he jokes.
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"I'm sure they'd get a kick out of it down at the Public Defender's Office."
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He'd jumped back in a Viper just before Darrow, and that's difficult to forget.
"Maybe it's better if we don't get ahead of ourselves," he says, holding out a hand to take Molly's coat too. He doesn't know if she's just stopping off before heading home, but he figures he should hang it up anyway.
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"Well, shit, I hope this doesn't count as getting ahead of ourselves," she says with a laugh, once she's slipped her coat off and handed it to him. Her smile grows a little softer anyway as she reaches into her purse, taking out the carefully wrapped gift she's been carrying around in it. "I, uh, I have something for you. And before you say anything... Christmas might not be a thing for you, but it is for me, and I was out shopping already when I found this, so..." It’s not even close to the truth. She’d gone out of her way to hunt down a nice copy, a leather-bound, hardback edition of an old book on Darrow government, but his reaction to the book itself isn’t what she’s most concerned about. It’s the message on the inside, written in careful print. Following that, there’s a lopsided heart and her name, scrawled. Originally, she’d intended to leave it at that, but after a good deal of debating whether or not she should, she’d added one more sentence.
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"You really didn't have to," Lee says, even though Molly's said that she was already out shopping. He still feels like he's gone into tonight empty handed.
"Not that I think it's getting ahead of ourselves, but..."
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"Molly, this is... this is great," he says, and though he realizes right away that the word isn't enough, but there's no lack of sincerity in his tone. But really, it hadn't been a question, being there when she found herself the only person left who worked for City Hall.
The book still in his hand, Lee closes the distance between them to wrap an arm around Molly and pull her close, leaning down to press a brief kiss to her lips. "Thank you."
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"Well, merry Christmas," she says with a small smile, just this side of wry, perfectly aware that it doesn't mean to him what it does to her. She could leave it at that, and for a moment, she intends to, but then figures, to hell with it. Holding back, dancing around subjects, certainly ones of this nature, that's never been her. There's no reason why it should be now. Maybe this is the perfect opportunity to get some clarity here.
Resting her hand against his arm, she exhales on a quiet laugh. "Can I ask you a question? That... might also be kind of awkward and imposing?"
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He pauses, and takes a second to brush a few strands of Molly's hair back, behind her ear, "Well, how can I say no? Shoot."
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"That's what I had in mind, yeah," Lee admits, and though he doesn't think it shows, he worries that it's a fact that might change things. Because he and Molly haven't gone out of their way to put words to exactly what they're doing here.
"Does that change your answer?"
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"Of course not," she says like it ought to have been obvious, leaning in to kiss him briefly, mostly to keep her smile from growing too wide, a ridiculous impulse that she manages to stave off. Whatever she thinks of his response, she isn't looking to embarrass herself now. "I didn't want to assume, is all."
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