Public Service Announcement
Open thread! CW: minor allusion to suicide.
Public Service Announcement
((Zara Mohammad pregame START))
It felt wrong to be putting up posters.
Zara usually liked the process. She liked the feeling of holding a stack of warm copies, fresh from the printer. She liked how it felt to slap a freshly-inked printout against the wall, press it flat with the palm of her hand and adjust it just a touch this way and a touch that way, until its edges matched the rails of the bulletin board with razor-straight precision. She even liked the feeling of pushing little gold thumbtacks until they punched through the paper and into the cork beneath. She always made a game out of seeing if she could get the head of the tack flush to the paper without dimpling it; she almost always succeeded. That kind of thing mattered. Dimples looked amateurish, and they reflected badly on the content; if your posters looked lousy, then your event would probably be lousy too.
It was hard to say whether Zara had directly learned this, or whether she'd picked it up by sheer instinct. Her dādā Syed had owned a print shop, and had had his sons sorting movable type before they could read; all of his offspring had ink in their veins.
But for the past couple of weeks, ever since her eighteenth birthday, she'd been dimpling. Creasing, even. And what worse: she'd started not to care. In another few days, she'd probably find herself abandoning the gold thumbtacks for multicolored push pins - unsorted, in random color combinations. Little polka dots of anarchy, stabbed into the paper hard enough to leave Grand-Canyon creases. Dādā Syed would fall down dead at the very idea.
The truth was, it was hard to care about little things right now. Not since her birthday, when she'd gotten up early and proudly shown her ID to the voting officials before casting her first-ever vote for Marisa D'Cruz. Not since she'd stayed up into the wee hours with terrible generic birthday cake churnining her stomach as she watched swing states topple like dominos. How was she supposed to care about page margins and font sizes when several million people had effectively decided that her humanity was a small price to pay for cheaper eggs? How was she supposed to care about any of the things that student council had planned for the year? Hey kids, your parents put a dementia patient in charge of the nuclear codes, but buckle up for safety!
Today, it was Bullying Awareness. It was redundant, for two reasons. The first was that they'd already done Bullying Awareness Month back in October. Under the circumstances, it bore repeating. This time around they'd added the numbers for several suicide hotlines. According to the Associated Press, the Rainbow Youth Project alone had received twice as many calls during election week as they usually got in a month. The second reason was that everybody was already good and aware of bullying - especially the bullies themselves. They were glad for the extra attention, if the replies on X (the Misinform Your Way to a Shadow Presidency App) were any guide, and very eager to get started.
Zara grimaced and pushed another thumbtack in - using her pointer finger, in a display of wild abandon. No, she didn't feel like putting up posters. No, she didn't feel like being aware. Awareness hurt right now. Zara had hotly debated deleting her X and Meta profiles to reduce her stress, but then she'd have had to explain her sudden absence to Aunty Maryam and she wouldn't get the updates on how Sadaf was doing at university ("put a space in my name, cousin, because I'm sad AF") that her mother kept asking after, and her stress level would ultimately remain the same.
So, no, she didn't care about the posters. But she put them up anyway. Zara wanted to be Student Council President, because it was one of those titles that looked good on applications. Presidents (with one glaring exception) commanded respect and broadcast dignity. And if you wanted to be Student Council President, people had to be able to envision you in the role. That generally meant you had to be seen doing student council work, which was why she'd chosen to put up posters outside the auditorium at precisely this moment, when the hallway flow was at its zenith. Vibes were votes. What better way to look presidential than to be here, pushing thumbtacks and raising Bullying Awareness awareness? She made sure to smile at everybody who made even fleeting eye contact, but in a serious way. After all, bullying was a serious issue, so long as international trade relationships and nuclear missiles weren't involved.
The poster, only slightly dimpled, was affixed. Zara turned, smiled soberly at a passing cheerleader. She raised her eyebrows, as if to silently communicate, "Bullies. They're the worst, am I right? Vote Zara! Cute skirt, by the way."
Then she moved a few feet to the left, squared up to the next billboard, and started the whole process anew.
It felt wrong to be putting up posters.
Zara usually liked the process. She liked the feeling of holding a stack of warm copies, fresh from the printer. She liked how it felt to slap a freshly-inked printout against the wall, press it flat with the palm of her hand and adjust it just a touch this way and a touch that way, until its edges matched the rails of the bulletin board with razor-straight precision. She even liked the feeling of pushing little gold thumbtacks until they punched through the paper and into the cork beneath. She always made a game out of seeing if she could get the head of the tack flush to the paper without dimpling it; she almost always succeeded. That kind of thing mattered. Dimples looked amateurish, and they reflected badly on the content; if your posters looked lousy, then your event would probably be lousy too.
It was hard to say whether Zara had directly learned this, or whether she'd picked it up by sheer instinct. Her dādā Syed had owned a print shop, and had had his sons sorting movable type before they could read; all of his offspring had ink in their veins.
