( marc looks away from lottie when she asks him what he meant. she knows what he meant and he knows she knows. ) I've been told Tel Aviv's cool. ( is his response, then, deliberately bypassing both of her questions.
he's been, once or twice, but more often to jerusalem. he shoots her a sidelong glance, watchful and appraising as he weighs up what he knows about lottie (odd facts and inferences based on time spent together where they don't really talk about anything, a companionable kind of non-communication that marc doesn't hate) versus what he knows about tel aviv: architecture lottie wouldn't necessarily care for but for the photograph opportunities. markets she'd enjoy for much the same reason and would be strangely careful about eating anything from (marc's never quite been sure what her deal is — he's noticed she avoid gluten, noticed she always opts for a non-dairy milk, and he's never quite been sure if it's because alternative diets are cool these days or if it's because she genuinely suffers from a host of intolerances).
his lips quirk and he hides the barest hint of a smile behind his coffee cup as he adds, ) It's where the kids hang out. (is it?
marc is not always as ignorant as he plays at. he knows, vaguely, what an influencer is and does, but he's never cared to discover the minutiae, never felt particularly inclined to discover what about it specifically is employable and what it means in a broad, day-to-day sense. lottie spends a lot of time on her phone (fine, people do that generally anyway, people that aren't marc), she spends a lot of time on her laptop (also fine, that's how a lot of people do jobs generally), but the details of marketing oneself and one's life is a tedious and horrifying concept to marc given his deep-rooted desire to be personally invisible.
(moon knight's different).
he has never cared for fashion, not as a kid, not as a teenager, and certainly not as an adult. lottie's shared her appreciation for his suit — it is nice, even if most people get fixated on the 'but it's white!' aspect — but nothing else. steven cares the most, is fussy and particular in a way that neither marc nor jake can relate to, though jake is particular about his own sense of style in his own, jake-like way.
marc dresses for dull practicality. ) So at a guess, with my limited knowledge, that's probably where you want to go to get your fashion fix.
[ There is a big part of her that wants to bite out that she is not a kid, because she personally always (always, always!) feels like one. It doesn't matter how many birthdays pass (she is nearing 30, Christ), how many events have warped her personally, she will always feel like everything but an adult. That she's messing up somehow and she isn't as responsible as she should be, as functional. But she knows Marc is just being cheeky, so she forces back the instinctual frustration that might coat her face, her tone. It's another reminder at their difference in age, years (many of them), that he's in the same age bracket as her sisters. And god, she knows he's being cheeky but some weird part of her brain thinks: of course he thinks she's a kidβ she spends all of her time online like one (it's different, her time online is an investment in her brand, her name, and so what if she farts around looking at people's stories incessantly?!).
So she tries to think of it differently, that he's aging himself instead of aging her, and it only manages to lessen the weird swirl of feelings settling in her chest. Arguably, is that even better? Reminding herself Marc is older than her and a dad (she will, truly, never get over this β Marc screams bachelor having an always-crisis and not a dad!)? She lets her gaze sweep over him, wonders if this is what she gets for asking when she already knew what he meant, if this is some weird sort of karma being inflicted on her.
Really, she knows Marc wouldn't purposely inflict her with this, if he knew how deep her insecurities ran. How unsure of herself she really felt, how deep the roots go into her brain. She tries to run off this, lets herself fiddle with the straw in her drink when he announces that's where she'd get her 'fashion fix'. He is thinking about her, ultimately, and she should be satisfied with that, and yetβ. ]
Tel Aviv.. [ She repeats, after a second of dedicated thought (read: giving a slow nod and humming), sounding out the name on her tongue. Marc is mentioning it, so that means it must be worthwhile. Also, Marc mentioned it, so she has to go at some point. ] ..Okay. I'll have Esther pencil that in for me.
[ Her phone is out of reach, having been placed on his desk before she came to lean beside him, so she'll make a note to text her about it. Secretly, she hopes she'll actually remember, because she wants to let it be known to Marc that she pays attention to what he says. That she remembers, is putting an active effort into what they have, because isn't that what friendship is? She tilts her head until the crown of it rests softly against the wall. Her tone is curious, bordering on even, when she asks. ]
( it hits marc infrequently that he and lottie share a similar impulsiveness. marc has rarely, if ever, made considered, thoughtful decisions. he's wholly emotional — for as much as he's deeply, deeply prefer not to be — driven almost entirely by his heart than his brain, and as soon as lottie says she'll have esther pencil tel aviv in, he realises it's not dissimilar to what he's always tended to do.
marlene would comment, unhappily, on how much time was being spent on moon knight and not enough time on their relationship, and so marc — or steven, or jake — would impulsively book a holiday, not quite anywhere they last remembered marlene mentioning, but somewhere that'd seem like marc (or steven, or jake—) was listening to marlene, reflecting on what she'd said, giving her (them) a vacation together, but then it'd inevitably be somewhere with a link to marc's past (always marc's, because marc is the only one of them with a past worth escaping) and marlene would — well, she'd be unhappy, of course.
he's done it with greer, too — arguments and fraught conversations resulting in considered but frankly spur of the moment gifts in lieu of a good apology (marc has never been good at those). with frenchie, it'd been impulsive invitations, a resolute ignoring of issues as to say 'look, water under the bridge, look, let's do this, just like the old days'.
lottie says she'll pencil tel aviv in and he's — startled. surprised, though not unpleasantly. it's world's apart from the start of their conversation, the difficulty in clarity, in being open and honest with each other. it's a strange sensation to realise it's a maybe decision made off the back of marc's frankly poor knowledge of what's fun and exciting to do in israel, and though it's not unpleasant, it's not a situation marc has found him in often with friends — marc hasn't many, for one, and for two, he's often the one making decisions and leaving little room for opinion.
generally, it makes its way back to him in the form of 'god, you make this really difficult, marc'. )
I haven't been abroad in a while, ( he admits carefully, a not-quite answer to her question. that's the second surprise, the implied invitation, and he thinks of all the times he'd travelled with marlene. he doesn't think he needs to tell lottie that he's not the most involved person to travel with.
(that is, he doesn't think he needs to mention it, but he probably should.)
he doesn't think he's travelled since — since marlene before left for france. he wonders if anna's still living in jerusalem, if any of his father's friends are still there. it's not a long journey from tel aviv — an hour and a half, maybe. he'd have to ask badr to look after the mission. ) —I don't know how much of a valuable addition I'd be to your Instagram.
[ It is a comment said entirely to prove that she had been listening, that she cares about his interests and hearing about his experiences, even if she's liable to forget about it when this is all said and done. It's why she had even asked him if he'd come β half because she expected this type of not-answer, and half because she knows it'd never happen (probably).
But truthfully, she's never considered Marc to travel for fun β he's too busy doing his Moon Knight stuff here, has sunken his roots into the soil so deep she doesn't think he'd ever leave if given the chance. Plus, it'd be hard finding a replacement if he wanted to take time for himself, probably.. Not a lot of people willing to moonlight (hah) as Moon Knight (hah) for a week or so while Marc gets his tan on.
She doesn't even get as far as imagining just what type of person he'd even be on a trip (she'd start with what white themed ensemble he'd shove himself into first before fantasizing about anything related to group activities) before he continues. And it's minute β tiny, so little it's a real blink and you miss it β the way her lips tug down. She knows he doesn't mean anything by it, whether he'd be valuable to her Instagram, her brand, or not, but it makes her stomach twist oddly.
