August 23rd, 1892 - Late at the True Hart Music Hall, London
Usually Sophia loved the chance to be a spectator of the performing arts, and usually, she loved the opera. But tonight's evening at the opera was far from anything usual, and the ballerina was in a royally foul mood about it.
A brief, chance encounter in the lobby during intermission turned her entire night on its head. On one hand, it was a good thing for them to run into each other and create some sort of closure. Sophia's guilt gnawed at her mind, and she was relieved to have made her feelings known. On the other, she was shocked by how bitter she felt when he accepted her terms and made a swift departure. She thought this was what she wanted. She reminded herself that this was what she wanted, even as she fought back a hot sting in her eyes that suggested otherwise. Being upset over this man is out of the question, she reminded herself. This feeling should ebb away as she returned to the intoxicating haze of the performance.
Although the woman ended up having a very hard time focusing on much of the rest of the opera. Stubbornly, she stuck it out on principle. Even as her mind turned over the exchange that had just occurred, and how she felt about it. It didn't matter much that his departure was the right or reasonable thing to do when they were both here with their respective dates. It didn't matter the ironic humor in the fact that she was finally the one between the both of them left stranded (not that they were keeping score, but that makes them 2 to 1 now). It didn't matter at all becauseshe's the one who initiated the end of something that never even started, and yet...
Once the opera ended, Sophia made a point to leave her companion as soon as it was remotely close to appropriate. The brunette had little desire to seen by Oz again, and veritably fled down the London streets with her heels clicking sharply on cobblestones. By the time post-show patrons flooded the street, she rounded the corner and was long gone.
A few short blocks ultimately brought her here, to True Hart Music Hall. She wanted somewhere that would accept her, and ideally where she could be left alone. Though she felt a few curious eyes on her person -- a diminutive and graceful beauty, dressed in her prettiest evening dress, albeit still in mourning black -- her hunch proved to be true. Even if anyone did recognize her for who she was, they wouldn't bother her, not with such a strong signal of distress as she swiftly moved to a seat at the bar and plainly addressed the man across from her.
"Pardon me. Do you have wine? If so I would love a glass of white." Though her request was bright and pleasant, her tone rang with the smallest twinge of angst.
thank you gin for the set<3