Much Ado
About Uber
Part 4
by Poto
E-Mail: poto4@hotmail.com
QUICK NOTE: I'd
like to beg the forgiveness of my beta readers now for not mentioning them in
the initial disclaimers!! As usual I am indebted to them for pulling this heap
of junk into a story, and for encouraging me to be as sentimental is I wanted
to be <g>. Special thanks to my beta reader of choice Lela Kaunitz (I'd
never publish a word on the web I hadn't had you read through at least twice
babe!!) and to Debbie Benson and all the others who volunteered off the
XWPfanfic list. Much thanks.
And now, without further ado
(pun intended)…ahem!…we continue. Suggestions, comments as usual to be directed
to poto4@hotmail.com.
ACT FOUR
ACT IV.i
Laurie came over to inspect
the lock for herself. Jen backed off to watch, her heart dropping marvellingat
the look of hopelessness that crossed the younger woman’s features as she
recognised their predicament for what it was.
"The only way we’re
getting out of here is for someone to let us out." Laurie diagnosed
finally. Jen nodded sadly, biting back a comment about stating the obvious, not
willing to aggravate Laurie further.
Laurie looked up and caught
Jen staring at her. "What?"
"Sorry." She
looked away quickly. "You just looked really tired all of a sudden."
"Yeah well, I am. No
surprises there."
Laurie pulled her coat
tighter around her shoulders, attempting to shield herself better against the
draught that whistled through the stairwell.
"Look, it's all right.
We’re not going to be stuck here all night. Maybe that really was someone you
heard inside before, and some jerk just decided to lock the door after him on
the way out." Jen said, hopefully.
"Maybe."
Shivering, Laurie smiled a little, grateful for Jen’s optimism.
The taller woman seat her
backpack down on the ground and sat on it in an attempt to avoid the cold
floor. , trying not to sit on the cold floor. The concrete surrounding them on
all sides seemed to amplify the chill. She closed her eyes, trying not to think
about it.
She heard a sliding sound
and a thump. When she opened her eyes, Laurie had slunk to the floor again,
looking dejected.
She looks so different like that. Jen chuckled. Almost
harmless. Laurie opened a curious eye to look at her.
Laurie opened a curious eye
to look at her. "Something funny?"
Jen opened her mouth
nervously. "A little bit.I was just thinking that if we had the energy to
bother, we could keep warm by fighting with each other." She kept her tone
light, not wanting her comment to be misconstrued.
"You mean get something
halfway useful out of a pointless n endlessbattle?" Laurie quipped in
return, her tone equally light and cautious.
"Something like
that."
"Nice theory. But I do
want to get out of here alive."
"Well, there’s
something to be said for circling each other like caged tigers." Jen
added, feeling encouraged by their banter.Jen quipped.
"And what’s that?"
Laurie asked, sceptically.
"You fuel the best
rumours."
Laurie looked away, too
exhausted to snap back where she felt offended.But she didn’t laugh.
Jen lowered her eyes.
Stupid. Stupid! What did you have to say that for?
"Because it’s the
truth."
Two sides of her brain kept
her mind occupied by disagreeing with each other. The fight continued on for
several minutes.
"Did you say
something?" Laurie’s voice broke into her thoughts.
Jen flushed, not realising
her thoughts had come out aloud. "I was just talking to myself."
"Oh." Bemused
Ssilence. "Do you do that often?"
Only when I’m trapped in stairwells with gorgeous
women.
Whoa babe, where the hell did that come from?
"No.." She stammered,
helplessly. "No, not really."
Whoa babe, where the hell
did that come from?
What, you don’t think she’s gorgeous?
Of course, I just didn’t know I did.
Oh shutup!
"I think I’m going
insane." Jen whispered out loud, jumpeding up from her spot, and began to
begin pacing the small space they sat in.
"What, just now? Or has
it been coming on for awhile?" Laurie joked.
"Oh, it’s always been
there. Latent, lurking…" Jen grinned, rubbeding her palms together as she
paced.
"You look like a serial
killer planning the next kill."
"You should be so
lucky. At least that would get you out of here quicker." Jen sniffled,
stopped, and then held her breath to bite back the pressure of a building
sneeze attack.
Laurie looked on in
amusement. "You think I’d rather be dead than be stuck in a stairwell with
you?"
Well, what am I supposed to say to that? "I’m refusing to answer that on the grounds I
might incriminate myself, or piss you off. Or both."