It's something everyone assumes of her, of most influencers, and they're not wrong. Lottie, genuinely, only goes somewhere if she can curate content from it. She never goes out for fun, only goes out into the world with the intent of finding the spot with the best lighting. Because who doesn't love a selfie as a story update, you know? But she doesn't do much of that whenever they're together β she thought he'd understand that? It'd also be the same? Is that what he thinks of her? Idly, she bites at her lip, glances off to the side as her expression settles on: self-conscious.
It's only vaguely defensive, the way her words sound out of her lips. ]
..I don't post everything to Instagram.
[ She wouldn't post him if he doesn't want her to, she means. ]
( finding someone to look after his area of manhattan would be the easiest part, really — when one of them ("them", superheroes, vigilantes, whatever) was out of action for any reason, personal feelings stopped mattering. everyone else would step up and help out, and be ready to have that conversation of 'so what the fuck happened?' if necessary, though certainly not always.
marc's unpopularity aside, his poor reputation and past reliance on questionable methods to get the job done is ultimately inconsequential. he knows he's fucked up, he knows it's going to take a while to pull back whatever goodwill he might have fostered over the years (here and there, back and forth between other bad decisions), but he knows too, that if anyone had any problems with what he was doing now, he'd have heard about it.
he'd have another visitor at his door and it wouldn't be a friendly face like greer. it'd be t'challa, or captain america, or goddamn tony stark (again), and marc's tired of those visits. bored of the repetitive conversations. the black panther had given him an olive branch that he's only sort of accepted in the form of tigra, but the lack of anything else says that what marc's doing now is acceptable to the rest of them.
clea owes him a favour (well, not really, but they're friends). wong doesn't quite owe him a favour, but wong's a good guy (although marc's aware he should probably stop pissing off the various sorcerer supremes of the world). daredevil (and there's a guy who's had a few problems of his own). spider-man (ditto). castle's busy having a personal crisis of his own and despite how many times they've teamed up over the years, marc doesn't think he has it in him to ever go to him for help. (khonshu and his "oh, that one works for another god and his god must be very pleased", like marc hasn't done enough for him over the years, the fucking dick.) but he thinks he could probably even scare 8-ball enough to keep an eye out for him.
so no, finding someone else to keep an eye on his territory wouldn't be the issue. the issue would absolutely be marc giving up control of it all for long enough. that is: possible, but challenging.
he doesn't catch the shift in lottie's expression, but he does catch the glance to the side, does notice the difference in the way she answers him now to mere moments before and he doesn't know what he's said. instagram? her—problem is his comment about instagram? )
I didn't—. ( abrupt pause; reconsideration. if she elaborated a little more on what she meant, precisely, marc would explain that he didn't mean it like that. he'd meant that their values are different. he meant he's not fun and doesn't do fun things, isn't someone many people have historically made fun memories with. that, objectively, there must have been something that'd kept marlene around for as long as she was but now, marc's not really sure what it was. ) That's not what I meant.
[ He pauses, and she just waits for him to say something.. What? She doesn't know. The only thing she knows for a fact is that she isn't going to say anything, doesn't particularly want to. Elaborating on how she feels means letting him know she has feelings, and deeply values his own opinion of her. And Lottie, having done that throughout the night (be hurt, and let him know she does feel), doesn't want to give him more. Is willing to let him know she is listening enough to consider a trip to a place he recommends, a place she thinks he is familiar with, but not enough to outwardly say she is hurt by what she thinks he is implying.
He says that's not what he meant, after a beat, and the good thing is she doesn't immediately hop into what is instinctual for her when she's feeling insecure: bitter denial. She's quiet, but it's not because she doesn't believe him. It's because she still wants to try and communicate without letting slip too much of her thoughts, because she's not sure how her words will sound coming out of her lips. ]
Okay..
[ So if he doesn't think she's a crazy clout goblin, then.. ]
So what did you mean?
[ She asks, tone curious and vaguely guarded, like she's preparing herself for an answer she might not like. ]
( she asks what he meant and he makes a short, low noise of impatient frustration because actually, he's not very good at putting it into words. they're there — the I'm not funs and the you see, what normally happens is I get distracted and I forget about plans; or the I'm not very good at letting things go—. but verbalising them, vocalising them is not something that's ever made marc particularly comfortable — no, half the time, it's as if the words are there but that they get lost somewhere mid-journey between brain and mouth and what comes out instead is what he thinks ought to be said instead of what should be said.
marc's constantly caught between caring too much about what people think of him and deciding what does it matter to ever give a thought to his opinion on someone else mattering. that'd been the problem with jeff: marc had never had an ounce of time for the boy, left him stranded in brooklyn, and was more or less the reason he became a villain.
(and then marc had killed him. fortunately, lottie is not jeff.)
true to form, though, he doesn't think (again) of how lottie interprets his actions and his comments. he inhales, makes a small gesture with his hand that doesn't mean anything (is instead simply something to do), and says— )
I meant— ( and immediately pauses. how does he say what he meant? his comment was a commentary on her instagramming, it was a commentary on himself—! ) I'm not very present.
( that's it, right? that's about the shape of it. )
[ In the weirdest way, the way he verbalizes his frustration through that single clipped sound manages to ease her. Sure, she's still really confused, but she's considerably less anxious than she was before. It's nice to know that she isn't the only one positively struggling to get words out (one of her biggest character flaws is Lottie's inability to say what she really wants to say, after all). She swirls the contents of her coffee drink as she waits, begins to wonder if he's going to say anything before he abruptly bursts out (with a strained 'I meantβ') .. Then, cuts himself off. Tries again with that sentence.
(Somewhere in the back of her mind she thinks, damn, it feels nice to be on the other side of things β isn't she usually the one fumbling and just completely failing to make one sentence?)
Her brows slowly lift, waits a few measured moments to see if he'll even elaborate. He won't, Lottie knows this of Marc and yet she still waits just to see if he'll make an exception for her (he doesn't), so she scratches at her scalpβ ruffles some of her hair in the process. ]
Uh.. On trips?
[ She asks this, but it's not exactly a question, because she doesn't wait for him to confirm as she's already continuing. ]
Well, I mean.. Yeah, I kinda figured that. Marc, we can barely watch a TV show together. [ She means, both their attention spans aren't exactly stellar. ]
( for most of their interactions to date, lottie's dealt with a marc that's felt relatively in control of their conversations β with the exception, of course, of the Incident at lottie's that one time. on the occasion that he's not been sure, it's most often been via text (a surprising benefit to communicating with lottie, it turns out), so it's never been noticed.
now marc's on the back foot, having been pushed into (sort of almost not quite but close enough for him) admitting something honest about how he feels and his self-awareness, instead of pushing it onto someone else.
she doesn't respond immediately and marc almost allows himself tonthink that's the end of it, that she'll take the remark as is and they won't touch on it again. instead, and to his disappointment, she half-questions what he means and the 'no' sits on the tip of his tongue, against the back of his teeth before she plows ahead and says it for him.
it's oddly deflating, in a way β to realise he's that painfully transparent. he'd promised so many people time and time again that he'd stop being moon knight, that he'd make more effort, that he'd be β not him, he supposes, that it sits strangely and uncomfortably to not have that expected of him. to have the 'yeah, no, you suck at that' that's readily admitted and β accepted?