But for the past couple of weeks, ever since her eighteenth birthday, she'd been dimpling. Creasing, even. And what worse: she'd started not to care. In another few days, she'd probably find herself abandoning the gold thumbtacks for multicolored push pins - unsorted, in random color combinations. Little polka dots of anarchy, stabbed into the paper hard enough to leave Grand-Canyon creases. Dādā Syed would fall down dead at the very idea.
The truth was, it was hard to care about little things right now. Not since her birthday, when she'd gotten up early and proudly shown her ID to the voting officials before casting her first-ever vote for Marisa D'Cruz. Not since she'd stayed up into the wee hours with terrible generic birthday cake churnining her stomach as she watched swing states topple like dominos. How was she supposed to care about page margins and font sizes when several million people had effectively decided that her humanity was a small price to pay for cheaper eggs? How was she supposed to care about any of the things that student council had planned for the year? Hey kids, your parents put a dementia patient in charge of the nuclear codes, but buckle up for safety!
Today, it was Bullying Awareness. It was redundant, for two reasons. The first was that they'd already done Bullying Awareness Month back in October. Under the circumstances, it bore repeating. This time around they'd added the numbers for several suicide hotlines. According to the Associated Press, the Rainbow Youth Project alone had received twice as many calls during election week as they usually got in a month. The second reason was that everybody was already good and aware of bullying - especially the bullies themselves. They were glad for the extra attention, if the replies on X (the Misinform Your Way to a Shadow Presidency App) were any guide, and very eager to get started.
Zara grimaced and pushed another thumbtack in - using her pointer finger, in a display of wild abandon. No, she didn't feel like putting up posters. No, she didn't feel like being aware. Awareness hurt right now. Zara had hotly debated deleting her X and Meta profiles to reduce her stress, but then she'd have had to explain her sudden absence to Aunty Maryam and she wouldn't get the updates on how Sadaf was doing at university ("put a space in my name, cousin, because I'm sad AF") that her mother kept asking after, and her stress level would ultimately remain the same.
So, no, she didn't care about the posters. But she put them up anyway. Zara wanted to be Student Council President, because it was one of those titles that looked good on applications. Presidents (with one glaring exception) commanded respect and broadcast dignity. And if you wanted to be Student Council President, people had to be able to envision you in the role. That generally meant you had to be seen doing student council work, which was why she'd chosen to put up posters outside the auditorium at precisely this moment, when the hallway flow was at its zenith. Vibes were votes. What better way to look presidential than to be here, pushing thumbtacks and raising Bullying Awareness awareness? She made sure to smile at everybody who made even fleeting eye contact, but in a serious way. After all, bullying was a serious issue, so long as international trade relationships and nuclear missiles weren't involved.
The poster, only slightly dimpled, was affixed. Zara turned, smiled soberly at a passing cheerleader. She raised her eyebrows, as if to silently communicate, "Bullies. They're the worst, am I right? Vote Zara! Cute skirt, by the way."
Then she moved a few feet to the left, squared up to the next billboard, and started the whole process anew.
V9 Characters:
Zara Mohammad
Alexis Keller
Wyatt Latimer
Stephanie "Radical Steph" Raddison
Xiomara Ximenez
Zara Mohammad
Alexis Keller
Wyatt Latimer
Stephanie "Radical Steph" Raddison
Xiomara Ximenez
- Dr Adjective
- Posts: 516
- Joined: Mon Jul 06, 2020 8:25 pm
- Location: in your walls
Head and shoulders above many of her peers, the shock of white-blonde hair above a near-omnipresent displeased scowl would've been hard not to see.
[An unusually tall girl walked past, on her way from somewhere else.]
Heather's eyes met Zara's for a moment. She'd been curious who it was sticking up posters, and she'd been thoroughly unsurprised to see the local busybody behind it. Zara gave her professional smile, Heather responded with a derisive scoff. One didn't need to see the tattoo underneath her jacket to guess why. Bullying awareness? Days after inaugurating the Bully in Chief? Was that supposed to be some kind of sarcastic joke? If she'd seen it in another context she might even have laughed at the comedic timing, but the clear sincerity just made Heather sad. Yeah. The tiniest of band-aids on the problem, that'd fix things. Canvassing for the most irrelevant poltiical appointment known to man, and for what, extra juice to go into real politics or law, and try to explain frantically from the sidelines that a dog isn't allowed to play basketball while Air Canon dunks on her over and over?
God, to think she'd let the harm reduction argument convince her to participate in the charade that was the last election, as if she could possibly change anything about the one-party state besides giving it another crumb of legitimacy by engaging. The memory of it was infuriating. Humiliating.
"Yeah, good luck with that."
Oh. She said that out loud.
What a shame.
[An unusually tall girl walked past, on her way from somewhere else.]