"Am I really that easy
to annoy?" Laurie asked, serious.
Jen stopped long enough to
cast a weary glance at her companion then continued her pacing. "I think I
annoy people easily."
"I don't know about
that. When you're not going out of your way to be a bitch you seem almost
human.
"Don’t let it get
around." Jen smirked.
"Oh, I won’t. Anyway, I
don’t think anyone would believe me."
Jen snorted. Her pacing
continued.
"You’re making me
dizzy. Why don’t you try going up and down you try pacing up and down the
stairs? Close your eyes and pretend you’re in the gym on a Stairmaster just
getting a good workout."
Jen stopped, and stared at
the huddle on the floor that was Laurie. "You know, I'm starting to think
that you’re quite possibly the only person I know who is weirder than I
am."
"You? Weird? I don’t
know. What do you do that's weird?"
"I have strange
dreams."
"Why is that weird? We
all do that. What do you dream about?"
"Well, the other night
I dreamt that this woman I know was coming onto me on a desert island."
She glanced up,
disappointed. "What's so strange about that?"
"She was wearing Seven
of Nine’s catsuit. You know, , the silver one, from Voyager?"
Laurie nodded. "I’ve
seen pictures. I’ve never watched it."
Go on, tell her it was her climbing out of the
catsuit. See if she thinks you’re weird then?
Didn’t I tell you to shut
the hell up?
"And you don’t think
that’s weird?" Jen demanded.
"I don’t know. Who was
the woman?" Laurie felt her heart beat faster even as she asked the
question.
"Some chick I met at a
party." She lied.She lied.
To Jen’s surprise, Laurie
nodded knowingly. started nodding. "Oh that would have to be the blonde.
I’ve heard about her. That story is like theatre legend around here."
Jen fumed. Fuck! I’m going to kill those guys. "So?
Isn’t it weird?" Jen insisted.
"Did she look good in
the catsuit?" Laurie stared her down, feeling some of the chill in the
room dissipate at the heat that was flushing through her body.
Jen stared back., and
cracked up. "You know, that was the absolute last thing I expected you to
ask right at that second."
"I’m unpredictable."
Jen just nodded, unable to
think of a clever retort.
, not wanting to say
anything if it wasn’t something that would carry the conversation further.
Laurie changed the subject
instead. "Have you ever read Pride and Prejudice?"
Jen took a step back to lean
against the wall. She shook her head, no. "I’ve seen the BBC re-make, the
one from a couple of years ago. Does that count?"
"That’ll do, actually
that's probably even better. There’s this scene in it, at a ball, where they’re
dancing, and you can almost feel the electricity flowing from them. Like they
could light up the room, all by themselves. You remember it?"
Jen nodded, not remembering
anything particularly electric about it.
Laurie continued. "And
Elizabeth is talking to Darcy, and one of her lines is ‘We’re both of a
unusually taciturn disposition, unwilling to speak unless we expect to say
something that will amaze the whole room.’ Or something like that. I think you
and I are a bit like that."
Jen stared speechless.
"Don’t you think
so?" Laurie asked. "And we're kind of the same as them, we have these
differences in our personalities but we still try and be clever, trying to
impress each other I think."
"I...I was kind of
thinking something similar just then. Nothing quite so literary of course."
She thinks we have electricity?
"It was the best
example I could think of."
No stupid, she just thinks you two fight a lot.
And you’re too competitive.
And she’s right.
"Sounded like a good
description to me, whatever it was." Jen’s head was spinning.
Laurie turned her head away,
satisfied. She snuggled down into her large overcoat that she was incredibly
glad she'd brought with her. She looked up at Jen who had given up pacing and
had resumed her spot on the floor, tucking the backpack underneath her.
They sat in silence for a
long time. Jen gave up looking at her watch after about the first 45 minutes,
and finally just stopped thinking about it, beginning to think it wasn’t worth
waiting up to be rescued.
"We might want to just
get some sleep." She suggested, breaking the silence. There was no answer.
"Laurie?"
No answer.
Hauling herself to her feet
she heard the cracking in her protesting knees. She walked over to where Laurie
sat and peered close. Eyes were firmly shut and her breathing was regular. Jen
wondered when exactly the small woman had dropped off to sleep. She was amazed
at how quietly she slept, tucked up like that. She knew for herself that the
second she fell asleep on the hard ground in an awkward position she would no
doubt start snoring like a hibernating bear.