(yeah, no, he's not sure that he likes it, in truth.) )
That's normally the sort of thing I have to apologise for, ( uttered with a wry quirk of his lips. (or: ignores the odd feeling. )
[ It isn't that he's that transparent, she thinks, it's more that she's just been around him and has overthought about his interactions with her to the heavens (Esther can back her up on this, having been privy to a lot of their drama and her questions of, 'Was he just being weird or am I being weird?') that she just.. Has come to the conclusion herself. And while Lottie does have personal issues with people who simply don't respect her or her time, Marc teeters that weird line that her friends do. That she does, even (because she isn't perfect, either). Where she's satisfied with what they've established even if she'd like a little more consistency β but she's learned, growing up, that's kind of everybody.
Misty is a huge flake, Meg makes everything about herself, and Lottie is insane. Marc is sometimes all three, or sometimes only one. And Esther is probably the only normal one in her entire social circle.
(Caroline sits in the weird outlier, in an uncomfortable unattainable circle she's tried so hard to break into. Maybe, never willβ) ]
That's so stupid.
[ He quirks his lips and Lottie doesn't see it as an attempt by Marc to steer his own feelings, his emotions, in a way that doesn't let her in on his own thoughts. In fact, she just sees it and it manages to irk her. And maybe, if they had met under different circumstances, as people instead of Lottie "Faking Everything About Myself Online" Person and Marc "Moon Knight" Spector, she'd understand what he's getting at. But she doesn't β to her, this is part of the package deal of being friends with him. ]
—What? ( it takes him a moment to understand exactly what she's getting at. he thinks it's supposed to be a compliment of sorts — or at least, not an insult — that his emotional ineptitude and inability to be present consistently and in any real capacity is just part and parcel of knowing him, but he's been involved in enough capital-c conversations to be more than aware that: no. it's not something most people are willing to overlook. that people, eventually, expect more.
(a decade, tops, if there's investment in hoping he'll change; fifteen, maybe, if your name's jean-paul duchamp.)
for better or worse, marc has at least reached the point in his life when he can look at how he's acted and is prone to acting and acknowledge that, no, other people are right: he can and does act very fucking shittily at times. he hadn't reached that conclusion by himself, it had been the result of a lot of unpleasantries, a lot of arguments and a lot of marc alternately isolating himself and then demanding to be involved in marlene's life, or frenchie's life because that's what he wanted now, and being told — resolutely and with precisely no room for misunderstandings — to fuck off until he'd grown up.
then it'd been 'just don't even bother'.
he thinks he ought to appreciate what she's trying to say, but he doesn't. he doesn't enjoy being known as unreliable, or difficult and uncommunicative. he exhales a huff of breath, a forceful sigh that's almost entirely made up of frustrated agreement. where lottie's irked on marc's behalf at the implied expectations of a man that has never been able to consistently meet the barest minimum of an equal partnership, marc is simply irked at himself.
(nothing new.) )
Yeah.
( whatever friendship he and lottie have here and now isn't any different, he thinks — the last few days have been more than enough evidence of that. they'd fallen out, marc hadn't communicated or made an effort, they'd reconciled but he wouldn't be surprised that if it came to it, if this happened over and over and over again, that lottie would grow tired of it, tired of being the one to reach out to make amends; tired of the fact that if she doesn't do that, it's less than fifty-fifty on whether or not marc will make the effort — and if he does, how much of the issue he's managed to cotton onto.
he's better than he was, but given where the bar started, it's not a massive achievement. )
What is it they teach at school? Actions have consequences?( at least, that's the vague sentiment marc heard a lot. )Do unto others? (that one was all his dad. ) It's not stupid to want better. ( even if, god, he hates the turn this conversation has taken. )
[ It definitely isn't an insult, but it isn't quite a compliment, either. To Lottie, she is just stating a fact that this is simply Marc. It's part of how she's known him and it hasn't exactly caused problems for her, for them (save for, well, these past few days of pure silence, pure irritation at his willingness to let things (tense, difficult, silent) be as they are). She thinks it's just something that, at some point, you need to accept. Quirky character flaws. So when he huffs out a breath of air that is more β she can't even begin to figure out how to describe it, but there's a weight to it, the way he expels it. He makes her think like she's missing out on something, that she's not cluing into whatever it is he's feeling.
And then there's the big question β does he want her to clue into it? Is this something he wants to explain to her? Wants her asking? She tilts her head towards him, raising a single brow as if to ask him if he's okay, or if there's something he wants to share with the class.
He answers that look with a very unimpressive: yeah.
And then he hits her with, what, things she's learned in grade school? Things that, she hates to admit, she thinks about a lot of the time? Because even if she's used to how dysfunctional and catty her friend group is, it doesn't mean that she's particularly satisfied with it. It simply means she's learned to become complacent, to not expect much. Annoyingly, Marc is making her think about the day she met Caroline, how she was so enthusiastic at the prospect of meeting a cool new friend who actually listens to her so she can dump her old ones. She thinks of how she's, for the most part, cut off contact with Sunny β save for when she's bored and she knows he'll answer her texts (usually at three am, usually when she's run out of people to bug) β because he was so impossibly hot and cold post their break up that she couldn't find it in herself to entertain it anymore. 'It's not stupid to want better.'
(She considers how things went on her second date with Caroline, remembers the almost mocking, mean, way she said, "So.. Did you really set your hair on fire?? Ahahaha! You're supposed to let it go out before you drink, you know?"
"H-hey!" She remembers the way she blurted out, "I was distracted! You were walking away, andβ I was just trying to figure you out! I never know where I stand with you..."
There's not even a beat of consideration to what Lottie really wants her to say, is goading her to admit. She just lets her lips curl in that knowing (ominous?) way she's always come to associate with Caroline β
"Maybe that's... Exactly the way I want it to be.")
It's not stupid to want better, but that doesn't mean it always works out like that. It doesn't make you feel less stupid if 'better' doesn't pan out. She clicks her tongue, not even sure what to say in response to him because while she agrees, she has no idea where to take this conversation. What direction it should go.. Because they're fine now, right? Is he telling her she should want better from him? Or that she should agree with everyone else? Because if this were her, she would've agreed and left it at that, but she can tell something is bothering him. She's just not sure whatβ ]
I mean.. Should I want better?? [ There's a vague, awkward, wave of her hand. ] With.. I don't knowβ us?
( marc is not enjoying this conversation. in the past, this would be the part where he'd leave, cut his losses and pretend that he's got something far more important and far more interesting to deal with. the problem is that one, they're at the mission so the only other place he could go is outside (and he's still shoe-less); two, even if he did, he's not convinced that lottie wouldn't still be here when he came back; and three, he knows it wouldn't actually help anything.
he swigs the remains of his coffee — it's terrible. the colder it gets, the worse it tastes — when she asks him if she should want better (yes), clarifies that she means specifically with her and him (the answer's still 'yes'). there's a pause in which marc lets the silence answer for him, lets it imply the questions he doesn't throw at her — the why are they even having this conversation? couldn't she have just taken his instagram remark at face value, with the spirit in which it was meant, instead of opening the door to — this?
(marc plays this game with almost everyone: speaks vaguely about his thoughts and feelings and experiences and then, when pushed, almost completely refuses to elaborate any further. refuses to add depth, or explain why. his friends, the people he's closest to get the brunt of it, because they're the people he can be most honest with.) )
Yes. ( frankly. bluntly. (if she's going to ask.) a light outside the window catches his attention and he looks towards it — a brake light, stop-start, stop-start as some kids run recklessly across the road. marc watches, pressing the coffee cup in his hand together, letting it fold in on itself and the lid pop off before picking it off delicately. he turns away from the window (and lottie) and makes his way back to the desk, ducking down for just long enough to throw his cup and the lid in a bin.