Heather's eyes met Zara's for a moment. She'd been curious who it was sticking up posters, and she'd been thoroughly unsurprised to see the local busybody behind it. Zara gave her professional smile, Heather responded with a derisive scoff. One didn't need to see the tattoo underneath her jacket to guess why. Bullying awareness? Days after inaugurating the Bully in Chief? Was that supposed to be some kind of sarcastic joke? If she'd seen it in another context she might even have laughed at the comedic timing, but the clear sincerity just made Heather sad. Yeah. The tiniest of band-aids on the problem, that'd fix things. Canvassing for the most irrelevant poltiical appointment known to man, and for what, extra juice to go into real politics or law, and try to explain frantically from the sidelines that a dog isn't allowed to play basketball while Air Canon dunks on her over and over?
God, to think she'd let the harm reduction argument convince her to participate in the charade that was the last election, as if she could possibly change anything about the one-party state besides giving it another crumb of legitimacy by engaging. The memory of it was infuriating. Humiliating.
"Yeah, good luck with that."
Oh. She said that out loud.
What a shame.
Ah, Heather Klein. Her surname was ironic, if you knew a little German.
Zara's smile left her eyes when Heather scoffed, but fortified itself on her lips; the waspish follow-up comment bounced right off without making a dent.
"Heather Klein!" she said, chipperly. Zara liked to be on a full-name basis with people. It made them feel like she remembered them, which, depending on who you were and what you'd done, could be a charming compliment or a thinly-veiled threat. In Heather's case, it was probably a bit of both.
"Not a fan of bullying awareness?"
Zara's smile left her eyes when Heather scoffed, but fortified itself on her lips; the waspish follow-up comment bounced right off without making a dent.
"Heather Klein!" she said, chipperly. Zara liked to be on a full-name basis with people. It made them feel like she remembered them, which, depending on who you were and what you'd done, could be a charming compliment or a thinly-veiled threat. In Heather's case, it was probably a bit of both.
"Not a fan of bullying awareness?"
V9 Characters:
Zara Mohammad
Alexis Keller
Wyatt Latimer
Stephanie "Radical Steph" Raddison
Xiomara Ximenez
Zara Mohammad
Alexis Keller
Wyatt Latimer
Stephanie "Radical Steph" Raddison
Xiomara Ximenez
- Dr Adjective
- Posts: 516
- Joined: Mon Jul 06, 2020 8:25 pm
- Location: in your walls
Parry, riposte. Zara was sharp. Heather at least had to respect that much about her. Liberals did tend to be good at rhetoric after all, it was a necessary skill to make up for the yawning void of principles that genuine impassioned argument might otherwise emerge from.
"I'm already very aware of it. Don't you watch the news?"
Bob, weave. Physical sparring was of course Heather's preferred style, but she could trade barbs too. Blue check bootlicks weren't usually as smart as Zara, but you take your practice where you can get it.
"Really, good luck. I'm sure this time it'll work."
"I'm already very aware of it. Don't you watch the news?"
Bob, weave. Physical sparring was of course Heather's preferred style, but she could trade barbs too. Blue check bootlicks weren't usually as smart as Zara, but you take your practice where you can get it.
"Really, good luck. I'm sure this time it'll work."
Ah. There it was.
Zara's smile briefly became genuine. She liked people like Heather, all bristling with righteous indignation. The Heathers of the world liked to point at a mess and say "Isn't this disgusting?", as though their obligation to fix the problem ended at simply noticing its existence and registering disapproval. Then for an encore they'd stand around criticizing the way others tried to clean it up.
Zara liked how much people like Heather hated people like her. It meant she was doing things right.
"It's not just awareness," she said, breezily answering a question Heather hadn't asked. "We're working with community partners, making counselors available for people who need them, developing confidential reporting initiatives so students can safely raise concerns. We're never going to stop bullying from happening. But we're going to make sure that when it does happen, students know they have somewhere to go."
Zara's smile briefly became genuine. She liked people like Heather, all bristling with righteous indignation. The Heathers of the world liked to point at a mess and say "Isn't this disgusting?", as though their obligation to fix the problem ended at simply noticing its existence and registering disapproval. Then for an encore they'd stand around criticizing the way others tried to clean it up.
Zara liked how much people like Heather hated people like her. It meant she was doing things right.
"It's not just awareness," she said, breezily answering a question Heather hadn't asked. "We're working with community partners, making counselors available for people who need them, developing confidential reporting initiatives so students can safely raise concerns. We're never going to stop bullying from happening. But we're going to make sure that when it does happen, students know they have somewhere to go."
V9 Characters:
Zara Mohammad
Alexis Keller
Wyatt Latimer
Stephanie "Radical Steph" Raddison
Xiomara Ximenez
Zara Mohammad
Alexis Keller
Wyatt Latimer
Stephanie "Radical Steph" Raddison
Xiomara Ximenez
- Dr Adjective
- Posts: 516
- Joined: Mon Jul 06, 2020 8:25 pm
- Location: in your walls
Heather’s eyebrows quirked up, a smirk playing around her lips. Zara came to play. Quick on her toes and rolling with the punches like a pro.