Staring at the snoozing form
on the ground she was tempted to flop down beside it.
Preserve body heat?
She shook her head in
confusion, trying to bring herself to her senses.
Wake up! She doesn't want anything to do with you, get
it!?
Regretfully, she slunk back
over to the other side of the landing, laid down with her head rested on her
lumpy backpack, and tried fitfully to drift off to sleep.
Act IV.ii
"Wake up! Rise and
shine ladies. What the hell are you doing in here?"
Laurie stretched out, and
looked up through bleary eyes at the security guard lurking above her.
"What time is it?"
She poked Jen unceremoniously with her toe, causing the dark haired woman to
curse.
The security guard glanced
at his watch. "It’s 3am. Is there something wrong with that deadbolt
again?"
"No." Laurie
glared, pulling herself stiffly to her feet. "We just like the thrill of
sleeping in stairwells. Concrete just seems to do it for me."
By this time Jen had raised
her sleepy head from her backpack pillow. "Hey Stan. I was hoping you’d
come by a little earlier tonight."
The guard grunted. he He
gestured towards the now unlocked downstairs exit. "Here you go ladies you
can get out at the bottom now. Time to run home and get some sleep I say."
"What are you talking
about?" Jen flashed a grim smile. "I was sleeping just fine."
"No kidding? I thought
someone had left an air-conditioning unit running in here." The guard
replied, completely missing the irony of her remark. She let it go, content
with just pulling herself together and escaping from the dank smelling stairs.
Jen pulled Laurie to her
feet. The small woman threw the guard a halfway apologetic glance before
descending the stairs and exiting through the doorway out into the chilly night
air.
"How’d you get stuck in
there anyway?" The guard mumbled, following out after them.
"Laurie thought the
cleaner was still in the building, had left and he hadn’t, and the damn
doorlock shut and got lockedstuck behind us." Jen replied, not thinking.
Immediately she felt herself fixed with a cold, green eyed stare.
"That’s right. Blame it
all on me. Be your typical obnoxious self." Laurie grunted miserably. She
growled suddenly, shoveding her arms through the straps of her bag and stalked
ing off into the night. without turning around.
"Wait. I didn’t
mean…" Jen started off after her, then stopped., annoyed. She whirled back
around to look at the guard, who was staring in unabashed confusion.
"Fucking hell, I’m too tired for this."
Rummaging in her pack for
car keys, she gave Stan a quick nod and headed for her car.
"I swear to God that
woman does not possess a rational bone in her whole body." She muttered,
slamming the truck into gear and squealing onto the highway.
Laurie heard the 4WD leaving
the car park but still refused to turn around. She was too busy searching her
over-tired brain for more unpleasant adjectives to describe tall, dark haired,
idiotic, big-mouthed, blame-shifting stage managers.
Act IV.iii
Three days before the final
dress rehearsal, Laurie and Marie stood giggling backstage as they watched the
nasally Tina screech her way through the wedding sequence. "Nothing certainer: One Hero died defiled, but I do live, And
surely as I live, I am a maid."
"Do you think if we
tightened the laces on the corset a bit we could get her to sound like Barbra
Streisand?" Laurie grinned, playfully.
Marie looked down at her
clipboard and tried not to laugh. "She hasn’t got the nose for it. Besides
if we laced that corset anymore we’d probably kill her. She’s already popping
out as it is."
Ted shuffled around the
corner, groaning underneath a large piece of chipboard.
Laurie looked wickedly at
the wood. "Oh look, Ted brought Tina’s parents along to see the
show."
Marie choked, her clipboard
clattering to the floor, earning her a glare from the huffing diva attempting a
love scene on the stage. She continued on, mournfully wailing to the
overdressed and sweating Don Pedro and Claudio.
"We couldn’t have made
those collars more practical?" Ted asked, gesturing at the men onstage in
sympathy.
Marie shook her head.
"I’m drawing a demarcation line now Ted, any complaints should be directed
to Costume. It’s in my union rules not to take grievances about anything other
than casting."
Ted bowed in deference,
before grinning over at Laurie. "She’s learning quick. How long’d it take?
Six weeks? Seven?"
"Yeah, I bet she could
even stand up to the bitch troll now." Laurie replied.
"Rrrooow!" Ted
slashed his fingers cat-like in the air.
