Time Warp: In a Forbidden Tone
Jan 1, 2015 19:24:14 GMT -5
Post by Lucy Serrano-Blaise on Jan 1, 2015 19:24:14 GMT -5
May, 2018
Paris, France
Paris, France
Working away had grown to be familiar by now. Over a year and she was often flying out of the country towards something greater. Meetings. Interviews. Shows. More interviews. Investment interventions at the side of the twins. Dom would always interject about the future of the industry, and the trust he was trying to build towards. As it still stood, shows highlighting certain skills were a little more minor. How the colours merged in the works of Lucy Serrano still remained a bit of a mystery.
But it was a first, now. The first time she could be joined on an overseas trip. A week of scheduling and interviews. A week of setting up the space. A week of showing and selling. Everything left was hardly on her list of things to worry about. She got company for a little over one of those weeks.
It was unfortunate that the beginning of that trip coincided with a stressful set of days ensuring everything's perfection. An slowly filling gallery with empty walls still showing. Chevaliers wrapped in meetings. It was all ordinary. All the standard.
At least she got to have her counterpart with her while she worked.
"Lower." The Australian instructed, pen in hand as she indicated towards the piece in front of her.
"But the standard height is-"
"Lower." She quickly reasoned, "If it's too high, it's not at eye level. If it's not at eye level, people aren't going to pay attention." Turning her attention side-ward, she glanced at the same woman who kept following her around. The one who followed her in every aspect of her working day; "If it's not in your face, it's exactly what it is now; something minor on a wall in the background."
She replied with a nod. It was lowered. And the pattern would follow suit along the line.
"Be-Art was asking about your show. Again." She interjected.
Never a moment of solitude, the ink manipulator waved for the psychometrist to follow along. She'd wanted to show what it meant to work as she did as much as she was sure Penny wanted to experience it, hectic as it was. "What did they want this time?"
"Rumours state you're going to paint yourself from head to toe in order to properly express your talents."
The threat of a halt to Lucy's steps, but she continued anyway, "Why?"
"Because they adore outlandish foreigners."
It was a fair point; Australia was hardly known for producing masses of intellectual artistic figures. A sidelong glance to her counterpart before the thoughts of her brand of humour could overcome the moment as Lucy so wanted it to, "Schedule a visit for tomorrow, if you think it's best." She replied, "If you could point out no one's going to be naked, that'd be even better."
"I'll do my best."
"Anything else?" The Australian asked, her eyebrows raised questionably. A moment to breathe would have been nice, but the assistant beside her was tentative to respond, let alone step out of time.
"Maisons Cote Sud would like to know when you'll be releasing the license to the galaxy featured on page six."
"When they've filled the invoice for it." She replied without a look. Just a small grin at the corner of her mouth which promptly dragged attention to the forefront.
"Ils ne vont pas." Pausing abruptly her footing, Lucy raised a free hand and pressed her index finger between the curve of her lips. This always happened.
"Sorry, what?" Lucy asked, raising her eyebrows. The language filtered in one ear and out the other, but the woman at her side gave her a short, intrusive glance.
"Ils ne vont pas." She repeated, her accent drawling over the words in an almost condescending way.
Promptly, Lucy ran her tongue along her lower lip. The corner of her mouth twitched to a frown. It was busy enough as it was; she hated when they did this. Exhaling a sigh, she felt the frustrated connotations of her own mentality breach her expression. A process. The gears turning.
"Faites-les." She finally drawled, the inflections of her own accent breaking the flow of words, but the understanding was still evident; forgiving as her follower was, "S'il vous plaît? I literally can't if they don't."
With a small nod, she stepped away, a grateful smile on her features for the simple fact that the stubborn Australian tried to appease her primary language.
Within that moment to breathe, the ink manipulator finally managed to turn her attention completely to the counterpart. A small smile at the corner of her mouth as she reached out towards her, hands at either side of her waist. "This is probably really bloody boring," Lucy pointed out, inflections in her tone softening "We can go soon."