“Oh that’s a great stump speech D’Cruz, you practice that in the mirror this morning?”
Typical technique she’d seen on the news a million times, pivot directly to the canned talking points, dismiss anything that isn’t on-message. Why respond to the gesture towards Canon if it couldn’t be recycled for the counter? Slip that one, hit back.
So for her counter? Borrow the enemy’s weapon. A random encounter like this was no place to start talking about structural solutions, and Zara would have no trouble turning back any criticism of merely treating symptoms, accusing Heather of not caring about those. That was the problem with debating from a radical position, status quo enjoyers would never entertain the idea that their position also needed to be justified rather than merely assumed. So what to do? Smugly determine that the discussion is over and claim the last word. Let Zara call after her or not, didn’t matter.
“Well, keep up the valuable work!”
Heather shot the shorter girl a single finger-gun, and carried on towards her next class.
[Heather, peace out.]
“Oh that’s a great stump speech D’Cruz, you practice that in the mirror this morning?”
Typical technique she’d seen on the news a million times, pivot directly to the canned talking points, dismiss anything that isn’t on-message. Why respond to the gesture towards Canon if it couldn’t be recycled for the counter? Slip that one, hit back.
So for her counter? Borrow the enemy’s weapon. A random encounter like this was no place to start talking about structural solutions, and Zara would have no trouble turning back any criticism of merely treating symptoms, accusing Heather of not caring about those. That was the problem with debating from a radical position, status quo enjoyers would never entertain the idea that their position also needed to be justified rather than merely assumed. So what to do? Smugly determine that the discussion is over and claim the last word. Let Zara call after her or not, didn’t matter.
“Well, keep up the valuable work!”
Heather shot the shorter girl a single finger-gun, and carried on towards her next class.
[Heather, peace out.]
Zara responded with dual finger guns of her own as Heather walked off. "I will! And you keep on... well, I'm sure you're doing something."
A beat later, she added, "Remember, vote Mohammad!"
She kept the smile up until she'd turned back to the billboard, then she let it wither.
A beat later, she added, "Remember, vote Mohammad!"
She kept the smile up until she'd turned back to the billboard, then she let it wither.
V9 Characters:
Zara Mohammad
Alexis Keller
Wyatt Latimer
Stephanie "Radical Steph" Raddison
Xiomara Ximenez
Zara Mohammad
Alexis Keller
Wyatt Latimer
Stephanie "Radical Steph" Raddison
Xiomara Ximenez
There was a thud from the wall next to Zara as a body fell against it, taking up the position of a relaxed lean, vape pen between its lips, furtively hidden behind hands like a piece of contraband in a POW camp. Which, given they were inside a school building, it technically was. But Charlie Girl was enjoying the drama of the whole presentation, her eyes gleamed with barely concealed amusement at the exchange she had been watching like it was a particularly exciting scene from Planet Earth.
"Talk about having long toes." She said to Zara with a sly smile as she gently exhaled a cloud of vape smoke beneath her hand, waving it away as she coughed lightly.
It wasn't that she cared.
She didn't.
But there was something funny to her about watching someone getting on with their day only to decide that wasn't going to fly with you. It wasn't as if the encounter would cause any change in how Zara or Heather viewed the world. If anything it would only reinforce their existing beliefs. Truth be told, Charlie Girl probably preferred Heather to Zara, but Heather had walked off, so she wasn't available for comment. Instead, it was the girl who dreamed of being President. At least that was what Charlie Girl had heard about her. She had never actually verified that particular piece of information, because frankly she would have needed to ask more of her fellow classmates to verify it and they weren't good sources, seeing as they were both biased and prone to falsehoods. Charlie Girl certainly wasn't going to ask Zara directly about it either, she had more tact than that. Heather at least didn't want to be President—as far as Charlie Girl was aware—which meant she was more trustworthy than Zara. But Heather had her own problems, namely her entire attitude and demeanour, which she had once again displayed to anyone who had been paying attention. Something Charlie Girl couldn't confirm was limited to just her, the art of listening in while pretending you weren't doing so was a key skill high schoolers developed over their many years.
A quick check that the coast was clear led to another discrete hit of the vape.
"How many of these are you putting up?" She asked, as she tilted her head down and exhaled a cloud of strawberry-smelling mist in the direction of the floor.
"Talk about having long toes." She said to Zara with a sly smile as she gently exhaled a cloud of vape smoke beneath her hand, waving it away as she coughed lightly.
It wasn't that she cared.
She didn't.