(—but then, that's the problem, isn't it? he's always relied on the people around him to push him to be better and has never quite been able to settle on whether he wants to be pushed or whether he just wants to keep on doing the same things he's always done.) )
—Forget it, it's late. We're just talking in circles. I didn't mean anything with the Instagram comment.
[ Marc feels like he's in so deep in his thoughts he's operating purely on his own spectrum, maybe not even realizing Lottie is privy to every action he takes. Sees the way he just, demolishes his cup of coffee and doesn't say anything. Just moodily looks out his window like he's on HBO's hottest TV show, is the shows most illustrious broody bachelor. Gives her one word answers that leave her more confused (flustered?) as he crushes (pressures?) that coffee cup until the lid is the only sound that's being made between the two of them.
In the time he takes to throw away his cup (hide?), Lottie pushes herself off the wall, sips her own drink in a stupor because what the hell. Why is he so dramatic? So.. Confusing? The signals are so mixed that her own wires are getting crossed trying to understand it. ]
Uh, yeah. You're right.. It's late.
[ She's not agreeing with him because she has no idea what else to say.
βOkay, well, shit, she actually is, but it's true. It is late. Usually she'd be asleep by now, but the impending issue of their friendship had kept her awake so long it prompted her into doing this very bad idea, the worst #meetcute of the century. Now she's the one who feels like she's walking on eggshells, because, uh, no, they're not talking in circles. Lottie talks circles, squares, and triangles, and this isn't circles. It's Marc avoiding the topic he suggested (walked them into?) and she'sβ exhausted enough to find herself agreeing with him (for real, this time). He says he didn't mean anything by it and.. That's that.
In the end, she rubs at her temples, nodding softly. Wondering if he's going to make himself present one way or the other or if he might just hide under his desk forever. Just stick his ass up as he says, 'ciao loser, goodbye!' ]
Thanks, for, uh, clarifying? It's just β you know how people are with influencers. [ No, he doesn't. She knows he doesn't. ] Sometimes it's fine, and other times it's like..
[ A slippery slope? Sometimes people think you're using them? Sometimes they're right? That you're less a person just because you exist on the internet? ]
I guess let me know if you do, or something. [ Want to go. On the trip? The trip that might not happen but.. She scrunches her face in thoughtβ indecision. ] I should probably go?
( it doesn't occur to marc that he's being awkward. (although he'd disagree, vehemently, that this is the result of his comment — this is the result of lottie misinterpreting it, and there's a difference.) it doesn't occur to marc that this is one of the few times when she's encountered marc being marc without the cloak of anything else to hide himself in: introspective, avoidant, and — as andrea had put it — angsty. and it certainly doesn't occur to him that he ought to clarify anything.
(it would probably help, he doesn't think, to explain that she'd managed to hit a nerve, even — no, especially because she didn't mean to.)
she agrees that it's late (has no other choice — objectively speaking, it is late, it's the sort of late where marc, if he wasn't busy doing this and he was awake, would be thinking about getting a(nother) coffee regardless. late enough that he'd think about how fucking stupid he is for leading this lifestyle, how his routine probably isn't that great for his health. he knows lottie's still awake at this hour sometimes — he's had messages from her — but not often enough for him to think it's a regular occurrence for her.
what it's not is late enough for marc to know he'll go straight to bed when lottie leaves.
he doesn't stay under the desk for long, reappears to catch her agreement, her fingers massaging her temples as she attempts to fathom how they weren't from where they were to here. he leans against the desk, palms flat against the surface. haltingly, she thanks him for explaining, tacks on an explanation of her own that she doesn't quite finish and leaves him to infer the rest. he doesn't really know, but he knows how people are with him and thinks it's probably none too dissimilar: sometimes, he's treated like a person, normal and regular. other times, he's treated like all he is, is the sum of his worst mistakes, someone to be tolerated and humoured.
(it's frustrating and is it any wonder he prefers to work alone? no, but he also can't blame anyone for the wariness, as much as he hates it.)
she switches topics abruptly, telling him to let her know if he does something, and marc doesn't ask what she means. lets his features pinch together tightly as he tries to work it out (fails), and decides to just accept the remark and come back to it later because she asks, unsure, if she should go, not that she should go. )
I'll call you a car, ( he offers. he doesn't know how she got here, actually, and the thought occurs to him suddenly, distractingly. it's not that he's kicking her out (eh), it's that he doesn't know why she'd want to stay, why the hesitancy. they've cleared the air (mostly), marc's made it a little bit weird (again), but it's fine. )
[ Marc doesn't.. Hm? Give her an answer to anything? Other than letting her know that, yes, she should probably go, and it puts a weird taste in her mouth. One that makes her feel awkward and realize, yeah, she's probably overstayed her welcome. Maybe Marc just doesn't want to hang out after such an emotionally taxing time and she's.. God, she doesn't know. She looks up to the ceiling in a stupor, trying very hard to rationalize all this because this isn't like the first time she's had this realization, that she's over late and someone calls her an Uber. But it's just.. Weird. ]
Oh, thanks..
[ (Lottie did take an Uber, one that was equal parts nonchalant and curious as to why she was being dropped off in front of nowhere. Not even a restaurant, not even a houseβ just the side of a shady street that Moon Knight protects (the fact isn't on the forefront of everyone's mind, but it is still there when they are in the thick of his corners).) ]
Lemme know how much it is and I'll venmo you?
[ She says, in lieu of anything else. Because, what can she say? She's not sure if there's any merit to actually staying, to actually finishing the conversation she is so very much dying to just.. Dig into, even slightly? Now, having accepted his offer, she knows that she never will, Marc's willingness to humor her outside of this moment dwindling by the second as she walks over to dump her own cup of coffee into his trash can. ]
( where lottie was (and is) completely oblivious to the thoughts swirling around marc's head, he's completely oblivious to hers. if she expressed a desire to stay, he'd — not exactly rethink his offer to send her home, but he'd at least attempt to consider why. he doesn't think there's any more conversation to be had (not uncommon), and she's — crucially — not andrea sterman, with a reason for him to open up; and she's not greer, with years of friendship (and a little bit more) to call on to be able to say 'marc, we are talking about this'.
she looks up at the ceiling and he follows her gaze, briefly, and there's nothing there. then she looks back to him and offers to venmo him the money and the look he gives her says as much as the— )
No. ( firm, dismissive, intended with absolutely no room for argument (but it's lottie, so what he intends and what he gets are not always the same things). ) It's the least I could do.
[ ..Huh. She eases her way back up to look at him, the tiniest bit surprised at the way he hits her with that 'no' (firm, dismissive, putting his foot down and trying to put an end to that discussion). For once, she doesn't really fight him on it β she's still feeling strange about how the conversation took an abrupt, weird, mopey, turn, and she figures if this is what will make him feel better.. Why not? Lottie puts her hands in her pockets, about to thank him again before stopping herself. ]
..Okay.
[ A beat. ]
Wanna walk me up when it gets here?
abrupt, weird, and mopey: the name of marc's autobiography
( frankly, it won't make marc feel better, not really, but when marc's caught in a mood, there's not a lot that'll shift it. typically, marc mopes, decides he's frustrated (not mopey), and then works the frustration out in questionable ways. (in other circumstances, he mopes and proceeds to act so thoroughly guilty, so thoroughly ashamed — without ever saying the words — that he seems to be offering no other option than to be forgiven for whatever act of personal ineptitude.)
lottie doesn't argue the point (thankfully), meaning her question earns a nod whilst he reaches for his phone. pauses. (how many ubers has 'marc spector' got in his life? not many, and the last journey he had made— —mm.
he misses having a private car and a driver.)
that is: lottie's rating is definitely higher than his. he looks at her, expression deliberately impassive. )
—I'll give you my card details.