"Somebody taking my
name in vain?" Jennifer appeared from around the corner, barely glancing
at Laurie. The blonde woman was colouring rapidly. "That’s Miss Bitch
Troll to you. Ted, we need that lump of wood over on the far side, one of the
goddamned speakers is rickety or something. Talk to Craig."
She disappeared as quickly
as she had come, darting behind the large backstage curtain.
Marie glanced over at Laurie
who looked about to sink into the floor. "Take one mouth. Insert foot.
Chew."
"It’s not exactly like
she didn’t despise me before." Laurie spat back, trying to cover her
embarassment.
"I thought the feeling
was mutual." Marie gave her a sidelong glance.
Laurie chose to ignore the
look. "Yeah well. Who knows? Besides, only three weeks of shows and we’ll
never have to see each other again."
They flinched as Tina burst
into mock tears onstage, hitting a particularly screechy part of her upper
register. The casting agent gave a ragged sigh. "Amen to that."
"She’s going to destroy
the whole damned production. What was Richard thinking?" Laurie mumbled.
Marie turned too look at her, humour dancing in her brown eyes. Shrugging, she
let out a snort. "OK, don’t answer that."
"But we’ll be saved by
our fabulous Beatrice!"
Laurie struck a classic
melodramatic pose in her costume, and let out a soft whimper. "Thank you,
thank you, you’re just…too kind."
In the corner of her mind
she heard a cue, and straightened quickly. "Uggh, almost missed it."
Within seconds she’d collected herself and was poised at the edge of the
curtain, ready to bolt onstage, filled with romantic mirth and petulance. She
ran over the scene in her mind, instantly blocking the hum of the theatre into
the background.
She heard the lines replay
themselves in her head, and she sighed when she thought of her speech to come.
An image flashed in her mind; tall, dark haired, with blue eyes blazing. She
shuddered, and concentrated on her breathing.
Don't trip. There's nothing worse than tripping up on
the first sentence. She reminded
herself.
Actors exited, and she
lifted her skirts a little to allow herself extra movement. She’d dubbed her
entrance the "Beatrice saunter", a combination of arrogance,
over-confidence with just a touch of insecurity. She’d practiced it constantly
in her apartment, sweeping haughtily from her bathroom in nothing but a soggy
towel, to the applause and appreciation of her flat mate.
She adjusted the stays of
her costume. The soggy towel is was definitely more comfortable.
Not even under the lights
yet, she could already feel the sweat starting to drip down between her breasts
and shoulder blades, on the other side pooling in the small of her back.
Jen didn’t even know she was
staring until she felt a familiar presence interrupting her reverie from
behind.
"Jen?"
"Hmmm? Yes?"
"You’re going to have
to move out a little, I need to get in to the board."
She looked down at where she
was standing and mumbled an apology, shifting over so Steve could get into his
seat. Her eyes were transfixed on the stage, her ears filled with the projected
voices powering out from the proscenium arch.
"By my sword Beatrice, thou lovest me!"
"Do not swear and eat it."
"I will swear by it that you love me, and I will
make him eat it that says that I love not you."
"Will you not eat your word?"
"With no sauce that can be devised to it – I
protest I love thee."
"Why then God forgive me –"
"What offence sweet Beatrice?"
"You have stayed me in a happy hour, I was about
to protest I love you!"
"And do it with all thy heart?"
"I love you with so much of my heart that none
is left to protest."
"Jen!"
She whipped her head around.
"Wha…What?"
"Richard wants you
downstairs. Something about feedback over in the corner." Ted held open
the door of the booth for her and she slipped out reluctantly, eyes being
magnetically drawn back towards the two figures fighting out the conditions of
their love on the stage.
She tore her eyes away, only
to find Ted staring at her curiously. "Do you have a problem?"
"I was about to ask you
the same thing." He replied, mirth flashing in his brown eyes.
She looked away from him
distractedly. Beatrice skipped along the boards, taking the hand of Benedick
and flashing him an enormous smile.
"O that I were a man! What, bear in hand until
they come to take her hands, and then with public accusation, uncovered
slander, unmitigated rancour – Oh God that I were a man! I would eat his heart
in the marketplace!"
Ted chuckled. ‘That would be
a shame."
Jen barely heard him.
"What would be?"
"If she was a
man."
"Uh huh…" Her eyes
flickered towards the stage again, then back to Ted. "What?"
He waved a hand in front of
her eyes. "Hello! Are you listening to me?"
"No. No, not
really."
