Chloe Frazer (
missthis_ass) wrote2018-09-26 07:10 pm
Entry tags:
[oct 5]
For the past two weeks, Chloe has been keeping busy, moving Nate's notes from his apartment to her own, going through the things he'd left behind and deciding what to do with it all. It's a little bit like someone has died, she realizes as she folds the last of his shirts and packs them away to give to charity, going through the same motions she'd gone through when she and her mother had finally accepted her father was dead.
That's the thought that does it. Nathan Drake isn't dead, but that moment still happens, where she drops one last shirt into a box and realizes she's done this all before.
And fuck that.
There's nothing important left behind, all his notebooks are already at her place, so she hastily labels the box for charity, then gets the hell out of that apartment where they'd spent so many nights together over the past few months. There is no way in hell she's acting as if Nate is dead, not when this is hardly the first time one of them has walked away from the other. That's what they were known for. They would get together, do a job, fall into bed, then one of them would turn their back on the other. She's not mourning something that's happened a dozen times before.
That night she puts in a little extra time, dabbing on some lipstick, choosing a pair of boots that don't look like she's spent the last three hours hiking through mud, as well as her favourite jeans and a red tank top. To hell with a pity party, she's simply not going to do it. Tonight she's going to find herself a bar and she's going to get herself a drink and she's going to have fun.
She bypasses the loud clubs and pulls her car into the lot of a slightly tamer place, only because that's what she needs tonight. There will be time for a party, but not now. Right now she wants a bar where she can talk to a stranger if they interest her. A place where she doesn't have to shout to be a heard.
A place, apparently, where she can find Sam Winchester. As she pushes open the door, he's the first thing she spots, taller than anyone else nearby, and she heads in that direction with a faint smile. Maybe he'll let her take him for a drive.
That's the thought that does it. Nathan Drake isn't dead, but that moment still happens, where she drops one last shirt into a box and realizes she's done this all before.
And fuck that.
There's nothing important left behind, all his notebooks are already at her place, so she hastily labels the box for charity, then gets the hell out of that apartment where they'd spent so many nights together over the past few months. There is no way in hell she's acting as if Nate is dead, not when this is hardly the first time one of them has walked away from the other. That's what they were known for. They would get together, do a job, fall into bed, then one of them would turn their back on the other. She's not mourning something that's happened a dozen times before.
That night she puts in a little extra time, dabbing on some lipstick, choosing a pair of boots that don't look like she's spent the last three hours hiking through mud, as well as her favourite jeans and a red tank top. To hell with a pity party, she's simply not going to do it. Tonight she's going to find herself a bar and she's going to get herself a drink and she's going to have fun.
She bypasses the loud clubs and pulls her car into the lot of a slightly tamer place, only because that's what she needs tonight. There will be time for a party, but not now. Right now she wants a bar where she can talk to a stranger if they interest her. A place where she doesn't have to shout to be a heard.
A place, apparently, where she can find Sam Winchester. As she pushes open the door, he's the first thing she spots, taller than anyone else nearby, and she heads in that direction with a faint smile. Maybe he'll let her take him for a drive.

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Still, when he saw that it was Chloe, he relaxed, even if only by a fraction. His smile didn't quite reach his eyes but it was no less genuine.
"Hey," he said turning on his stool to face her.
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"Hey," she answers, tilting her head to look up at him. "You, darling, look like you're in need of a drink just about as much as I am. It's on me."
It's probably not his first tonight, not if he's here, but that's fine. Chloe usually isn't one for drinking to excess and there's no way in hell she would ever risk her car by driving under the influence, so she can have one and Sam can have as many as he likes.
She already has a plan.
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"Yeah, you're not wrong," he admitted, flagging down the bartender and gesturing to his empty beer. "Thanks."
His smile softened and he took a moment to look at her. Outwardly, she looked as pulled together as ever, but there was something harder in the set of her jaw.
"You okay?" He asked, his brow creased with concern.
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She's not here to talk about Nate. That man has haunted her in some form or another since the moment they met, infuriating and attractive and insensitive and complicated and obnoxious. What she needs right now is to just get away from thinking about him for a little while. He's gone now. Nothing changes that. Nothing brings him back.
But that's been the case for as long as they've known each other. They've moved in and out of each others' orbits for years. Just because he might be out of hers now for a little longer than usual doesn't make it something worth crying over.
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"I, uh. I guess it would be a pretty stupid question, asking if you wanted to talk about it."
She angled toward him and smiled, but it didn't quite reach her eyes. When he did the same, his smile didn't quite reach his either.
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And wherever the hell things go from there, she's comfortable with it either way. A big part of her, of course, would happily take Sam back to her place right now, but she figures she ought to at least buy him those drinks before she goes straight for the metaphorical kill.
"Unless you're not the fast car sort and then I'm sure we can find other things to do," she adds with another grin.
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Cars would always be something his brother and father shared-- he'd always cared more about practicality, but he knew more about them than he'd ever been given credit for.
"It's been a while since I've taken a drive, for anything other than work," he admitted, clinking his glass against hers and then bringing it to his lips.
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"Unless you want to talk about why that smile doesn't quite look genuine?" she asks. "I'm not going to lie and say I'm a good listener, but I'm not adverse to giving it a shot. Especially if you make the story interesting."
She doesn't want to talk about losing Nate because, for all it hurts, that's a boring story. It's typical and expected and rather irritating in just how mundane it really is.
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He'd already thought about it enough. He'd had a whole week to do it, cramped up in Marcus's apartment, coming down from the high of too much power. Now, forgetting while in the company of a beautiful woman sounded a hell of a lot better than anything else he could've come up with.
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"We can talk about anything else in the world," she tells him, finishing the last of her beer. She's not drunk, knows better than to have too much when she's planning on driving, and no one else in this world gets to drive her car. "Like how it is we kissed the very first we met and haven't again since then. Terribly disappointing, darling, I'll tell you that much."
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"Those were, uh. Kind of weird circumstances. We probably shouldn't have been waiting for a repeat of those," he admitted, with a crooked smile.
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Nate. She had been trying for Nate, trying to be the woman she still suspects he wants, the woman who will settle down and marry him and give him that beautiful daughter in the photo album she's now in possession of. Chloe has to hope he never would have expected that much of her, never would have honestly thought she would ever be happy taking the same route he'd gone with Elena, but she knows he still would have wanted it.
But at least part of the point of tonight is that she not think about Nate and so instead of letting herself really go down that path, she sets her beer on the bar top and lays her hand on Sam's arm. "It was a good kiss, wasn't it?" she asks, though she doesn't give him a chance to answer. Instead she slides her hand up his arm and hops down from her stool, getting close enough to Sam's that she can kiss him for the second time. Long and slow.
She loves Nate, but how she's missed things like this.
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This was a good kiss, and not simply because it was the first he'd had in a depressingly long time. It was better, now, because it wasn't tied to some spell. There was nothing but the two of them, and perhaps their shared loneliness.
His hand fell to her waist, feeling the warmth of her through her clothes, and she was right. He couldn't think of a single reason why they'd waited so long.
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It's always been a much safer way to live.
She likes Sam's hand on her waist, the weight of it, and when the kiss breaks and she pulls back to look at him, she's grinning. He reminds her a little of Charlie, a very favourable comparison, as far as Chloe's concerned. "Done with that beer?" she asks. "Ready to get out of here?"