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Celine lifted a hand to cover the abrupt laugh escaped her lips at the girl's disgusted statement. She slipped the star-shaped glasses onto her face and smirked at the girl. "So, you are either very lost or doing a character study for a role," she said, giving the girl a once-over. There was no judgement in her tone, just mild curiosity and wry amusement. She let the girl's dramatic revulsion hang there for a moment between them before continuing. "I mean, if the couches are haunted and the air smells like regret, you made it about ten steps farther than I would expect." Celine continued browsing through the odd collection of knick knacks on display, glancing over her shoulder. "Seriously though, what dragged you in here? You look like you're waiting for a tetanus shot from just standing there."
magnolia had never stepped inside a secondhand store in her entire life – until today. except, the fact that it was a secondhand store had completely slipped her mind until she'd spotted a pair of fake miu miu sunglasses attempting to pass off as the real ones. it should have been more obvious – retro roots, come on ! she could not bring herself to touch anything inside the store, fearing the smell of expired perfume and bad aura would cling onto her and follow her home. a voice nearby broke the unsettling silence and magnolia turned to spot the source, eyeing her carefully as if buying herself some time to filter out her true thoughts. she had a habit of letting her, sometimes unwarranted, opinions slip – no matter how harsh. one thing she could not filter out were her reactions as she continued to stare with a look of repulsion. “they scream ‘post-divorce meltdown’ but to each their own ?” oh, how she absolutely hated how high-pitched her voice got at the end of that sentence. “in the literal sense of the word, this is it – my very own personal nightmare. this place feels like cycling through your friend's exes or an unaired episode of hoarders. let's not even get started on velvet couches.”
Celine's expression shifted, barely concealing her amusement. Her eyes glanced down at the basket in his hand with several well-worn books. "Books," she noted, a hint of approval slipping into her voice. "I'm surprised you managed to find that many in a shop like this." His sudden lava lamp factoid made her blink once and then let out a laugh, slightly incredulous. "Astro lamps, huh?" she echoed, folding her arms. "That kind of sounds like the name of a failed disco band from the seventies. I kinda love that." She leaned against one of the nearby display tables and tilted her head at the boy. "Are you always full of obscure trivia, or is today just my lucky day?" she asked.
Henry looked up as he heard the woman speak, wondering if she was actually conversing with him or just thin air. And then she turned to him, causing his cheeks to color up a little bit as her eyes unexpectedly met his. “Well--” Before he really had time to voice his opinion on the sunglasses, she was asking him another question. A faint smile touched his lips as she spoke, though his nose wrinkled just slightly at the idea of couches with suspicious stains. “Well, none of those,” he admitted, and held up the basket that was dangling from one hand, which was full of books. Mostly paperbacks, a few hardcover, many with yellowing pages. He glanced around the store before his eyes turned back to her. “Did you know lava lamps were originally called Astro Lamps and originated in the UK?”
Celine lifted a brow at the boy, turning the star-shaped sunglasses in her hands like she was debating if his description was accurate or not. "Well, you're not wrong," she smirked, "I probably could swipe my ex's car — though I don't think he would be too upset, which probably kills some of the drama." She popped the glasses onto her face with a flourish, the frames clashing delightfully with the red of her outfit. "For the record, I didn't watch Heathers—I lived it." Celine gave him a once-over that was filled with amusement. He barely looked old enough to know what a VHS tape even was. "You look like the kind of boy who grew up rewinding Elvira clips on Youtube and never recovered." The woman stepped around him, her eyes scanning over the treasure trove of nostalgia that was Retro Roots. There was more than one item that seemed it could come to life, if it wasn't already. "Sentient? Kid, if something in here starts whispering in Latin, I'm leaving you to get possessed while I call your emergency contact." She glanced over her shoulder, and shot him a wink over the rim of the sunglasses.
⇢ ✨ STATUS ﹕ open ( 0/6 ) ⇢ ✨ TAGGING ﹕celine + utp !! ( @palmviewstarters ) ⇢ ✨ LOCATION ﹕ retro roots.
“This store is either a fever dream or a trap,” Celine muttered under her breath, eyeing a hot pink rotary phone like it might bite her. “I swear my aunt had one just like this, just covered in cigarette ash.” She picked up a pair of gold-framed, star-shaped sunglasses and ran a finger long the edge. She caught motion in her peripheral vision and glanced up, raising an eyebrow with faux gravitas. “Hey, these scream ‘divorced and dangerous,’ right? Asking for a friend." Celine's smirk widened, taking in her fellow shopper before tilting her head. There was something about the otherworldly, out of time feel of the store that had her lowering her usual guard, just a little. “What's your poison? Lava lamps? VHS tapes? …Velvet couches with suspicious stains?”