"I noticed." He
replied dryly.
Laurie pranced like a
spoiled princess on the stage, her skirts trailing her small body as it whipped
energetically from mark to mark, caught up fully in the text. Richard was
beaming openly. A satisfied, almost proud feeling settled in the pit of Jen’s
stomach.
"She’s really
talented." Jen whispered.
Ted’s eyebrows shot up.
"What? A compliment for Laurie from the self proclaimed bitch troll?"
Annoyed, Jen glared at him.
"Don’t you have somewhere to be?"
"Probably. But I’ve got
one question for you."
"Whatever it is, get
someone else to handle it."
"No, I’m afraid tThis
is a question only you can answer."
She stared him down.
"What then?"
"Why don’t you just
tell her how you feel about her?"
Thunderstruck, Jen stuck out
a hand, clutching the back of a chair to keep her knees from buckling from
keeling over. It took a moment for her to get her breath back.
"Sucker punch."
She growled She replied, flatly.
Ted flinched at the wounded
look in Jen's eyes, but held his ground. "Doesn’t make it any less
true."
"I don’t think that’s
any of your business."
"Funny, that’s just
what Laurie said." He watched, fascinated at how easily his comment had
found its mark. Her eyes widening involuntarily until he was sure they were
going to pop out.
Gathering her emotions again
quickly, Jen drew herself up to her full height, and gazed down at Ted’s blank
guileless face. "What’s your angle Ted? Why are you saying this?"
"You’re questioning my
motives?" He paused, her steely eyes enough of an answer. "Well, I
guess I don’t blame you."
"That doesn’t even come
close to answering my question." She barked, slumping down into the chair,
her arm failing to hold her up any longer.
Ted pulled in a huge breath,
grabbed Jen's chin and turned her face towards him. "You want an answer?
Fine I'll give you one." She snapped his hand away from her face. Standing
back, he went on undaunted. "This is so ridiculous. I wanted you, then I
wanted her, but you two want each other!" Her head snapped around so fast
she could feel the bones in her neck groaning in protest. Ted was frowning.
"At least someone should get something good out of all this crap."
"How terribly
self-sacrificing of you." She sneered, was unable to keep the spite from
her voice.
"It bugged you that I
asked her out. And it bugged you even more that she said yes. But she spent
half the night talking about you."
Nothing wrong with a little
healthy exaggeration if it achieves the purpose, he reasoned. It’s almost true.
"Putting me down and
calling me names I bet." She grunted.
"Does it matter? She’s
scared of you."
Jen looked up at him,
incredulous. "Of me? Why?"
Ted put on his best patient
look. "You come off as a little harsh sometimes Jen, you have to admit.
And…"
"And what?" She
demanded.
"And she's attracted to
you. I don't think she's had much experience with women before. It scares her
half to death."
Jen fell into a sullen sulk.
Annoyingly, she found herself stuck between wanting to punch Ted clean between
the eyes for his irritating lack of tact, and kissing him for being so damned
right.
She looked down at the stage
again, the small blonde figure launching into a string of insults at her
Benedick.
Fitting.
She grinned wryly.
After a while she looked up.
"Who died and made you Cupid?"
Ted gave her a small grin,
relieved that she wasn't ripping him apart. "I prefer to think of myself
as being more Puck-like, you know, stirring up mischief with magic potions and
all that."
Long pause. Jen kept staring
at the stage, her heart in her throat.
Finally, she dragged herself
to her feet. "You’re going to need a stronger magic potion than that Ted.
Too much water under that bridge."
She sighed, and shrugged her
shoulders. Seeing the look of frustration on Ted’s face, she patted him lightly
on the shoulder before turning away. Richard spotted her making her way down
the aisle and gestured her over emphatically.
Ted watched her retreating
back and frowned.
Nice work Jen, you almost had me believing it. But
you’ve always underestimated how stubborn I can be.
He nodded to himself, and
wandered Not the least bit daunted, Ted headed off towards Marie, who had come
out from backstage and was sitting in the third row of seats from the back,
inspecting the stage with satisfaction.
"Hey Marie." He
called out.
"Hey Ted, what's
up?"
"Nothing much. Or maybe
a lot. It'll depend on Jen and Laurie." He began.
"Jen and Laurie?"
She replied, perplexed.
"Yup. I have a little
scheme in the works, and I think I might need your help."
He smiled, sat down, and
began to explain his plan.
••••
(c) Poto