Summer Smith (
somethingwithturquoise) wrote2023-07-08 07:29 am
Entry tags:
MHA #4; Saturday [07/08].
As Summer had suspected from all the dreams she'd been having and that stupid urge to go traipsing through the woods to find some dumb rock, Morty had shown up at her apartment last night after getting ice cream for himself (you'd think, wouldn't you, that if you were going to come back from the dead temporarily to crash at your sister's place for a weekend, you could at least bring her some ice cream, too, but nooo~oooo), and they ordered pizza and she totally schooled his ass at Italian Plumber Franchise Racing Game, and she had to ban fighting games because he was such a button masher, and now it was Saturday, and she was just trying to figure out what to do with him now.
"Like," she said, as he sat on her couch, legs folded underneath him, tongue slightly out of his mouth as he intently button mashed against the video game itself since Summer refused to deal with it anymore, "what do you even want to do? Should I, like, take you to the park or something?"
"I'm fourteen, Summer, you don't need to take me to the park."
"I don't know!" she argued back. "It's been a while. Like, a really long time, you're practically a baby to me at this point. I don't know. There's an arcade at the bowling alley. I'm friends with the guy who runs the place, I can probably get you some free play in exchange for some weed, or something?"
There was a pause, filled with a clattering of buttons on the controller, before the computer totally demolished Morty, the fatality screen came up on her TV with a booming voice reminding him of how much he sucked, and then he sighed and set the controller down in his lap and looked up at Summer.
"We don't need to do anything, Summer," he said. "Maybe I...maybe I just wanted to come...and...and...and, you know, hang out with my sister again."
"Morty," said Summer, "we never hung out together."
Morty looked down at his hands and the controller in his lap for a moment, before looking over at her hopefully. "Sometimes we did!" he insisted. "Y-you know, not...often, or anything, but sometimes we did! And...and it was really nice, when we did and we got along, and I thought, y-you know, it's pretty cool, having a sister like you. You...you weren't perfect, and you're....you're definitely a bitch sometime, but you're not bad, either, and maybe....maybe I just wish...we could have spent more time just...just hanging out, you know?"
And Summer looked at Morty for a moment, and she felt a little twinge of guilt for all the ways in which she'd made either of her Morty's life a living hell, and how it was kind of nice, wasn't it, that even despite all that, he still just wanted to come visit and hang out?
"Yeah, okay," she said, reaching over to ruffle his hair as she moved passed him on the couch and plopped down to pick up the other controller, "but I swear to god, if you just button mash again, we're switching back to a shooter."
"But I'm not as good at those!"
"Explain to me again how that's my problem."
He totally did start button mashing again, but Summer, for now, decided to let it slide.
[[ open! ]]
"Like," she said, as he sat on her couch, legs folded underneath him, tongue slightly out of his mouth as he intently button mashed against the video game itself since Summer refused to deal with it anymore, "what do you even want to do? Should I, like, take you to the park or something?"
"I'm fourteen, Summer, you don't need to take me to the park."
"I don't know!" she argued back. "It's been a while. Like, a really long time, you're practically a baby to me at this point. I don't know. There's an arcade at the bowling alley. I'm friends with the guy who runs the place, I can probably get you some free play in exchange for some weed, or something?"
There was a pause, filled with a clattering of buttons on the controller, before the computer totally demolished Morty, the fatality screen came up on her TV with a booming voice reminding him of how much he sucked, and then he sighed and set the controller down in his lap and looked up at Summer.
"We don't need to do anything, Summer," he said. "Maybe I...maybe I just wanted to come...and...and...and, you know, hang out with my sister again."
"Morty," said Summer, "we never hung out together."
Morty looked down at his hands and the controller in his lap for a moment, before looking over at her hopefully. "Sometimes we did!" he insisted. "Y-you know, not...often, or anything, but sometimes we did! And...and it was really nice, when we did and we got along, and I thought, y-you know, it's pretty cool, having a sister like you. You...you weren't perfect, and you're....you're definitely a bitch sometime, but you're not bad, either, and maybe....maybe I just wish...we could have spent more time just...just hanging out, you know?"