( maybe if he says it decisively enough, she won't question it. )
his best selling book to date (his only book To Date)
[ He reaches for his phone and.. Doesn't put it back.
But pointedly does not unlock it, does not use it, and does not look for any type of app that suspiciously looks like Uber? No, he in fact says he'll give her his card details and this is where the niceties end and her questioning begins. She scrunches her face slightly, crossing her arms in his direction. Not exactly unlocking her own phone quite yet, because she needs to know something first β ]
God.. Are you banned from Uber, Marc?
[ Typically.. People who offer to pay just get the car using their own phone! They also, usually, don't have her put their card details under a payment method on her own account (that she will accidentally use, one of these days)!! ]
( there's a subtle shift in marc's expression, a brief widening of his eyes that sits dangerously close to embarrassment that he seeks to smooth over with his patented spector frownTM. )
No, ( cagily, pointed — (too pointed?) — but he still doesn't look down at his phone, as if ignoring it will convince lottie otherwise, as if not dropping his gaze will convince her that no, he's—.
(ah, fuck it, who's he kidding?)
—he inhales, slowly, then exhales. pinches the bridge of his nose and admits— ) Yes. ( apparently, blood stains aren't conducive to a good rating. apparently he'd been aggressive — not to the driver, no, he's not that much of a dick, but there'd been the collateral on the sidewalk, the stark evidence of what he does and what he's capable of. threatening had been the exact wording used, he thinks — or maybe intimidating, and marc hadn't exactly been able to argue the point. ) —Don't. (say anything, he means. )
He is banned. Lottie manages to feel bad for all of one second as he sighs heavy, pinches the bridge of his nose in a resignation they are both familiar with. In response, she finally unlocks her phone, presses at it a few times before handing it over to him. It's set to the page where he'd be able to punch in those card details, as Lottie turns to make sure not to look (because, you know, privacy or something!!).
She decides she won't say anything about Uber. That, maybe, someday she'll mention how she's banned from her favorite coffee spot for going insane at her friend's engagement party and pushing Charlene into a pool (it's not her fault she couldn't swim or something? Oops?). It's curious, almost sympathetic, even, the way she asks, ]
Hmm? ( he murmurs, half-distracted typing in his details to lottie's phone. he's not fussed as to whether she watches or not (it's not as if she'd be able to memorise his card number off the bat, and even if she did, well— he knows where she lives.)
her words take a second to register. (lyft. lyft? is he?). he pauses, mid-type, eyebrows furrowed and then — a shrug. they're all the same, aren't they? he doesn't answer, not properly, not until he's finished typing in his card details and handed the phone back to lottie. at least this way, he tells himself, she can be certain of the pick up location and drop off point. ) —Probably.
[ Wow.. In a way, Lottie is jealous of just how free Marc is from worrying about his reputation on apps like that. He's just, she doesn't know, living his life and finding workarounds? He hands her that phone back and she takes it, rubs her thumb along the buttons lining the side in thought before looking down to her screen and ordering that uber. The ETA says: ]
Five minutes. [ And 5 minutes feels too soon, like she'd have to go wait out in the front right now unless she misses the car entirely and he's charged an extra fee on top of everything. But she doesn't move, not quite yet, just turns off her screen and gestures vaguely with a hand. ]
It said it'd be a Honda Civic. [ Said in the fashion of someone who does not knowwhat that looks like. ]
( 'living his life and finding workarounds' mostly means that he, when he needs to, drives. it means he—they've—still got jake's cab (which jake doesn't like him driving), he's still got cars that haven't been taken in as part of investigations into 'might've tried to blow up his therapist, marc spector', 'maybe tried to assassinate a diplomat, marc spector', 'was a bit too publicly violent with a criminal in tower block whilst on the news, marc spector'. weirdly, he's found, his belongings aren't always taken when he's actually done something worthy of police (and more—) attention, only when someone thinks he has.
honda civic, she says, and marc looks at her, skepticism painting his features. he knows she has no idea what kind of car that is, opens his mouth to tell her as much but what comes out instead is an— )
—Ugh, fuck.
( not about the car. honda civics aren't very exciting cars, but who wants an exciting taxi ride? no, the dismayed, annoyed mutter is because marc's remembered, quite suddenly (for the second time) that walking her out means putting his boots back on. he eyes one, looking at it as if it's personally betrayed him and then sets about unlacing it properly so that he can put it back on.
(he should've done that in the first place, but he'd been too grumpy—.) )
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he's been, once or twice, but more often to jerusalem. he shoots her a sidelong glance, watchful and appraising as he weighs up what he knows about lottie (odd facts and inferences based on time spent together where they don't really talk about anything, a companionable kind of non-communication that marc doesn't hate) versus what he knows about tel aviv: architecture lottie wouldn't necessarily care for but for the photograph opportunities. markets she'd enjoy for much the same reason and would be strangely careful about eating anything from (marc's never quite been sure what her deal is — he's noticed she avoid gluten, noticed she always opts for a non-dairy milk, and he's never quite been sure if it's because alternative diets are cool these days or if it's because she genuinely suffers from a host of intolerances).
his lips quirk and he hides the barest hint of a smile behind his coffee cup as he adds, ) It's where the kids hang out. ( is it?
marc is not always as ignorant as he plays at. he knows, vaguely, what an influencer is and does, but he's never cared to discover the minutiae, never felt particularly inclined to discover what about it specifically is employable and what it means in a broad, day-to-day sense. lottie spends a lot of time on her phone (fine, people do that generally anyway, people that aren't marc), she spends a lot of time on her laptop (also fine, that's how a lot of people do jobs generally), but the details of marketing oneself and one's life is a tedious and horrifying concept to marc given his deep-rooted desire to be personally invisible.
(moon knight's different).
he has never cared for fashion, not as a kid, not as a teenager, and certainly not as an adult. lottie's shared her appreciation for his suit — it is nice, even if most people get fixated on the 'but it's white!' aspect — but nothing else. steven cares the most, is fussy and particular in a way that neither marc nor jake can relate to, though jake is particular about his own sense of style in his own, jake-like way.
marc dresses for dull practicality. ) So at a guess, with my limited knowledge, that's probably where you want to go to get your fashion fix.
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So she tries to think of it differently, that he's aging himself instead of aging her, and it only manages to lessen the weird swirl of feelings settling in her chest. Arguably, is that even better? Reminding herself Marc is older than her and a dad (she will, truly, never get over this β Marc screams bachelor having an always-crisis and not a dad!)? She lets her gaze sweep over him, wonders if this is what she gets for asking when she already knew what he meant, if this is some weird sort of karma being inflicted on her.
Really, she knows Marc wouldn't purposely inflict her with this, if he knew how deep her insecurities ran. How unsure of herself she really felt, how deep the roots go into her brain. She tries to run off this, lets herself fiddle with the straw in her drink when he announces that's where she'd get her 'fashion fix'. He is thinking about her, ultimately, and she should be satisfied with that, and yetβ. ]
Tel Aviv.. [ She repeats, after a second of dedicated thought (read: giving a slow nod and humming), sounding out the name on her tongue. Marc is mentioning it, so that means it must be worthwhile. Also, Marc mentioned it, so she has to go at some point. ] ..Okay. I'll have Esther pencil that in for me.
