st_ackeddeck (
st_ackeddeck) wrote in
strangetrip2018-03-14 01:51 pm
[GP/EP] Pie for Pi Day
The only ones who might have known yesterday held any significance were Jag and Sunny, and if they did, they also knew her well enough to know she wasn't big on celebrations. Her one tradition, a new deck for her birthday, hadn't been possible this year, since she hadn't found anything like a tarot deck on Asphodel Station. But that was okay.
Pi Day, on the other hand, was worth celebrating. Everybody liked pie. Last week, she'd talked to Pike, who had been curious and excited about a holiday for pie, and seemed eager to help. Yesterday, she'd put a notice on the bulletin board, hand-lettered over a watercolor scene of pies and more pies. She'd also made ice cream in a variety of flavors, since she wasn't Bobby to freeze it on demand, in less time than it took to prepare the custard base. Today, she left the non-pie food preparation to Ignis, the chicken chef, and anyone who wanted to fend for themselves.
Today, along with Pike and anyone else who wanted to and knew what they were doing, Emma baked pies. Fruit pies and cream pies. Quiche and pot pies. Shepherd's pie and meat pies. Hand pies, savory or sweet, baked or fried. As close as she could get to real Brooklyn-style pizza this far from Brooklyn. Some were decorated with the symbol π or the first few digits of the number it represented, as a vent in a top crust, piped in whipped cream, or carefully laid out in caramelized onions depending on the pie. And because she couldn't resist the visual pun any more now than she could the first time she celebrated Pi Day at the castle, a square apple pie (one of Bobby's favorites) and cherry tart (a recipe she'd learned from Sabine, the fruits a deep ruby red against white cream and pale crust that would have appealed to her cousin's aesthetics).
It wasn't the same as Pi Day at the castle, but there was a bustle and energy as people moved between the kitchens, the bakery, and the cafe, sitting to talk over a slice, or helping each other choose what to taste next. As long as Emma stayed busy, she could enjoy the memories without dwelling on the people she missed.
And there was pie. Everybody likes pie.
Pi Day, on the other hand, was worth celebrating. Everybody liked pie. Last week, she'd talked to Pike, who had been curious and excited about a holiday for pie, and seemed eager to help. Yesterday, she'd put a notice on the bulletin board, hand-lettered over a watercolor scene of pies and more pies. She'd also made ice cream in a variety of flavors, since she wasn't Bobby to freeze it on demand, in less time than it took to prepare the custard base. Today, she left the non-pie food preparation to Ignis, the chicken chef, and anyone who wanted to fend for themselves.
Today, along with Pike and anyone else who wanted to and knew what they were doing, Emma baked pies. Fruit pies and cream pies. Quiche and pot pies. Shepherd's pie and meat pies. Hand pies, savory or sweet, baked or fried. As close as she could get to real Brooklyn-style pizza this far from Brooklyn. Some were decorated with the symbol π or the first few digits of the number it represented, as a vent in a top crust, piped in whipped cream, or carefully laid out in caramelized onions depending on the pie. And because she couldn't resist the visual pun any more now than she could the first time she celebrated Pi Day at the castle, a square apple pie (one of Bobby's favorites) and cherry tart (a recipe she'd learned from Sabine, the fruits a deep ruby red against white cream and pale crust that would have appealed to her cousin's aesthetics).
It wasn't the same as Pi Day at the castle, but there was a bustle and energy as people moved between the kitchens, the bakery, and the cafe, sitting to talk over a slice, or helping each other choose what to taste next. As long as Emma stayed busy, she could enjoy the memories without dwelling on the people she missed.
And there was pie. Everybody likes pie.

Re: Alec & Emma
"You were just kids," she said softly, to herself really, a sheen of tears forming but not falling. A second round of cards out from the center, and she shut her eyes, shaking her head and swearing in Sinte, with a few Quebecois sacres thrown in.
She blinked, and looked up to meet his eyes. "I'm sorry. Nobody deserves that."
Re: Alec & Emma
Well, that was a react he wasn't expecting and didn't know how to deal with. He tried to keep his poker face and was pretty successful, although there were slight gaps in his expression.
He cleared his throat lightly and then shrugged. "yeah, well, everyone needs to grow up somehow, huh?"
Re: Alec & Emma
"When I was fifteen, my cousin and I were snuck out of the US, because the government was rounding up mutants and putting them in camps, or worse. We were lucky. I have friends who 'had to grow up somehow,' before they managed to get away."
Re: Alec & Emma
"I don't get the government. They want to use people with powers, but they don't want to deal with them at the same time." He shook his head. A lot of his lack of respect for authority figures perhaps stemmed from this. "And why are people with powers so damn scary to humans?" He rolled his eyes.
Re: Alec & Emma
"What I can do scares me sometimes. I don't blame people for being afraid when they have a reason to be. It's what they do because of that fear that pisses me off."
Re: Alec & Emma
"That's fair." About being scared. Alec knew he was scary and he didn't have any real powers like Emma or the other mutants at the Inn had. "Even where I'm from the humans think we're dangerous. Even though they're the ones who created us to begin with." Alec felt that particular detail was what pissed him off the most.
Re: Alec & Emma
"Where I'm from, there's an island, just for mutants. Separatists, who think we can't live with baseline humans and shouldn't have to. Some of them want to go even further than just living in a mutants-only country. But Duninnean, where I was living, it's a sanctuary for mutants, but we live with baselines. It can be done. It's just not the easy route."
Re: Alec & Emma
"Separatists is really the name of the island? They couldn't think of a better name?" He tried not looking too amused. "Baseline is pretty neat though. Better than 'ordinaries' like some people call them back home. Pretty sure they just made that name because the humans kept making up names for us."
Re: Alec & Emma
"I'm not a fan."
Re: Alec & Emma
"Sounds like a smart way to make friends." He deadpanned. "We have crazy cult people who think they're the next in the evolutionary change. They don't exactly like our existence either since we're all 'made' and they've been doing creepy special breeding for centuries." And Max was their center of attention too.
"Must be nice then, to be here with people who don't really give a crap what you are or who you are."
Re: Alec & Emma
She didn't answer right away, and when she did, "I've been an outcast of one kind or another for most of my life. Home to me is people... and none of my people are here. Not that I haven't met people here I've become friends with, just... I'd rather be home, where I–" where I can help "I'd rather be home."
Re: Alec & Emma
"Yeah, I can see that." Much like Terminal City felt like there was a place to belong now, even if the humans wanted to take it away. "In that case, I'm sorry. Maybe someone here will crack the code to this place sooner rather than later."
Re: Alec & Emma
"I'm here now, so here and now is where I am. Tautology, but a good reminder. Precog - I'm not always good at being in the present."
Re: Alec & Emma
"I guess I can see that." He nodded. He was all for living in the moment, too. The past was too hard to deal with and the future probably sucked just as much too.
"Speaking of, I should probably let you get back to making pies." To be in the 'present' and not really have to deal with his shit.