Fic: Simply Infuriating (FRT)
Apr. 17th, 2006 04:50 pmFor the Under 400 Word Drabblethon
Written for
goddess_loki who requested the words blue, chocolate, and quixotic, and left the pairing up to me (except Lindsey slash) and wanted no sex, violence, or character death.
Rating: FRT
As usual, I own nothing, Joss owns all.
Word count, excluding title: 399
Simply Infuriating
It had been a long time since Giles had allowed himself to be anything but a Watcher. The Council had driven from his mind any thoughts of a wife and children; while he was not forbidden from having a family, he had seen too often what the outcome was.
Giles had sworn to himself that he wouldn’t let himself fall into that trap. If he loved a woman, it would at the least make her unhappy and at the worst cost her life. It had worked for years; there was enough of Ripper left in him that he had been far from a monk, but no connections, no dalliances into the quixotic romanticisms he occasionally found himself wanting to indulge in, no red roses and opera and moonlight for him.
Jenny was infuriating. She had been infuriating since she first walked into his library (and it was his library, Snyder and the American public school system be damned), sniffing disdainfully at the outmoded paper and leather that formed the geography of his world, and she remained infuriating with her half-smiles, unabashedly linking her chocolate eyes with his gaze.
One morning, she had stopped by with a cup of coffee, railing against the slowness of the school’s modems, and he had shrugged, letting the words run over his head. As she exited the swinging doors, Cordelia had entered, primly placed her books on a table, and produced a lipstick and compact from an impossibly small purse.
“So,” she’d said, carefully outlining her mouth, “when are you asking her out?”
“I beg your pardon, but Miss Calendar and I are merely colleagues. Also, isn’t there a ladies’ room where you might apply that more suitably?” Giles said, annoyed.
“The light’s better in here, and what color were her shoes?” she asked, tucking the lipstick back in her purse.
“Blue,” he said automatically, “but I don’t see what that...”
“Giles, face it. No man notices the color of a woman’s shoes unless he’s paying way more than casual attention. Deal with it. Buy her a cappuccino,” she demanded, picking up her books and leaving, the doors swinging behind her.
He stared after her, face contorted into a disbelieving frown until finally he punched the counter in frustration. Cordelia, tactless as she was, was entirely correct. He was fooling no one, including himself.
“Pillock,” he muttered, then slouched determinedly towards the teachers’ lounge.
Written for
Rating: FRT
As usual, I own nothing, Joss owns all.
Word count, excluding title: 399
It had been a long time since Giles had allowed himself to be anything but a Watcher. The Council had driven from his mind any thoughts of a wife and children; while he was not forbidden from having a family, he had seen too often what the outcome was.
Giles had sworn to himself that he wouldn’t let himself fall into that trap. If he loved a woman, it would at the least make her unhappy and at the worst cost her life. It had worked for years; there was enough of Ripper left in him that he had been far from a monk, but no connections, no dalliances into the quixotic romanticisms he occasionally found himself wanting to indulge in, no red roses and opera and moonlight for him.
Jenny was infuriating. She had been infuriating since she first walked into his library (and it was his library, Snyder and the American public school system be damned), sniffing disdainfully at the outmoded paper and leather that formed the geography of his world, and she remained infuriating with her half-smiles, unabashedly linking her chocolate eyes with his gaze.
One morning, she had stopped by with a cup of coffee, railing against the slowness of the school’s modems, and he had shrugged, letting the words run over his head. As she exited the swinging doors, Cordelia had entered, primly placed her books on a table, and produced a lipstick and compact from an impossibly small purse.
“So,” she’d said, carefully outlining her mouth, “when are you asking her out?”
“I beg your pardon, but Miss Calendar and I are merely colleagues. Also, isn’t there a ladies’ room where you might apply that more suitably?” Giles said, annoyed.
“The light’s better in here, and what color were her shoes?” she asked, tucking the lipstick back in her purse.
“Blue,” he said automatically, “but I don’t see what that...”
“Giles, face it. No man notices the color of a woman’s shoes unless he’s paying way more than casual attention. Deal with it. Buy her a cappuccino,” she demanded, picking up her books and leaving, the doors swinging behind her.
He stared after her, face contorted into a disbelieving frown until finally he punched the counter in frustration. Cordelia, tactless as she was, was entirely correct. He was fooling no one, including himself.
“Pillock,” he muttered, then slouched determinedly towards the teachers’ lounge.
no subject
Date: 2006-04-17 08:57 pm (UTC)Miss seeing this side of Giles. Lovely.
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Date: 2006-04-17 11:43 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2006-04-17 10:15 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2006-04-17 11:43 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2006-04-18 04:25 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2006-04-19 02:25 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2006-04-18 06:42 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2006-04-19 02:25 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2007-01-07 09:44 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2007-01-07 03:37 pm (UTC)