[ Her phone is out of reach, having been placed on his desk before she came to lean beside him, so she'll make a note to text her about it. Secretly, she hopes she'll actually remember, because she wants to let it be known to Marc that she pays attention to what he says. That she remembers, is putting an active effort into what they have, because isn't that what friendship is? She tilts her head until the crown of it rests softly against the wall. Her tone is curious, bordering on even, when she asks. ]
Would you wanna go?
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marlene would comment, unhappily, on how much time was being spent on moon knight and not enough time on their relationship, and so marc — or steven, or jake — would impulsively book a holiday, not quite anywhere they last remembered marlene mentioning, but somewhere that'd seem like marc (or steven, or jake—) was listening to marlene, reflecting on what she'd said, giving her (them) a vacation together, but then it'd inevitably be somewhere with a link to marc's past (always marc's, because marc is the only one of them with a past worth escaping) and marlene would — well, she'd be unhappy, of course.
he's done it with greer, too — arguments and fraught conversations resulting in considered but frankly spur of the moment gifts in lieu of a good apology (marc has never been good at those). with frenchie, it'd been impulsive invitations, a resolute ignoring of issues as to say 'look, water under the bridge, look, let's do this, just like the old days'.
lottie says she'll pencil tel aviv in and he's — startled. surprised, though not unpleasantly. it's world's apart from the start of their conversation, the difficulty in clarity, in being open and honest with each other. it's a strange sensation to realise it's a maybe decision made off the back of marc's frankly poor knowledge of what's fun and exciting to do in israel, and though it's not unpleasant, it's not a situation marc has found him in often with friends — marc hasn't many, for one, and for two, he's often the one making decisions and leaving little room for opinion.
generally, it makes its way back to him in the form of 'god, you make this really difficult, marc'. )
I haven't been abroad in a while, ( he admits carefully, a not-quite answer to her question. that's the second surprise, the implied invitation, and he thinks of all the times he'd travelled with marlene. he doesn't think he needs to tell lottie that he's not the most involved person to travel with.
(that is, he doesn't think he needs to mention it, but he probably should.)
he doesn't think he's travelled since — since marlene before left for france. he wonders if anna's still living in jerusalem, if any of his father's friends are still there. it's not a long journey from tel aviv — an hour and a half, maybe. he'd have to ask badr to look after the mission. ) —I don't know how much of a valuable addition I'd be to your Instagram.
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But truthfully, she's never considered Marc to travel for fun β he's too busy doing his Moon Knight stuff here, has sunken his roots into the soil so deep she doesn't think he'd ever leave if given the chance. Plus, it'd be hard finding a replacement if he wanted to take time for himself, probably.. Not a lot of people willing to moonlight (hah) as Moon Knight (hah) for a week or so while Marc gets his tan on.
She doesn't even get as far as imagining just what type of person he'd even be on a trip (she'd start with what white themed ensemble he'd shove himself into first before fantasizing about anything related to group activities) before he continues. And it's minute β tiny, so little it's a real blink and you miss it β the way her lips tug down. She knows he doesn't mean anything by it, whether he'd be valuable to her Instagram, her brand, or not, but it makes her stomach twist oddly.
It's something everyone assumes of her, of most influencers, and they're not wrong. Lottie, genuinely, only goes somewhere if she can curate content from it. She never goes out for fun, only goes out into the world with the intent of finding the spot with the best lighting. Because who doesn't love a selfie as a story update, you know? But she doesn't do much of that whenever they're together β she thought he'd understand that? It'd also be the same? Is that what he thinks of her? Idly, she bites at her lip, glances off to the side as her expression settles on: self-conscious.
It's only vaguely defensive, the way her words sound out of her lips. ]
..I don't post everything to Instagram.
[ She wouldn't post him if he doesn't want her to, she means. ]
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marc's unpopularity aside, his poor reputation and past reliance on questionable methods to get the job done is ultimately inconsequential. he knows he's fucked up, he knows it's going to take a while to pull back whatever goodwill he might have fostered over the years (here and there, back and forth between other bad decisions), but he knows too, that if anyone had any problems with what he was doing now, he'd have heard about it.
he'd have another visitor at his door and it wouldn't be a friendly face like greer. it'd be t'challa, or captain america, or goddamn tony stark (again), and marc's tired of those visits. bored of the repetitive conversations. the black panther had given him an olive branch that he's only sort of accepted in the form of tigra, but the lack of anything else says that what marc's doing now is acceptable to the rest of them.
clea owes him a favour (well, not really, but they're friends). wong doesn't quite owe him a favour, but wong's a good guy (although marc's aware he should probably stop pissing off the various sorcerer supremes of the world). daredevil (and there's a guy who's had a few problems of his own). spider-man (ditto). castle's busy having a personal crisis of his own and despite how many times they've teamed up over the years, marc doesn't think he has it in him to ever go to him for help. (khonshu and his "oh, that one works for another god and his god must be very pleased", like marc hasn't done enough for him over the years, the fucking dick.) but he thinks he could probably even scare 8-ball enough to keep an eye out for him.
so no, finding someone else to keep an eye on his territory wouldn't be the issue. the issue would absolutely be marc giving up control of it all for long enough.
that is: possible, but challenging.
he doesn't catch the shift in lottie's expression, but he does catch the glance to the side, does notice the difference in the way she answers him now to mere moments before and he doesn't know what he's said. instagram? her—problem is his comment about instagram? )
I didn't—. ( abrupt pause; reconsideration. if she elaborated a little more on what she meant, precisely, marc would explain that he didn't mean it like that. he'd meant that their values are different. he meant he's not fun and doesn't do fun things, isn't someone many people have historically made fun memories with. that, objectively, there must have been something that'd kept marlene around for as long as she was but now, marc's not really sure what it was. ) That's not what I meant.
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He says that's not what he meant, after a beat, and the good thing is she doesn't immediately hop into what is instinctual for her when she's feeling insecure: bitter denial. She's quiet, but it's not because she doesn't believe him. It's because she still wants to try and communicate without letting slip too much of her thoughts, because she's not sure how her words will sound coming out of her lips. ]
Okay..
[ So if he doesn't think she's a crazy clout goblin, then.. ]
So what did you mean?
[ She asks, tone curious and vaguely guarded, like she's preparing herself for an answer she might not like. ]
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marc's constantly caught between caring too much about what people think of him and deciding what does it matter to ever give a thought to his opinion on someone else mattering. that'd been the problem with jeff: marc had never had an ounce of time for the boy, left him stranded in brooklyn, and was more or less the reason he became a villain.
(and then marc had killed him. fortunately, lottie is not jeff.)
true to form, though, he doesn't think (again) of how lottie interprets his actions and his comments. he inhales, makes a small gesture with his hand that doesn't mean anything (is instead simply something to do), and says— )
I meant— ( and immediately pauses. how does he say what he meant? his comment was a commentary on her instagramming, it was a commentary on himself—! ) I'm not very present.
( that's it, right? that's about the shape of it. )
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(Somewhere in the back of her mind she thinks, damn, it feels nice to be on the other side of things β isn't she usually the one fumbling and just completely failing to make one sentence?)
Her brows slowly lift, waits a few measured moments to see if he'll even elaborate. He won't, Lottie knows this of Marc and yet she still waits just to see if he'll make an exception for her (he doesn't), so she scratches at her scalpβ ruffles some of her hair in the process. ]
Uh.. On trips?
