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Title: Some Dance to Remember
Author: kiltsandlollies
Pairing: LT/OB
Rating: PG
Summary: Some dances should
never begin.
Disclaimer: Most certainly
untrue.
Author's Note: Remix of yueni's
Dance.
I'm so happy she liked it, too.
Some dance to remember, some dance to forget.
It’s
a tired line from a tired song Liv sings in her head whenever she finds
herself in a room like this, lined from one end to the other with
tuxedos, taffeta and the occasional tiara. It’s another New Year’s Eve,
the second one she has spent in the company of too many people she
neither knows nor cares to know. Most of the cast has long since
retired to other rooms in the hotel to smoke or drink or both, and even
Miranda abandoned her half an hour ago to call home.
But she’s not entirely alone here.
He’s
beautiful, in the same way she is beautiful, or so she’s been told. And
in truth, they could be brother and sister. They could be lovers, too,
were she not so in love with Royston and his far more ragged beauty.
Instead, they are friends, and have been from the first day Liv arrived
in New Zealand, nervous and homesick already after only one
interminable flight from Los Angeles.
She depends on Orlando now for more than he knows. Yes, she makes him
drive, terrified to do so herself on the wrong—wrong to you,
he laughs, in his surprisingly throaty voice—side of the road. But she
does not have to persuade him to sit and bandy lines in the complicated
Elvish back and forth with her. He needs no convincing to hold her hand
when she freezes up and suddenly remembers just how big this project
is. He’s always there, whenever she looks up from a magazine or Peter’s
monitor. Sometimes he is there when he’s not meant to be, and the look
on his face when Peter or Caro scolds him back to the correct set is
something she loves to see.
Something she loves almost as much as she does watching him dance.
Orlando
confessed months ago that he’d learned to dance by watching dreadful
movies and forcing only the shyest girls with the lowest expectations
out on floors with him at weddings and in clubs. He’d practiced this
like nothing he’d ever practiced before, and still feels he doesn’t
have much to show for his efforts. But he dances nonetheless, with
anyone who’ll have him for a partner, because he loves the music—and
because he cannot resist the pretty flush of a cheek that’s been
pressed against his own, even for a moment.
Liv watches him now,
her eyes settling on his back as he moves. Her gaze only leaves him to
check the clock, which is nearing midnight so quickly Liv unconsciously
wiggles her toes in her uncomfortable, pinching shoes—a Cinderella
eager to lose her slipper. Orlando’s made an effort tonight, or as much
of an effort as can be expected, anyway. Only his cummerbund— splashed
with oranges, reds and blues and dubbed The Vomit Slick by Dominic, who
really shouldn’t be casting any stones—detracts from the tuxedo, the
long, lush hair that will all be shaved off tomorrow, and the brilliant
smile Liv can feel all the way over here.
Indeed, no one dances
like Orlando. No one attracts so much attention, for good or ill. This
has been established in clubs across the North and South Islands, and
reported faithfully by the hobbits. His long limbs are perfectly suited
for turning a partner, spinning her and pulling her back against his
chest. Sometimes, when he’s certain no one is looking, Orlando will
attempt something like a dancer’s expression—the Tortured Tango
Artist’s pout marring his otherwise smooth, tanned face. Liv has seen
it enough times that she doesn’t even laugh even more—at least not out
loud.
But he’s less comical than he is terribly, terribly
earnest. And Liv can certainly understand why; Orlando has a great deal
at stake every time he steps into any sort of light. There is always
someone—several someones— watching him, and he feels it—has confessed
that, too, over a bottle of Stoli and a jar of pickles late one night
in Liv’s trailer. He’s conscious of physical beauty everywhere,
including his own, and he has no choice but to preen a little like
this, dancing partner after partner across the room so there will be
something to watch.
Because he could not possibly be interesting enough just standing still.
Liv
has tried to convince him otherwise, with varying degrees of success,
and she imagines that at least in this she can return some of the care
Orlando’s shown her. She makes him laugh, at jokes that seem so awful,
so very wrong—wrong to you, she laughs, in her perfectly
bell–like voice—that even the hobbits roll their eyes or blush. She
makes him breakfast sometimes and dinner more often. She goes shopping
with him and tells him he’s far more beautiful inside than out.
She even saves him her only dance.
It’s
almost time now. Almost time for the clock to strike and for the
confetti and balloons to fall from the ceiling, for the chorus of song
to drown out the promises people always make to each other just before
midnight. There will be more dancing as soon as the song is over, and
some will dance to remember those promises, while others dance to
forget. And for the first time tonight, Liv is grateful she is here
alone (but not entirely). She doesn’t need any more promises than the
one she gave Orlando the moment she first saw him tonight, a promise he
suddenly seems to recall.
He appears in front of her, balancing heel–toe, heel–toe and nearly
vibrating with energy.
“You
haven’t danced all night,” he smiles, tilting his head and blowing
errant curls from his face. It’s the same phrase he’s used time and
time again at these events, one that comforts them both.
“I’m a
terrible dancer,” she smiles back prettily and line–perfect. She waits,
two beats, then six, until Orlando’s missed his cue and the air between
them begins to crackle a little with something new and not easily
resolved. Orlando has ceased his bouncing, and his eyes burn into hers,
making Liv press her lips together in a tight smile.
“Orli,” she says softly.
“Nonsense,”
he laughs, and the sound is nothing like his own voice. Before Liv can
say anything, he’s pulled her onto the floor, sweeping her gently into
his arms and spinning, spinning them both until the walls and people
begin to blur. And Liv feels something different now, something a
little like loss. She holds on to Orlando tightly, already feeling him
fading, feeling their friendship slipping away.
Liv is dancing desperately to remember, and Orlando is dancing
desperately to forget.
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