And Summer looked at Morty for a moment, and she felt a little twinge of guilt for all the ways in which she'd made either of her Morty's life a living hell, and how it was kind of nice, wasn't it, that even despite all that, he still just wanted to come visit and hang out?
"Yeah, okay," she said, reaching over to ruffle his hair as she moved passed him on the couch and plopped down to pick up the other controller, "but I swear to god, if you just button mash again, we're switching back to a shooter."
"But I'm not as good at those!"
"Explain to me again how that's my problem."
He totally did start button mashing again, but Summer, for now, decided to let it slide.
[[ open! ]]

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But since that was not the case, and there was a knock on her door, Summer just sort of turned toward it for a moment before looking at Morty with an accusing sort of look.
"You did not bring Grampa Rick with you this time," she said with an offended grunt, "did you?"
"No!" Morty insisted. "I...I didn't, I swear, I don't....I don't know what's up with him, but he wasn't with me with I came!"
Summer narrowed her eyes suspiciously at him for a moment, before setting down the controller and getting up.
"I doubt," she reasoned to both herself and her brother, "if he was coming, he'd have bothered knocking anyway..."
Still, she braced herself for when she took a peek through the peephole, but what she was was so not what she had been dreading that she was not even remotely prepared for it.
And then her brain did a little connecting and remembering and she closed her eyes for a moment and wondered if she'd have preferred it be her dead grandfather instead.
"Are you fucking kidding me right now?" she murmured to herself, before reaching for the knob and pulling the door open and maybe staring at Stark a little in an effort to not just immediately flick her eyes toward who Stark was with.
"Stark," she said, not looking, not looking, not--damn. She looked, but then immediately looked back. "What's up?"
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"Hello, Summer. I...Zhaan..."
"I asked if I might meet you," Zhaan said smoothly, stepping forward just a little.
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There was maybe a faint twitch, and a sudden feeling like there was not enough alcohol in the world to deal with this right now, but then her attention shifted over to Zhaan completely right now with her best smile forward. "Of course," she gushed. "Right! Why wouldn't you? And, I mean, I've heard so much about you, too, that it would have really been a shame it....ugh, like, where are my manners?" She laughed, rolling her eyes at herself and opening the door wider and stepping back. "Come in, come in, welcome to my apartment. That's Pancakes over there," ignoring literally everything except a spot of fur on her leg, "and I know you guys have already met Morty."
Morty, for his part, was just sort of staring at them from over by the couch, until he was acknowledged, at which point he sort of beamed and gave an excited wave at his friends from the ice cream shop last night.
"H-hi, Stark! Hi...." See? See? He knew he wouldn't remember the name she'd given him! Awww, crap...
But, thankfully, Summer was still charging forward enough to maybe cover that up.
"Can I get you guys something to drink?"
And if the answer was anything other than no, no, that's alright, we weren't planning on staying, could that drink be something very, very strong??
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"I met a few of his other friends the last time I was able to come here," Zhaan told her, smiling. "I like to know he still has people who care for him." Now that she was no longer able to, especially with what she knew now of what had happened since last she was here. "It's lovely to meet you, Summer. A drink would be most welcome."
"Hello, Morty," Stark said. He was trying not to sound or look as awkward as he felt right now.
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"What would you like?" she asked. "Water?" You know! Because plant! She paid attention! "Coffee? Tea? Juice?....Booze?"
That pause might have been a little hopeful.
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"An intoxicant would be welcome," she said. "But please don't go to any trouble. I only wished to see you for myself. Stark has nothing but good things to say of you."
Stark, meanwhile, was wondering if he'd made a terrible mistake here.
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"It's no trouble," Summer assured her, already drifting toward the kitchen now. "Trust me, I've got intoxicants for days. I can even make jello shots, if you want!"
Summer, no.
"Did Stark tell you about the jello shots?"
"Can....can I have jello shots, too, Summer?" asked Morty hopefully from the couch.
"No, Morty, you can't. You're fourteen."
"Awww, geez, Summer!"
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"They're her specialty," Stark said with a very fond look in Summer’s direction before looking back almost guiltily at Zhaan. "Like I told you. Every weeken at the bar."