[ She asks this, but it's not exactly a question, because she doesn't wait for him to confirm as she's already continuing. ]
Well, I mean.. Yeah, I kinda figured that. Marc, we can barely watch a TV show together. [ She means, both their attention spans aren't exactly stellar. ]
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now marc's on the back foot, having been pushed into (sort of almost not quite but close enough for him) admitting something honest about how he feels and his self-awareness, instead of pushing it onto someone else.
she doesn't respond immediately and marc almost allows himself tonthink that's the end of it, that she'll take the remark as is and they won't touch on it again. instead, and to his disappointment, she half-questions what he means and the 'no' sits on the tip of his tongue, against the back of his teeth before she plows ahead and says it for him.
it's oddly deflating, in a way β to realise he's that painfully transparent. he'd promised so many people time and time again that he'd stop being moon knight, that he'd make more effort, that he'd be β not him, he supposes, that it sits strangely and uncomfortably to not have that expected of him. to have the 'yeah, no, you suck at that' that's readily admitted and β accepted?
(yeah, no, he's not sure that he likes it, in truth.) )
That's normally the sort of thing I have to apologise for, ( uttered with a wry quirk of his lips. (or: ignores the odd feeling. )
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Misty is a huge flake, Meg makes everything about herself, and Lottie is insane. Marc is sometimes all three, or sometimes only one. And Esther is probably the only normal one in her entire social circle.
(Caroline sits in the weird outlier, in an uncomfortable unattainable circle she's tried so hard to break into. Maybe, never willβ) ]
That's so stupid.
[ He quirks his lips and Lottie doesn't see it as an attempt by Marc to steer his own feelings, his emotions, in a way that doesn't let her in on his own thoughts. In fact, she just sees it and it manages to irk her. And maybe, if they had met under different circumstances, as people instead of Lottie "Faking Everything About Myself Online" Person and Marc "Moon Knight" Spector, she'd understand what he's getting at. But she doesn't β to her, this is part of the package deal of being friends with him. ]
That's just a you thing.
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(a decade, tops, if there's investment in hoping he'll change; fifteen, maybe, if your name's jean-paul duchamp.)
for better or worse, marc has at least reached the point in his life when he can look at how he's acted and is prone to acting and acknowledge that, no, other people are right: he can and does act very fucking shittily at times. he hadn't reached that conclusion by himself, it had been the result of a lot of unpleasantries, a lot of arguments and a lot of marc alternately isolating himself and then demanding to be involved in marlene's life, or frenchie's life because that's what he wanted now, and being told — resolutely and with precisely no room for misunderstandings — to fuck off until he'd grown up.
then it'd been 'just don't even bother'.
he thinks he ought to appreciate what she's trying to say, but he doesn't. he doesn't enjoy being known as unreliable, or difficult and uncommunicative. he exhales a huff of breath, a forceful sigh that's almost entirely made up of frustrated agreement. where lottie's irked on marc's behalf at the implied expectations of a man that has never been able to consistently meet the barest minimum of an equal partnership, marc is simply irked at himself.
(nothing new.) )
Yeah.
( whatever friendship he and lottie have here and now isn't any different, he thinks — the last few days have been more than enough evidence of that. they'd fallen out, marc hadn't communicated or made an effort, they'd reconciled but he wouldn't be surprised that if it came to it, if this happened over and over and over again, that lottie would grow tired of it, tired of being the one to reach out to make amends; tired of the fact that if she doesn't do that, it's less than fifty-fifty on whether or not marc will make the effort — and if he does, how much of the issue he's managed to cotton onto.
he's better than he was, but given where the bar started, it's not a massive achievement. )
What is it they teach at school? Actions have consequences? ( at least, that's the vague sentiment marc heard a lot. ) Do unto others? ( that one was all his dad. ) It's not stupid to want better. ( even if, god, he hates the turn this conversation has taken. )
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And then there's the big question β does he want her to clue into it? Is this something he wants to explain to her? Wants her asking? She tilts her head towards him, raising a single brow as if to ask him if he's okay, or if there's something he wants to share with the class.
He answers that look with a very unimpressive: yeah.
And then he hits her with, what, things she's learned in grade school? Things that, she hates to admit, she thinks about a lot of the time? Because even if she's used to how dysfunctional and catty her friend group is, it doesn't mean that she's particularly satisfied with it. It simply means she's learned to become complacent, to not expect much. Annoyingly, Marc is making her think about the day she met Caroline, how she was so enthusiastic at the prospect of meeting a cool new friend who actually listens to her so she can dump her old ones. She thinks of how she's, for the most part, cut off contact with Sunny β save for when she's bored and she knows he'll answer her texts (usually at three am, usually when she's run out of people to bug) β because he was so impossibly hot and cold post their break up that she couldn't find it in herself to entertain it anymore. 'It's not stupid to want better.'
(She considers how things went on her second date with Caroline, remembers the almost mocking, mean, way she said, "So.. Did you really set your hair on fire?? Ahahaha! You're supposed to let it go out before you drink, you know?"
"H-hey!" She remembers the way she blurted out, "I was distracted! You were walking away, andβ I was just trying to figure you out! I never know where I stand with you..."
There's not even a beat of consideration to what Lottie really wants her to say, is goading her to admit. She just lets her lips curl in that knowing (ominous?) way she's always come to associate with Caroline β
"Maybe that's... Exactly the way I want it to be.")
It's not stupid to want better, but that doesn't mean it always works out like that. It doesn't make you feel less stupid if 'better' doesn't pan out. She clicks her tongue, not even sure what to say in response to him because while she agrees, she has no idea where to take this conversation. What direction it should go.. Because they're fine now, right? Is he telling her she should want better from him? Or that she should agree with everyone else? Because if this were her, she would've agreed and left it at that, but she can tell something is bothering him. She's just not sure whatβ ]
I mean.. Should I want better?? [ There's a vague, awkward, wave of her hand. ] With.. I don't knowβ us?
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he swigs the remains of his coffee — it's terrible. the colder it gets, the worse it tastes — when she asks him if she should want better (yes), clarifies that she means specifically with her and him (the answer's still 'yes'). there's a pause in which marc lets the silence answer for him, lets it imply the questions he doesn't throw at her — the why are they even having this conversation? couldn't she have just taken his instagram remark at face value, with the spirit in which it was meant, instead of opening the door to — this?
(marc plays this game with almost everyone: speaks vaguely about his thoughts and feelings and experiences and then, when pushed, almost completely refuses to elaborate any further. refuses to add depth, or explain why. his friends, the people he's closest to get the brunt of it, because they're the people he can be most honest with.) )
Yes. ( frankly. bluntly. (if she's going to ask.) a light outside the window catches his attention and he looks towards it — a brake light, stop-start, stop-start as some kids run recklessly across the road. marc watches, pressing the coffee cup in his hand together, letting it fold in on itself and the lid pop off before picking it off delicately. he turns away from the window (and lottie) and makes his way back to the desk, ducking down for just long enough to throw his cup and the lid in a bin.
(—but then, that's the problem, isn't it? he's always relied on the people around him to push him to be better and has never quite been able to settle on whether he wants to be pushed or whether he just wants to keep on doing the same things he's always done.) )
—Forget it, it's late. We're just talking in circles. I didn't mean anything with the Instagram comment.
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In the time he takes to throw away his cup (hide?), Lottie pushes herself off the wall, sips her own drink in a stupor because what the hell. Why is he so dramatic? So.. Confusing? The signals are so mixed that her own wires are getting crossed trying to understand it. ]
Uh, yeah. You're right.. It's late.
[ She's not agreeing with him because she has no idea what else to say.
