Regan Abbott (
negative_feedback) wrote2022-07-11 02:21 pm
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early May 2022
This is awful. Regan has been pulling Greta from rack to rack, trying to get her advice on different dresses — styles, color, lengths — and every one is wrong. It shouldn't be this big of a deal, but this is prom. She's never had a prom before, and she probably won't have one ever again. She wants her dress to be right.
And none of these are.
They've only been here for a half hour, maybe a little more, but Regan is starting to get panicked. What if she doesn't find anything? What if she ends up going to prom in just... some crappy dress out of, like... Objective, or something.
"Greta, I can't wear a dress from Objective to prom!" she insists, nearly dropping the two she has draped over one arm in her vehemence.
This is awful. Regan has been pulling Greta from rack to rack, trying to get her advice on different dresses — styles, color, lengths — and every one is wrong. It shouldn't be this big of a deal, but this is prom. She's never had a prom before, and she probably won't have one ever again. She wants her dress to be right.
And none of these are.
They've only been here for a half hour, maybe a little more, but Regan is starting to get panicked. What if she doesn't find anything? What if she ends up going to prom in just... some crappy dress out of, like... Objective, or something.
"Greta, I can't wear a dress from Objective to prom!" she insists, nearly dropping the two she has draped over one arm in her vehemence.
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"We're not shopping at Objective," Greta replies, both a reassurance and a simple statement of fact. A sales clerk is watching them a bit nervously — Regan's visible frustration needs no translation — and Greta offers them a brief, tight smile before turning her focus back to Regan. She touches one of the dresses over the girl's arm, asking, "What's wrong with this one?"
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It's never escaped Regan's notice that Greta wears clothes for utility more than for fashion. And for a long time, so did Regan herself. It hasn't been until recently that she's even allowed herself to wear clothes with fabrics that she knows will make noise against each other, even if she can't hear them herself. Maybe bringing her mother-figure prom dress shopping is weird, but all of her school friends have had their dresses on reserve for months. Greta might not be the most fashionable person in Darrow, but she is still good at clothes, knowing how they fit and drape and work, and Regan wants that knowledge and help today.
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Sequins are a little more out of her depth. She could probably teach herself how they're done, given a spare dress and a little time, but she has enough sense to avoid a project so fraught when she doesn't have that much time or focus to devote to it. The last thing either of them need is for Greta to volunteer a solution she isn't dead certain she can provide. And the last thing she needs is to arbitrarily put herself in full-time seamstress prison when there's other work to be done.
"Why don't we look for something else in this color — or close to it — and just worry about the bust, not the skirt length?" she suggests.
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She can do this. If she can trek her way across half of New York, use her implant to weak one of the creatures, and then stab it in the face... Well, then she can buy a damn dress, right?
It's just prom. It's just the most important dance of her high school career. But she can do this.
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Instead, while Regan resettles herself and puts a few of the dresses back, Greta returns to browsing the racks. She spies a dress that nearly matches the color Regan's looking for — the seasonality of colors used to strike her as arbitrary, but now she thinks it might work in their favor — and she plucks it off the rack, holding it up for Regan's inspection and lifting her eyebrows in inquiry.
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"The color is good," she says, a little uncertainly. She frowns and tugs it closer, holding it against herself and looking in one of the mirrors. No, the color isn't just good. It's really good. It's almost perfect, actually. The bodice is nice, too.
Regan closes her eyes like she's praying for a second, then tips the back of the bodice open to look at the size. It's too big. No, no, no. It can't be too big. She hooks the hanger over the back of her neck so she can tug the side seams against her body, trying to see where they'll fall if she were to put it on right now.
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"Do you want to try it on?" she suggests. Venturing a wry smile, she adds, "We can assess the damage." She doesn't expect anything off the rack to fit the girl perfectly, but once Regan's wearing it, they can get a better idea of what needs to be done.
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But she doesn't want to pass this up if it's the only dress that's even close to what she wants.
She takes a breath, and nods.
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She pauses outside the door to one of the changing rooms, and adds, "Just knock on the door when you're ready for me, okay?" The changing rooms are large enough to accommodate two people, and she thinks it might be better for everyone involved if they have any conversation about alterations in said room, where none of the shopkeepers can see them. It may not be against any laws to buy a dress you intend to modify, but it still feels a bit rude to be blatant about it.
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Taking a bracing, hopeful breath, Regan steps closer to the door and knocks on it.
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She lifts her gaze to Regan's face, which looks, she thinks, a little less despairing than it had a few minutes ago. "The fit's not bad," she says. "Better than I was expecting, actually. What do you think?"
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"I wanted tighter, longer sleeves," she admits, "and the bottom isn't full, like I want." She plucks at the skirts and sort of holds them where she wants the fullness to stop. Then she releases to add, "But... that'd just be an underskirt, right? Petticoat?" Is that what it's called? God, she doesn't know dress things as much as she should right now.
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"How much longer were you thinking for the sleeves?" she asks before reaching out to examine them, letting the fabric slide between her fingers. Tightening will be easy enough — she's not worried about any adjustments that involve taking fabric away. Lengthening might be trickier, as you can't add what you don't have. She could probably let out the hem a little, but if Regan's looking for several inches, they might need to get creative.
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"I guess... maybe this could work? I wanted it down to my elbows, but." She's trying to compromise, because she knows she only has so much time before prom, and she only has so much leeway with what Greta can feasibly do. She makes a little, playfully distressed face. "This looks okay at this length, right? If they're a little tighter?"