Celine let out a snort at the idea of taking their daughter out of sports. Rosie had developed into quite the little athlete, but no sport sung to her the same way soccer did. Her parents being who they were, of course, had signed her up for dance classes and theater, but while she enjoyed those as hobbies, Celine could see the true spark in her whenever she talked about her sport. "Sure, you try to pull her out of soccer and let me know how that conversation goes," she smirked. Jack invited her in and she hesitated for the briefest of moments. She stared after the space where Rosie had just vanished and then turned her gaze back to Jack. His features still familiar to her, and she was still able to read him so easily. It was a miracle he'd been able to keep anything from her in the years they were together. Celine exhaled and nodded, stepping inside, her eyes flicking to the snack on the counter. She smiled to herself—it was just further proof that Jack was still trying his damnedest to be the kind of dad Rosie deserved. She respected him more than she could ever say aloud. Jack had always been good, just not hers. Not fully. Not in the way she thought she'd signed up for. And so, a year later, they were still trying to find their way through parenting together, but separately. "I think she's just testing the waters. That's what I'm hoping at least. I know she'll want to be called Rose some day for real, but I'm praying we've got a few years left." There was affection clear in her tone, and a thinly veiled pride for the little girl with opinions too big for her eight-year-old frame. She studied Jack for a moment, catching the way he rubbed at his face. He always wore his guilt like a second skin. "I think...she's just trying to figure out who she is and where she fits now that the dust's settled." She stepped further into the kitchen. "Schedules have never been your strong suit," she said, dropping her bag on the counter. Celine turned to look at him, her eyes lingering on his face longer than she meant them to. Still handsome. Still kind. Still someone she loved—just not in the way she'd thought she would for the rest of her life. "All right. Let me see what you've got, I'll see if I can't make something work."
Jack would be lying if he said he hadn’t been glancing at the clock all morning waiting for his daughter to arrive. Every minute closer to drop off made his chest lighter. He'd just finished putting a snack on the counter when there was a familiar knock at the door. The second he opened the door, Rosie launched past him with only the chaotic grace she managed to pull off. "Well, hello to you too!" he called after her, laughing as her bedroom door shut in the distance. He turned back just in time to catch Celine’s blink, her arms still full of the overnight bag. Jack took it from her wordlessly, his fingers brushing hers as he did. Even now, even with everything that had changed, their rhythms stayed in sync. That was what made it harder, sometimes. He still felt pangs of guilt in his chest. They'd been so good together, a true unit, that it felt odd for them to take on parenting separately, yet still somehow together.
"She’s getting too fast," he said, flashing a grin that didn’t quite reach his eyes, holding a heaviness that never seemed to fully lighten between them. "We might need to rethink the sports. One more growth spurt and I’m done for." He paused, then let the smile fade into something softer. At her words 'It’s not bad', something in his chest twisted. A reflex. The kind you build when you’ve had to break news to someone who loved you. He tilted his head slightly, leaning towards the whisper, years of working around sound equipment not doing him any justice.
"Rose?" he echoed, eyebrows rising. "What, is she turning eighty?" He smirked, then sighed, scrubbing a hand down his face, "This whole.." Jack waved his hands around for emphasis, "personality thing... I thought we had a few good years left before puberty snuck in." He looked back briefly, toward the hallway where Rosie, 'Rose?', had disappeared to. Part of him hoped her door would creak back open and she’d be four again, asking him to retie her shoelaces or make up a bedtime story. But instead he looked back at Celine, eyes a little glassier than he meant them to be. "Would you like to come in?" he asked, voice quieter, a step to his side as an open invitation. "If you’re not in a rush. I’ve been trying to figure out her soccer schedule, but it overlaps with the college showcase and.." he exhaled. "I’m still not great at the calendar stuff." The silence that lingered was soft but familiar, like everything between them now, as complicated as it was, was still whole in its own way.
⇢ ✨ STATUS ﹕ closed. ⇢ ✨ TAGGING ﹕celine + jack !! (@anchorsfm ) ⇢ ✨ LOCATION ﹕outside of jack's apartment.
Celine wiped at a smudge on her daughter's cheek, even though Rosie had made it crystal clear she was not trying to impress anyone. Eight going on eighteen, apparently. She knocked on Jack's door twice, signaling their arrival and the second the front door opened, Rosie had barreled past both of them shouting a dramatic, "Hi Dad, bye Mom!" and disappeared down the hallway towards her bedroom. Celine blinked after her. "Aaand she's gone," she muttered, still holding the weekend overnight bag in her hands. She handed the bag off to Jack, and then stuck her hands in the back pocket of her jeans. "Okay, I know she just got here," she begin, lingering in the doorway instead of heading back to her car, "but, there's something I wanted to talk to you about. It's not bad," she added quickly, immediately seeing the familiar flicker of concern in his eyes. "Just... something you should know." Her voice dropped a little, quieter and more careful, to make sure Rosie didn't overhear. "She asked me last night if she could start going by Rose instead of Rosie. She was so serious about it too. Said Rosie is for little kids and she's basically nine now, so...you know." Celine gave a small, fond eye roll at that and her small smile was tinged with a melancholy that she was certain Jack would recognize. "I said of course. But I think it's a phase. It might not be, but it just felt like one of those things where she might only say something to one of us hoping we'd be the messenger." Her gaze lingered on him for a moment. It had been a year since everything changed. A quiet divorce, no scandals, just ... truth. A truth Jack hadn't been ready to say out loud, and one Celine had tried her best to hold with grace.
⇢ ✨ STATUS ﹕ open ( 2/6 ) ⇢ ✨ TAGGING ﹕celine + utp !! ( @palmviewstarters ) ⇢ ✨ LOCATION ﹕ retro roots.
“This store is either a fever dream or a trap,” Celine muttered under her breath, eyeing a hot pink rotary phone like it might bite her. “I swear my aunt had one just like this, just covered in cigarette ash.” She picked up a pair of gold-framed, star-shaped sunglasses and ran a finger long the edge. She caught motion in her peripheral vision and glanced up, raising an eyebrow with faux gravitas. “Hey, these scream ‘divorced and dangerous,’ right? Asking for a friend." Celine's smirk widened, taking in her fellow shopper before tilting her head. There was something about the otherworldly, out of time feel of the store that had her lowering her usual guard, just a little. “What's your poison? Lava lamps? VHS tapes? …Velvet couches with suspicious stains?”