magician's apprentice | we've come a long way from where we began (rp for
the_death_card)
The place Miranda picks for their lunch date is meant to be neutral ground, Dylan is sure. She has them come out to Chicago, and while she is doing a show here, sometime this weekend, if her website is to be believed, it's still not home, not for either of them. It's also not one of the dozen places around town that might have required a reservation and no escape, if either of them thinks this is going south. No, it's just a diner, a literal hole in the wall, in a strip mall between a chiropractor and -- something else, Dylan's not sure, as he misses the sign, etched into the wall as they head in, but either way, the effort all adds up to a massive relief. He's not sure this will go badly, that he needs to think in terms of advantages and disadvantages as if he was playing chess, considering he's changed in the last twenty years, twenty months, twenty weeks, but still. He lets out a breath of relief, as they step into the building and he takes a look around.
It's a little less reminiscent of a dive bar, inside, even if the floors are bare, the ceiling open, and Dylan takes a certain amount of comfort in that, too. He glances to Jack briefly, to gauge his impression of all of this, and then steps up to the hostess's station as he looks out over the tables, trying to spot Miranda in the dwindling late-lunch crowd. When he doesn't see her, he's not surprised (she never could be on time for anything), and so he gets them a table for three, by the window, and settles into a chair. He expects Jack will take up his side of the table, too, and that's fine with him.
Once he's settled, Dylan pauses a beat, before, "Have I mentioned the part where she'd be late for her own funeral?"
It's a little less reminiscent of a dive bar, inside, even if the floors are bare, the ceiling open, and Dylan takes a certain amount of comfort in that, too. He glances to Jack briefly, to gauge his impression of all of this, and then steps up to the hostess's station as he looks out over the tables, trying to spot Miranda in the dwindling late-lunch crowd. When he doesn't see her, he's not surprised (she never could be on time for anything), and so he gets them a table for three, by the window, and settles into a chair. He expects Jack will take up his side of the table, too, and that's fine with him.
Once he's settled, Dylan pauses a beat, before, "Have I mentioned the part where she'd be late for her own funeral?"

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His grin fades a little as Dylan goes on, since yeah, he can fill in that blank and knows what Dylan's not saying. He pauses a beat and then tries to redirect a little. "But they're still, like... open and making shit and everything? That's so cool."
He's definitely a nerd about this stuff already.
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"Bu Bu," Miranda supplies gently, apparently getting where Dylan was going with that, "and she really is a little old lady, now." Not just old to a seven-year-old's perception. "She's still running it, though. It'll be a cold day in Hell before she retires."
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"If you're looking for creepy guys in top hats who run magic shops, that'd be the place," Miranda clarifies, agrees. Most of the time, it's a persona, like she puts on on stage, like Dylan does, but still. Voodoo doctor is very popular. The tourists eat it up.
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"I can," Miranda informs them. "Think less sequins and -- well, less, period. I saw a guy on the corner of Spring Mountain who was wearing nothing but a thong and LED lights, last time I was there." Never mind the fact that he hadn't been a magician.
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He'd been good and hadn't gone to the strip at night despite the fact that he kind of wanted to, but that didn't stop him from seeing ads for escort services and the like.
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"Fun fact, though?" she continues after a beat. "Prostitution is actually illegal in Vegas. Most of the escort services are supposed to be just that." Not that that stops them from selling sex in the city. More money is spent on that sort of thing in Clark county, in Las Vegas, than any of the other counties where prostitution is actually legal and there are functioning brothels. "The closest place you can actually get a blowjob for twenty bucks is in Nye county."
" ... why are you telling him this?" Dylan asks, embarrassed. Never mind the fact that he's been to the Ranch Miranda is talking about and, yes, paid for sex. It's hard to have a real relationship with someone, when you're pretending to be someone else, and sometimes, you just have an itch to scratch.
"I want to see which one of your heads explode first," she answers, again cheerfully.
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He's lived more on the streets than in a house since he was ten. It takes an odd sort of thing to shock him at this point.
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Despite her flippancy, however, she's -- admittedly a little worried that Jack knows those kinds of people, but then again, she got an idea of his background from Dylan. It's not really surprising.
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He's also not noticing the fact that he bothered Miranda with that, too. It really isn't as bad as it could be, considering how many of those people had asked him occasionally if he had somewhere to go and something to eat and that kind of thing.
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Miranda shoots Jack a look, this one easier to read, asking why he puts up with Dylan, if he won't let him have the cheese sticks. If her worry lingers, it's because she knows how many Queens and sex workers get into drugs on top of everything else, and that's what bothers her. They may have kept an eye on Jack, but it's something of a miracle, she thinks, that that was all they did.
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It's not that Jack's never been around or offered drugs, it's that he has no interest in trying them himself considering he already knows people who have ODed. He'd appreciate the worry if he knew she was having it, though. It's still a little weird to have people that actually worry about him considering how long he's gotten by on his own, but he's also starting to get used to it, considering he's pretty sure it's part of being a family.
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He's definitely gonna be stealin ur cheesesticks, Dylan.
And oh dear Lord that meme is actually timely. The narration is sorry she double-checked.
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"Is that what happened to you? Miranda asks, as if she can read his mind. Maybe she is.
"Fuck off," he tells her, no heat behind the swear, as he sinks back into the table.
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Not that he really minds his height, even if people have given him shit for it in the past. It actually comes in handy sometimes when he's trying to get away from people bigger than him, after all.
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He's no where near as upset about this as he's pretending to be. He's only slightly more embarrassed when, when it turns out their waiter has materalized in the time that he's been buried in the table, Miranda tells him, "Two orders of the mozzarella sticks." At least then he finally sits up, like an adult.
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He's finally to a point where he's mostly stopped worrying about overstepping boundaries with Dylan, and one of the ways even he's aware that it's showing is the fact that he's stopped being weird about food - either in ordering his own meals or requesting things for dinner or the fact that he's stopped hiding food in his room.
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"So, where were we before the two of you made me start seriously questioning my life choices?" he teases. He reaches out to Jack with a brush of warmth, that said, so he knows he's not serious, if it wasn't clear enough.
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"Mm, I don't know, honey," Miranda answers, glancing over to Jack as if asking for his opinion. They should probably stop busting Dylan's balls at some point and actually talk about -- anything else, really, but that time might not be now. Maybe in a few minutes.
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"Or, uh..." he adds a moment later, and he is more serious, now. "I can ask you what you're working on?" He looks to Miranda, then. He's been looking up some of her videos, after all, and he's curious.
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Miranda hums, amused. If she planned on volunteering anything despite Dylan's protests, however, it dies on her lips at Jack's question. She makes another small noise, a just a second as she leans away, reaching for her purse. From it and impossibly, she produces a program for her show, holding it out for Jack. "This, mostly. I haven't really had the time, lately, to workshop anything new."
The show's been taking up all of her time.
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/fade