But there was something funny to her about watching someone getting on with their day only to decide that wasn't going to fly with you. It wasn't as if the encounter would cause any change in how Zara or Heather viewed the world. If anything it would only reinforce their existing beliefs. Truth be told, Charlie Girl probably preferred Heather to Zara, but Heather had walked off, so she wasn't available for comment. Instead, it was the girl who dreamed of being President. At least that was what Charlie Girl had heard about her. She had never actually verified that particular piece of information, because frankly she would have needed to ask more of her fellow classmates to verify it and they weren't good sources, seeing as they were both biased and prone to falsehoods. Charlie Girl certainly wasn't going to ask Zara directly about it either, she had more tact than that. Heather at least didn't want to be President—as far as Charlie Girl was aware—which meant she was more trustworthy than Zara. But Heather had her own problems, namely her entire attitude and demeanour, which she had once again displayed to anyone who had been paying attention. Something Charlie Girl couldn't confirm was limited to just her, the art of listening in while pretending you weren't doing so was a key skill high schoolers developed over their many years.
A quick check that the coast was clear led to another discrete hit of the vape.
"How many of these are you putting up?" She asked, as she tilted her head down and exhaled a cloud of strawberry-smelling mist in the direction of the floor.
((Marcy Valerio continued from Touch of Crate))Marcipan: Alright, so apparently it takes like 5 hours to drive down to Mexicali, so if we do this we may as well make a trip out of it. Any suggestions on where we can drop by on the way?
Marcy glanced up from her phone, almost stopping in her tracks when she saw Zara of all people... Smiling at her? Huh?
Zara then raised her eyebrows. Marcy raised a singular brow in response, glancing past at the poster Zara was setting up. Bullying Awareness month? Wasn't that back in October? Okay, whatever. Message received, bullies exist.
Which reminded her, she oughta see what Beelybubs was up to that weekend.
In any case, she walked past and swiftly returned her attention to her phone.
((Marcy Valerio continued in Everybody's looking for something))Marcipan: Oh, you know where I've never been? Hoover Dam! Maybe we can check that out or something whilst we're at it?
Zara's public-service smile blossomed again. "Another twenty, I think? It's just me today, so it's going to take a while."
This was technically true, with the caveat that she hadn't actually asked the other student council members for help. But she was the one who'd collated the information, assembled the graphics, chosen the typeface, and made the copies, so why should they get any of the goodwill and visibility she was building? And, uh... hmm...
Zara found her gaze sliding down Charlie Girl's face and locking onto the vape pen. The cloying scent of artificial strawberries wafted through the air between them. That thing wasn't allowed in school. Charlie Girl knew as much, if her token efforts at camouflage were any guide.
Zara looked back up and into the other girl's eyes, scrying for something in their depths. This was a test, she was sure of it. But what kind? A sting, maybe? Charlie Girl was on the student paper, and she had been responsible for taking The Photo.
Officially, former student council treasurer Kishan Singh had stepped down last year to focus on his college prep. In reality, he'd been strongarmed out. Charlie Girl and that muckraker Alexis Keller had reportedly camped out near the faculty hallway after classes for an entire week to get their money shot: a high-res photo burst of Kishan furtively sneaking in to use the teachers' private bathroom. According to the emails that everybody on the council had gotten asking for comment, they'd caught him on the way out, too. He hadn't washed his hands. The Photo was intended to be the centerpiece of a sprawling exposé ripping on the purported bourgeois excesses of student government, but Zara and the others had forced Kishan out before it could go to print. Keller had canned it and sated her printlust with coverage of the resultant by-election, but things between the council and the student press had been frosty ever since. It wasn't hard to envision Alexis crouching behind a bank of locker to covertly snap a photo of what would look very much like Zara and Charlie Girl vaping together. She could already see the headline: "Awareness UN-Fair? Student Council Member Caught Brazenly Sharing Drugs in Broad Daylight!"
But Zara saw no sign of anticipation in Charlie Girl's eyes, no clear desire for her to have any particular reaction to the vape. Nothing but a hint of mild amusement. So, all right, this wasn't a trap. Maybe it was something simpler - a provocation, breaking the rules just to see how Zara might react. If Zara ratted Charlie Girl out, the pen would get confiscated and she'd get it back at the end of the day, no harm, no foul; on the other hand, if Zara was cool about it, then perhaps that'd pave the way for some friendly relations. Maybe it wasn't even that, maybe it was just... nothing.
Zara decided to hedge her bets, and let the pen thing slide. If there was one axiom you could rely on in today's political climate, it was that rules only existed if someone wanted to enforce them. And right now, she didn't.
"...And what about you? Any big plans for after school?"
This was technically true, with the caveat that she hadn't actually asked the other student council members for help. But she was the one who'd collated the information, assembled the graphics, chosen the typeface, and made the copies, so why should they get any of the goodwill and visibility she was building? And, uh... hmm...