"I was hoping I might get to experience those for myself," Zhaan said, giving Stark's hand a gentle squeeze.
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She'd gone into one of her cupboards and bulled out a large, box-shaped machine, nudging a few things off the counter to make room for it. And then she smacked a hand triumphantly on it.
"This'll pump out shots in mere minutes, I'll just have to throw a few things together. My ex made it for me. It's pretty great."
Look, if Stark got to parade around past relationships right now, then so could she, dammit.
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"Thank you, Summer," he said quietly. "You're sure it's not a problem? I don't want to bother you..."
That earned him a fond eye roll from Zhaan.
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"Stark," she then said, very measured, very carefully, as she started pulling out various bottles and jello packets and fruits from her fridge, "if it was a problem, then I wouldn't have offered, now, would I?"
It was a damn good thing there was an actual science to the proper balance of alcohol to water when making jello shots, or else these shots were going to be so fucking loaded...
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"A friend like that," Zhaan said, watching Summer carefully, "is a precious thing."
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And while she was mixing things up and getting them ready to pour into the machine, she got to thinking about how she definitely didn't feel like she could be completely honest right now, but she got to wondering whether that had more to do with Zhaan being here or just actually Stark, or the combination of them both. Which just then got her thinking....
"Hey, actually, Staaaark?" she said. "It looks like I'm actually running a little low on vodka right now. Do you think maybe you and Morty can run over to the store and get some more, maybe pick up some snacks or something while you're there, too? I mean, I would just send Morty by himself, but he's underage, and quite frankly, I do not trust him by himself on an island with so many cute high school girls on it."
"Hey!"
"What?" Summer started pouring the first jello batch into the machine. "Am I wrong? Do I need to remind you why my current Morty was looking to find a dead Morty to replace?"
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"We could do that," he said, only the barest hint of suspicion in his tone. "Morty. Let's go find snacks. And vodka."
Maybe lots of vodka.
"Go ahead," Zhaan said when he looked over at her for confirmation. "We'll be fine here unsupervised."
Stark nodded and headed out the door, waiting for Morty to follow.
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"Yeah," said Summer, "sure. Whatever you want, Morty."
"Whoo-hoo!" he said, fists lifted in victory and that was all he needed to go hurrying eagerly after Stark, already trying to make a plan for the buttload of snacks he was going to drag back and totally binge on for the rest of the day.
Summer waited until she could be sure their footsteps had receded down the hallway before letting out a sigh, reaching over to pick up a bottle of vodka that was about half full, popping it open, and making quick work out of diminishing about half of that half.
(See, Morty? Not like Beth, then it would have been wine).
"See?" she said, holding the bottle up to inspect its decreased volume. "Running low."
She then offered the bottle out to Zhaan. "But now that it's just us girls..."
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"Were you hoping to get me alone?"
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"Obviously, I am," she said. "And I just feel we can speak more freely, now that we are."
And, more importantly, now this interaction was happening on her terms, dammit.
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"And what would you like to speak of?" Zhaan had some thoughts of her own but she was curious. Stark was extremely fond of this young woman. "I'm happy to answer questions. After," she said, lifting the bottle to her lips, "a drink. And perhaps as a few of my own."
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"Oh no," Summer informed her, folding her arms in front of her a little and leaning on the counter, "I'm good. You're the one who came to see me. What were you hoping to get out of it?"
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The jello machine dinged and a light switched to green, and so Summer turned to open it up and start taking out the shots.
"Who did you get the chance to meet last time?" she wondered. "And who else were you planning to meet this time? Have you Anakin before? Maybe Travis?"
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Someone else it seemed best not to mention.
"You seem to be closest to him, now."
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"How long have you known him then? He seems very fond of you." Had she said that already? If so perhaps it bore repeating.
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"Oh, god," said Summer, shaking her head a little. "I don't even know anymore. A while, I know that much. More than a few years now..."
She knew it was probably after everything with Faye that their friendship really cemented itself in as a definitely thing, and clearly they were friends before that, too, but it wasn't like Summer could remember exactly how long it had been.
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