βOkay, well, shit, she actually is, but it's true. It is late. Usually she'd be asleep by now, but the impending issue of their friendship had kept her awake so long it prompted her into doing this very bad idea, the worst #meetcute of the century. Now she's the one who feels like she's walking on eggshells, because, uh, no, they're not talking in circles. Lottie talks circles, squares, and triangles, and this isn't circles. It's Marc avoiding the topic he suggested (walked them into?) and she'sβ exhausted enough to find herself agreeing with him (for real, this time). He says he didn't mean anything by it and.. That's that.
In the end, she rubs at her temples, nodding softly. Wondering if he's going to make himself present one way or the other or if he might just hide under his desk forever. Just stick his ass up as he says, 'ciao loser, goodbye!' ]
Thanks, for, uh, clarifying? It's just β you know how people are with influencers. [ No, he doesn't. She knows he doesn't. ] Sometimes it's fine, and other times it's like..
[ A slippery slope? Sometimes people think you're using them? Sometimes they're right? That you're less a person just because you exist on the internet? ]
I guess let me know if you do, or something. [ Want to go. On the trip? The trip that might not happen but.. She scrunches her face in thoughtβ indecision. ] I should probably go?
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(it would probably help, he doesn't think, to explain that she'd managed to hit a nerve, even — no, especially because she didn't mean to.)
she agrees that it's late (has no other choice — objectively speaking, it is late, it's the sort of late where marc, if he wasn't busy doing this and he was awake, would be thinking about getting a(nother) coffee regardless. late enough that he'd think about how fucking stupid he is for leading this lifestyle, how his routine probably isn't that great for his health. he knows lottie's still awake at this hour sometimes — he's had messages from her — but not often enough for him to think it's a regular occurrence for her.
what it's not is late enough for marc to know he'll go straight to bed when lottie leaves.
he doesn't stay under the desk for long, reappears to catch her agreement, her fingers massaging her temples as she attempts to fathom how they weren't from where they were to here. he leans against the desk, palms flat against the surface. haltingly, she thanks him for explaining, tacks on an explanation of her own that she doesn't quite finish and leaves him to infer the rest. he doesn't really know, but he knows how people are with him and thinks it's probably none too dissimilar: sometimes, he's treated like a person, normal and regular. other times, he's treated like all he is, is the sum of his worst mistakes, someone to be tolerated and humoured.
(it's frustrating and is it any wonder he prefers to work alone? no, but he also can't blame anyone for the wariness, as much as he hates it.)
she switches topics abruptly, telling him to let her know if he does something, and marc doesn't ask what she means. lets his features pinch together tightly as he tries to work it out (fails), and decides to just accept the remark and come back to it later because she asks, unsure, if she should go, not that she should go. )
I'll call you a car, ( he offers. he doesn't know how she got here, actually, and the thought occurs to him suddenly, distractingly. it's not that he's kicking her out (eh), it's that he doesn't know why she'd want to stay, why the hesitancy. they've cleared the air (mostly), marc's made it a little bit weird (again), but it's fine. )
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Oh, thanks..
[ (Lottie did take an Uber, one that was equal parts nonchalant and curious as to why she was being dropped off in front of nowhere. Not even a restaurant, not even a houseβ just the side of a shady street that Moon Knight protects (the fact isn't on the forefront of everyone's mind, but it is still there when they are in the thick of his corners).) ]
Lemme know how much it is and I'll venmo you?
[ She says, in lieu of anything else. Because, what can she say? She's not sure if there's any merit to actually staying, to actually finishing the conversation she is so very much dying to just.. Dig into, even slightly? Now, having accepted his offer, she knows that she never will, Marc's willingness to humor her outside of this moment dwindling by the second as she walks over to dump her own cup of coffee into his trash can. ]
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she looks up at the ceiling and he follows her gaze, briefly, and there's nothing there. then she looks back to him and offers to venmo him the money and the look he gives her says as much as the— )
No. ( firm, dismissive, intended with absolutely no room for argument (but it's lottie, so what he intends and what he gets are not always the same things). ) It's the least I could do.
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..Okay.
[ A beat. ]
Wanna walk me up when it gets here?
abrupt, weird, and mopey: the name of marc's autobiography
lottie doesn't argue the point (thankfully), meaning her question earns a nod whilst he reaches for his phone. pauses. (how many ubers has 'marc spector' got in his life? not many, and the last journey he had made—
—mm.
he misses having a private car and a driver.)
that is: lottie's rating is definitely higher than his. he looks at her, expression deliberately impassive. )
—I'll give you my card details.
( maybe if he says it decisively enough, she won't question it. )
his best selling book to date (his only book To Date)
But pointedly does not unlock it, does not use it, and does not look for any type of app that suspiciously looks like Uber? No, he in fact says he'll give her his card details and this is where the niceties end and her questioning begins. She scrunches her face slightly, crossing her arms in his direction. Not exactly unlocking her own phone quite yet, because she needs to know something first β ]
God.. Are you banned from Uber, Marc?
[ Typically.. People who offer to pay just get the car using their own phone! They also, usually, don't have her put their card details under a payment method on her own account (that she will accidentally use, one of these days)!! ]
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No, ( cagily, pointed — (too pointed?) — but he still doesn't look down at his phone, as if ignoring it will convince lottie otherwise, as if not dropping his gaze will convince her that no, he's—.
(ah, fuck it, who's he kidding?)
—he inhales, slowly, then exhales. pinches the bridge of his nose and admits— ) Yes. ( apparently, blood stains aren't conducive to a good rating. apparently he'd been aggressive — not to the driver, no, he's not that much of a dick, but there'd been the collateral on the sidewalk, the stark evidence of what he does and what he's capable of. threatening had been the exact wording used, he thinks — or maybe intimidating, and marc hadn't exactly been able to argue the point. ) —Don't. ( say anything, he means. )
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Oh, he is.
He is banned. Lottie manages to feel bad for all of one second as he sighs heavy, pinches the bridge of his nose in a resignation they are both familiar with. In response, she finally unlocks her phone, presses at it a few times before handing it over to him. It's set to the page where he'd be able to punch in those card details, as Lottie turns to make sure not to look (because, you know, privacy or something!!).
She decides she won't say anything about Uber. That, maybe, someday she'll mention how she's banned from her favorite coffee spot for going insane at her friend's engagement party and pushing Charlene into a pool (it's not her fault she couldn't swim or something? Oops?). It's curious, almost sympathetic, even, the way she asks, ]
..Even Lyft?
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her words take a second to register. (lyft. lyft? is he?). he pauses, mid-type, eyebrows furrowed and then — a shrug. they're all the same, aren't they? he doesn't answer, not properly, not until he's finished typing in his card details and handed the phone back to lottie. at least this way, he tells himself, she can be certain of the pick up location and drop off point. ) —Probably.
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Five minutes. [ And 5 minutes feels too soon, like she'd have to go wait out in the front right now unless she misses the car entirely and he's charged an extra fee on top of everything. But she doesn't move, not quite yet, just turns off her screen and gestures vaguely with a hand. ]
It said it'd be a Honda Civic. [ Said in the fashion of someone who does not know what that looks like. ]
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honda civic, she says, and marc looks at her, skepticism painting his features. he knows she has no idea what kind of car that is, opens his mouth to tell her as much but what comes out instead is an— )
—Ugh, fuck.
( not about the car. honda civics aren't very exciting cars, but who wants an exciting taxi ride? no, the dismayed, annoyed mutter is because marc's remembered, quite suddenly (for the second time) that walking her out means putting his boots back on. he eyes one, looking at it as if it's personally betrayed him and then sets about unlacing it properly so that he can put it back on.
(he should've done that in the first place, but he'd been too grumpy—.) )
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