Zara found her gaze sliding down Charlie Girl's face and locking onto the vape pen. The cloying scent of artificial strawberries wafted through the air between them. That thing wasn't allowed in school. Charlie Girl knew as much, if her token efforts at camouflage were any guide.
Zara looked back up and into the other girl's eyes, scrying for something in their depths. This was a test, she was sure of it. But what kind? A sting, maybe? Charlie Girl was on the student paper, and she had been responsible for taking The Photo.
Officially, former student council treasurer Kishan Singh had stepped down last year to focus on his college prep. In reality, he'd been strongarmed out. Charlie Girl and that muckraker Alexis Keller had reportedly camped out near the faculty hallway after classes for an entire week to get their money shot: a high-res photo burst of Kishan furtively sneaking in to use the teachers' private bathroom. According to the emails that everybody on the council had gotten asking for comment, they'd caught him on the way out, too. He hadn't washed his hands. The Photo was intended to be the centerpiece of a sprawling exposé ripping on the purported bourgeois excesses of student government, but Zara and the others had forced Kishan out before it could go to print. Keller had canned it and sated her printlust with coverage of the resultant by-election, but things between the council and the student press had been frosty ever since. It wasn't hard to envision Alexis crouching behind a bank of locker to covertly snap a photo of what would look very much like Zara and Charlie Girl vaping together. She could already see the headline: "Awareness UN-Fair? Student Council Member Caught Brazenly Sharing Drugs in Broad Daylight!"
But Zara saw no sign of anticipation in Charlie Girl's eyes, no clear desire for her to have any particular reaction to the vape. Nothing but a hint of mild amusement. So, all right, this wasn't a trap. Maybe it was something simpler - a provocation, breaking the rules just to see how Zara might react. If Zara ratted Charlie Girl out, the pen would get confiscated and she'd get it back at the end of the day, no harm, no foul; on the other hand, if Zara was cool about it, then perhaps that'd pave the way for some friendly relations. Maybe it wasn't even that, maybe it was just... nothing.
Zara decided to hedge her bets, and let the pen thing slide. If there was one axiom you could rely on in today's political climate, it was that rules only existed if someone wanted to enforce them. And right now, she didn't.
"...And what about you? Any big plans for after school?"
V9 Characters:
Zara Mohammad
Alexis Keller
Wyatt Latimer
Stephanie "Radical Steph" Raddison
Xiomara Ximenez
Zara Mohammad
Alexis Keller
Wyatt Latimer
Stephanie "Radical Steph" Raddison
Xiomara Ximenez
As Zara's gaze went down to spy Charlie Girl's vape pen, so did Charlie Girl's eyes follow. Then with a quick flick and spin of the wrist, the vape was gone, stashed inside a pocket, like it had never truly been there at all. But even with the offending object gone, Charlie Girl could feel the other girls' unease. The vape pen making Zara uncomfortable she understood, although she doubted Zara was uncomfortable at the prospect of Charlie Girl getting in trouble. No, the future politician, like everyone who dreamed of accumulating power 'the proper way', was likely worried about the potential to be collateral in the event of a teacher walking past. But none had and with the vape out of sight, none could. Which, unfortunately, left Charlie Girl herself as the source of the uncomfortable vibes that were radiating off Zara and passing through Charlie Girl like gamma radiation.
Luckily, Zara relaxed before she turned into some terrible elephant's foot right there in the corridor and asked Charlie Girl if she had any plans for after school, which as far as interactions went was better than nothing. But it did give Charlie Girl a choice, she could tell the truth about her plans or alternatively, lie. The truth itself wasn't the most exciting, she was working on some new songs and had booked one of the practice rooms so she could guarantee some time to hammer out details and work on specific parts. The least glamorous part of songwriting was the pit of repetition. Practicing and going over songs again and again, until there was no chance you would mess up on stage, and that pit was where she currently resided.
Charlie Girl could have explained all of that but, instead, she decided that lying would be more fun.
"Oh, Alexis has this lead about some sort of illegal drug-fueled rave someone in our year is organizing so we're going to be looking into that." She said, like it was the most reasonable thing in the world.
Luckily, Zara relaxed before she turned into some terrible elephant's foot right there in the corridor and asked Charlie Girl if she had any plans for after school, which as far as interactions went was better than nothing. But it did give Charlie Girl a choice, she could tell the truth about her plans or alternatively, lie. The truth itself wasn't the most exciting, she was working on some new songs and had booked one of the practice rooms so she could guarantee some time to hammer out details and work on specific parts. The least glamorous part of songwriting was the pit of repetition. Practicing and going over songs again and again, until there was no chance you would mess up on stage, and that pit was where she currently resided.
Charlie Girl could have explained all of that but, instead, she decided that lying would be more fun.
"Oh, Alexis has this lead about some sort of illegal drug-fueled rave someone in our year is organizing so we're going to be looking into that." She said, like it was the most reasonable thing in the world.
