31 October, 1892 — Jekyll & Hyde Ball, English Countryside
An anonymously hosted ball where guests were asked to conceal their faces and drink a mystery potion before entering didn't just hint at mischief; it practically smacked you over the head with it. So showing up at all tonight had been a risk, but Ezra wasn't exactly risk averse, when it came to silly things like this. It depended on the shadows, really. If they were far away he had a tendency to be blindingly optimistic, to the point where he wouldn't think twice about drinking a mystery potion and just assuming everything would work out fine on the other side. When they were too close, his growing fatalism made it hard to care about the consequences even if he was sure there would be negative ones. He was going to die someday anyway, and was probably never going to be happy in the meantime; who cared if there were some rumors milling about in the periphery of his life? So it was really only within a very narrow margin that Ezra weighed risk at all, and neither the invitation nor the day of the party had managed to hit that very narrow window.
He was dressed as a circus ringmaster for the evening. One of his sisters had found a red and gold suit coat with tails at a Muggle secondhand shop, and the rest was easy to assemble from clothes he already owned. He'd added a plain black demi mask to meet the requirements of the masquerade aspect, selected a potion at the door without putting much thought into the question he was asked, and then melted into the party. It was meant to be a ball, but the layout wasn't what he would have expected; the group was spread over too many rooms, and few of them seemed large enough to allow any room for dancing. But the house had clearly been meticulously decorated with its candles and apples and such, and the servants in their matching checkerboard attire added an element of mystique. He wasn't in the state of mind where an excess of poor lighting would make him anxious, and he was two drinks down and enjoying himself so far.
In one of the smaller rooms, farther back from the entrance, he spotted her. Rosalie Hunniford — or someone who looked very much like her, anyway. Across the room and wearing a mask, he couldn't be immediately sure it wasn't another blond woman with her same build, but he thought it was her. Seeing her at events wasn't unusual, of course — he'd been seeing her at events ever since he'd started attending them again, ten months after she'd left him. Usually, though, he diverted his gaze as soon as it landed on her — careful not to linger long enough to catch her eye. Tonight something was different: he saw her and let himself stare. He wanted her to notice him, and to notice him noticing her. He didn't interrogate the impulse overmuch — maybe it was because the last interaction they'd had was her letter more or less accusing him of dodging society events because he was unwell. Maybe he wanted her to notice he was here so that her mind could rest easy on that point.
Maybe it was something else.
He was dressed as a circus ringmaster for the evening. One of his sisters had found a red and gold suit coat with tails at a Muggle secondhand shop, and the rest was easy to assemble from clothes he already owned. He'd added a plain black demi mask to meet the requirements of the masquerade aspect, selected a potion at the door without putting much thought into the question he was asked, and then melted into the party. It was meant to be a ball, but the layout wasn't what he would have expected; the group was spread over too many rooms, and few of them seemed large enough to allow any room for dancing. But the house had clearly been meticulously decorated with its candles and apples and such, and the servants in their matching checkerboard attire added an element of mystique. He wasn't in the state of mind where an excess of poor lighting would make him anxious, and he was two drinks down and enjoying himself so far.
In one of the smaller rooms, farther back from the entrance, he spotted her. Rosalie Hunniford — or someone who looked very much like her, anyway. Across the room and wearing a mask, he couldn't be immediately sure it wasn't another blond woman with her same build, but he thought it was her. Seeing her at events wasn't unusual, of course — he'd been seeing her at events ever since he'd started attending them again, ten months after she'd left him. Usually, though, he diverted his gaze as soon as it landed on her — careful not to linger long enough to catch her eye. Tonight something was different: he saw her and let himself stare. He wanted her to notice him, and to notice him noticing her. He didn't interrogate the impulse overmuch — maybe it was because the last interaction they'd had was her letter more or less accusing him of dodging society events because he was unwell. Maybe he wanted her to notice he was here so that her mind could rest easy on that point.
Maybe it was something else.
~~~ but I'm stuck trying not to come off crazy ~~~
Ezra