"You wouldn't know hospitality if it had fangs with which to bite you, ser." Though her back is to him, her tone leaves little to the imagination with regard to the cutting look in her rolled eye. She reserves it for the spout of the teapot, however, her little hand on the lid as she pours. "I am nobody's maid, regardless of my flatmates and their faculties at present."
Adeline turns with two teacups, one for each palm― just in time to meet that hollow gaze. Her patience wears thin, regardless of his grief, but such a look works to restore the draining well in her. She sets the cups down, his first in hostess-fashion, then her own; the space between them on the little table she fills with a dish of sugarcubes and a pot of honey. She sits, curling up on the chair in distant grace, a manner that would be icy if not for the rosy hue ever-present in her skin.
"My magic was taken from me when I entered this place, yes." Lifting her eyes to the little glowing chandelier above their heads, she bends at the waist a bit― a ruffle of skirts reveals a newfound flask, bound in leather, blanched and dyed rose. After undoing the cork, an amber-coloured liquid finds its way into her teacup seamlessly.
She considers offering, given she doesn't know him, but decides to take a liberty given the ache his attitude puts into her head. She replaces her flask beneath her skirts and begins to add ample amounts of both sugar and honey, her eyes meeting Mello's own. "And I'm to assume you're a witch, given your attitude, yes? Or shall I attribute it to something much more ungentlemanly?"
She smiles cattily across the table, her spoon making circles in her tea.
[For such a lady, Adeline has quite a mouth on her, doesn't she? If Mello weren't in such a state, he would find it admirable. A world away from the skittish thing he met in the forest. It's because they're currently in her domain, he knows. And his weakness upon seeing L has proven him to be no threat tonight. Right now, he's a broken thing; the cards are in her hands as far as their interaction is concerned.]
[Though she might not be quite the lady. Is that liquor she's slipping into her tea? Amusing. Mello can't afford to ask for some. He's never been much of a drinker, and he needs to be in a clear state when his mentor wakes.]
[Dulled eyes are staring down at the cup, now. He supposes he should be grateful for any hospitality at all, given the manner in which he showed up at their door. But Mello has never been a humble thing, and he doesn't intend on changing that any time soon. Instead of thanking her, he proceeds to sweeten his tea to near-unbearable levels (a trait he shares with L, she might notice) before taking the first, scalding sip.]
[It burns. Good. It should. Everything burns right now.]
[When he does lift his eyes, it's with a questioning glance.]
Being a witch hasn't changed who I am.
[And there's his answer. Mello is no gentleman. Or at least he's never attempted it. No point.]
You dislike me.
[The grin is half-genuine. Half-mocking.]
Yet you invite me to your table and prepare tea. You haven't protested me sticking around until this is resolved.
[The slightest arch of a pale brow beneath jagged bangs.]
"―you grieve for someone who isn't dead, but just as deeply," Adeline replies matter-of-factly, letting her eyes flutter shut as she savours the warmth pooling onto her tongue. She lifts her eyes, a bit pointed in doing so. "you care for him, in some capacity. Perhaps I find you― disagreeable, but I am far from being heartless."
"Besides, ser, you've proven easily provoked― why, provoked by nothing at all. Consider it the path of patience, and of least resistance, too. A stroke of luck, yes?" She leans forward, balancing her heart-shaped face on the back of a glove, peering back at him with equal curiosity. "I'm not obligated to withstand your... shall we say, quirks, and as such I choose to avoid them."
The roll of her eyes she gives him is less than polite, but it isn't antagonizing― just frank, even if it seems contrary to her appearance. She waves a palm.
"I've proven kinder to you than you consider warranted, yes?" Her grin is partly-catty, partly-earnest. "It isn't that I dislike you, ser, you've just no sense of awareness. Good on you to take me seriously, but I'm not often perceived as a threat so quickly."
no subject
Adeline turns with two teacups, one for each palm― just in time to meet that hollow gaze. Her patience wears thin, regardless of his grief, but such a look works to restore the draining well in her. She sets the cups down, his first in hostess-fashion, then her own; the space between them on the little table she fills with a dish of sugarcubes and a pot of honey. She sits, curling up on the chair in distant grace, a manner that would be icy if not for the rosy hue ever-present in her skin.
"My magic was taken from me when I entered this place, yes." Lifting her eyes to the little glowing chandelier above their heads, she bends at the waist a bit― a ruffle of skirts reveals a newfound flask, bound in leather, blanched and dyed rose. After undoing the cork, an amber-coloured liquid finds its way into her teacup seamlessly.
She considers offering, given she doesn't know him, but decides to take a liberty given the ache his attitude puts into her head. She replaces her flask beneath her skirts and begins to add ample amounts of both sugar and honey, her eyes meeting Mello's own. "And I'm to assume you're a witch, given your attitude, yes? Or shall I attribute it to something much more ungentlemanly?"
She smiles cattily across the table, her spoon making circles in her tea.
no subject
[Though she might not be quite the lady. Is that liquor she's slipping into her tea? Amusing. Mello can't afford to ask for some. He's never been much of a drinker, and he needs to be in a clear state when his mentor wakes.]
[Dulled eyes are staring down at the cup, now. He supposes he should be grateful for any hospitality at all, given the manner in which he showed up at their door. But Mello has never been a humble thing, and he doesn't intend on changing that any time soon. Instead of thanking her, he proceeds to sweeten his tea to near-unbearable levels (a trait he shares with L, she might notice) before taking the first, scalding sip.]
[It burns. Good. It should. Everything burns right now.]
[When he does lift his eyes, it's with a questioning glance.]
Being a witch hasn't changed who I am.
[And there's his answer. Mello is no gentleman. Or at least he's never attempted it. No point.]
You dislike me.
[The grin is half-genuine. Half-mocking.]
Yet you invite me to your table and prepare tea. You haven't protested me sticking around until this is resolved.
[The slightest arch of a pale brow beneath jagged bangs.]
Why?
no subject
"Besides, ser, you've proven easily provoked― why, provoked by nothing at all. Consider it the path of patience, and of least resistance, too. A stroke of luck, yes?" She leans forward, balancing her heart-shaped face on the back of a glove, peering back at him with equal curiosity. "I'm not obligated to withstand your... shall we say, quirks, and as such I choose to avoid them."
The roll of her eyes she gives him is less than polite, but it isn't antagonizing― just frank, even if it seems contrary to her appearance. She waves a palm.
"I've proven kinder to you than you consider warranted, yes?" Her grin is partly-catty, partly-earnest. "It isn't that I dislike you, ser, you've just no sense of awareness. Good on you to take me seriously, but I'm not often perceived as a threat so quickly."