Zara's eyes twinkled. Now that was bait. Presumably, Charlie Girl expected her to clutch some pearls and go flouncing off down the corridor with petticoats a-ruffled, aghast at the moral depravity of today's youth. If so, it was a fairly weak play. Narcing on anybody with the resources to stage an illegal raid would be political kryptonite. Besides, Zara was a fairly regular fixture at Woodrow Ritter's parties, and would stake twenty bucks that she'd flashed her fake ID to get into at least three parts of the Strip that Charlie Girl and Alexis had never even heard of.
And anyway, what did student council care if students were doing illegal drugs off-property? Just because Zara didn't want to be photographed doing drugs in a school hallway, that didn't mean she had any moral opposition to other people doing them. They were in Vegas. Try to be a prude here, and you'd stress yourself into a fatal ulcer inside of a week. If other students were doing drugs, fine. Let them get busted by the cops and ruin their futures. That kind of sordid incident would give the council fodder enough to churn out poster campaigns from now until graduation. It'd be an excuse to hook up with D.A.R.E, M.A.D.D., SAPTA, maybe even Narcalev. Heck, it might even take a few nepotism babies out contention for scholarships that Zara wanted.
Rats. Now she almost wished Charlie was telling the truth. Anyway, might as well go ahead and return the serve.
"I see," Zara said pleasantly. "Were you two looking to bust them, or just hoping to score an invite?"
And anyway, what did student council care if students were doing illegal drugs off-property? Just because Zara didn't want to be photographed doing drugs in a school hallway, that didn't mean she had any moral opposition to other people doing them. They were in Vegas. Try to be a prude here, and you'd stress yourself into a fatal ulcer inside of a week. If other students were doing drugs, fine. Let them get busted by the cops and ruin their futures. That kind of sordid incident would give the council fodder enough to churn out poster campaigns from now until graduation. It'd be an excuse to hook up with D.A.R.E, M.A.D.D., SAPTA, maybe even Narcalev. Heck, it might even take a few nepotism babies out contention for scholarships that Zara wanted.
Rats. Now she almost wished Charlie was telling the truth. Anyway, might as well go ahead and return the serve.
"I see," Zara said pleasantly. "Were you two looking to bust them, or just hoping to score an invite?"
V9 Characters:
Zara Mohammad
Alexis Keller
Wyatt Latimer
Stephanie "Radical Steph" Raddison
Xiomara Ximenez
Zara Mohammad
Alexis Keller
Wyatt Latimer
Stephanie "Radical Steph" Raddison
Xiomara Ximenez
Lying had not, in fact, been more fun. There had been an initial feeling of gratification sure, but Zara didn't seem particularly perturbed and had sent the ball straight back into Charlie Girl's court. So she had the initiative again but nowhere to go with it. As far as Charlie Girl saw it, she had two options, she could admit that it had been lie, laugh it off as a joke and that she was only messing around. Alternatively, she could do as all good politicians did when caught in a lie and double down on the falsehood. If you couldn't dig up, you may as well dig down until no one could see you anymore. Both options were equally enticing.
"I think the idea would be to do some gonzo journalism," Charlie Girl said with a small shrug, "You know, that real Fear and Loathing type beat." Charlie Girl wasn't one hundred percent sure what she meant by that, but it sure did sound good. It did seem like something Alexis would have suggested. Although, Charlie Girl wasn't sure Alexis or Zara actually had any experience with raves. She didn't either, but she had been around enough people who had been on molly to know that being in a warehouse full of them was a fate worse than death. They were annoying enough on an individual basis, let alone in a herd moving along to a thumping beat and hypnotised by pretty colours.
Charlie Girl wasn't sure how much road she had remaining on the lie, and she wasn't sure why she had decided to commit to it in the first place, besides boredom. It wasn't like Zara had been doing anything wrong, unless you counted putting up a poster, which Heather seemed to. There was a squeak from the polished floor of the auditorium as Charlie Girl shifted her feet.
"You fancy going if I can get you an invite?"
"I think the idea would be to do some gonzo journalism," Charlie Girl said with a small shrug, "You know, that real Fear and Loathing type beat." Charlie Girl wasn't one hundred percent sure what she meant by that, but it sure did sound good. It did seem like something Alexis would have suggested. Although, Charlie Girl wasn't sure Alexis or Zara actually had any experience with raves. She didn't either, but she had been around enough people who had been on molly to know that being in a warehouse full of them was a fate worse than death. They were annoying enough on an individual basis, let alone in a herd moving along to a thumping beat and hypnotised by pretty colours.
Charlie Girl wasn't sure how much road she had remaining on the lie, and she wasn't sure why she had decided to commit to it in the first place, besides boredom. It wasn't like Zara had been doing anything wrong, unless you counted putting up a poster, which Heather seemed to. There was a squeak from the polished floor of the auditorium as Charlie Girl shifted her feet.
"You fancy going if I can get you an invite?"
Zara looked up and down the hallway, scanning for authority figures. Sighting none, she shrugged. "Sure, why not? Taking down an illegal drug rave would look great on my law school applications. I've already got an invite, of course, but I wasn't planning on going. I'm sure they wouldn't suspect anything if I show up anyway, though. They usually like to pack in as many pretty girls as they can find."
She cocked her head to one side, her gaze sweeping up and down the girl before her. She made a show of chewing her bottom lip in thought. "Hmmmm... You two would probably have to dress up nice if you want to get past the velvet rope. Maybe get your hair and makeup done, do a little clothes shopping?"
The hard part was keeping a straight face. Moments like this, it was important to come off as deadly serious. Charlie Girl was clearly lying about the rave, but if Zara really sold it, there was a non-zero possibility that she and Alexis could convince themselves that they'd stumbled onto an actual party by complete coincidence. Either that, or Charlie Girl would pick up on the fact that Zara was messing with her, and they'd have a good laugh. Oh, that Zara. She's a sharp one! Intrigue was just as good a reason to vote Mohammad as any, right? Either way, as soon as she left the hallway, she'd have to start Googling. There had to be an abandoned sewage facility on the outskirts of Vegas she could send them to investigate.
She cocked her head to one side, her gaze sweeping up and down the girl before her. She made a show of chewing her bottom lip in thought. "Hmmmm... You two would probably have to dress up nice if you want to get past the velvet rope. Maybe get your hair and makeup done, do a little clothes shopping?"
The hard part was keeping a straight face. Moments like this, it was important to come off as deadly serious. Charlie Girl was clearly lying about the rave, but if Zara really sold it, there was a non-zero possibility that she and Alexis could convince themselves that they'd stumbled onto an actual party by complete coincidence. Either that, or Charlie Girl would pick up on the fact that Zara was messing with her, and they'd have a good laugh. Oh, that Zara. She's a sharp one! Intrigue was just as good a reason to vote Mohammad as any, right? Either way, as soon as she left the hallway, she'd have to start Googling. There had to be an abandoned sewage facility on the outskirts of Vegas she could send them to investigate.
V9 Characters:
Zara Mohammad
Alexis Keller
Wyatt Latimer
Stephanie "Radical Steph" Raddison
Xiomara Ximenez
Zara Mohammad
Alexis Keller
Wyatt Latimer
Stephanie "Radical Steph" Raddison
Xiomara Ximenez
“Oh…” Charlie Girl responded, making her voice small and soft, and her eyes as wide as a kitten pleading for more milk. “You don’t think I dress nice?“ She held the pose for a moment before bursting out laughing.
Maybe Zara wasn’t as bad as she had been lead to believe by the stories around school. That said, Charlie Girl probably should have known better. One of the people who had offered a negative opinion had been Heather after all and given how their interaction had gone, perhaps she wasn’t a completely unbiased source.
“Ok, yeah there’s no rave.” Charlie Girl said with a friendlier, more welcoming smile than her previous coy one.
“I’ve actually just booked out one of the practice rooms to work on some songs, interesting for me, but probably less so for you.”
Charlie Girl didn’t believe that Zara wouldn’t appreciate or understand how interesting she found working on her music. But the refinement process was the boring part as far as Charlie Girl was concerned. The spark and fire of the initial idea and inferno of work that followed had slowed down as everything was assembled and minor tweaks were made. An extra beat there, maybe more toms here, a slightly modified chord progression if necessary. It was all important work, but it wasn’t the most exciting part to watch. Then you got to the other fun part once you came to performing the song in front of people for the first time and seeing their reaction and response.
“So, somewhat less exciting than an illegal rave.” She finished.
“What about you? Any exciting plans?”
Maybe Zara wasn’t as bad as she had been lead to believe by the stories around school. That said, Charlie Girl probably should have known better. One of the people who had offered a negative opinion had been Heather after all and given how their interaction had gone, perhaps she wasn’t a completely unbiased source.
“Ok, yeah there’s no rave.” Charlie Girl said with a friendlier, more welcoming smile than her previous coy one.
“I’ve actually just booked out one of the practice rooms to work on some songs, interesting for me, but probably less so for you.”
Charlie Girl didn’t believe that Zara wouldn’t appreciate or understand how interesting she found working on her music. But the refinement process was the boring part as far as Charlie Girl was concerned. The spark and fire of the initial idea and inferno of work that followed had slowed down as everything was assembled and minor tweaks were made. An extra beat there, maybe more toms here, a slightly modified chord progression if necessary. It was all important work, but it wasn’t the most exciting part to watch. Then you got to the other fun part once you came to performing the song in front of people for the first time and seeing their reaction and response.
“So, somewhat less exciting than an illegal rave.” She finished.
“What about you? Any exciting plans?”