Subject: hS + Kaitlyn, musical theatre edition
Author:
Posted on: 2021-03-10 21:02:27 UTC

It had been a good run. The Dark Elf had been a hard sell, especially for the Players of the Plot Continuum's resident elves, but a few good costumes, a few well-written songs, and the company had pulled together once again. Tech week had been frantic, dress rehearsal had been properly horrendous, only a late-night duct-tape session had gotten the Kudzu back together in time, and then...

Opening Night had been perfect, down to the warm August weather. The house was full, the mood set when the lights dropped in time with the sunset, and the stage, the paint, the makeup all did its most subtle magic and vanished, transported the audience to Middle-Earth once again, carried them through the joy, the horror, the final, emphatic triumph.

The run was perfect, the reviews rave, the house full, every night.

And then it was September, and the summer was ending, summer theater season ending. New friends and old started saying their goodbyes, going their separate ways, back to the rest of their years, the rest of their lives.

Huinesoron had been with the company long enough to see many arrivals, many departures, over the years and performances. The elf had been there since practically the beginning, drafted to play the Sunflower by virtue of being one of the two people with the right gender for the role, despite protestations that puppeteering was hardly an elvish art.

This year had been a new one, a newer, bigger, more complicated Flower playing a bigger part in the conclusion of the story. A differently-gendered Flower, one for whom they'd pulled another person out of the crew to voice, and to spare an extra couple hands for the critical moment where many tendrils did many things simultaneously. Puppeteering had suddenly become strange and awkward again, and if his assistant hadn't been a veteran, someone he'd worked near for years...

Well. He wouldn't have bailed, couldn't have bailed. There was a reason the theater was called a 'house', and it was a home to him too. He loved it, in all its seasons, including the bittersweet autumn of departures.

Kaitlyn had been with the company long enough to see all the same arrivals, all the same departures. She'd pricked her fingers sewing the beautiful, horrid "gown" for Rambling Band, at the beginning of it all, and had been surprised when she'd volunteered for the second summer, the second run, the second mad chaos of sequins and glitter and quick costume changes.

This year had been new. This year had thrown another wrench in her plans, pulled her up to the stage to voice the slightly-malevolent Kudzu, along with still trying to ride herd on the chaos of Costuming. It'd be simple, they said. Just a couple minutes out of each run, working with a reliable, experienced partner.

She hadn't realized that performing was fun right up until the last curtain had dropped, when summer had become autumn.

Eventually, inevitably, Kaitlyn went to say her goodbyes to the stage, to the house, to the scarred black plywood where the Kudzu had sat.

For all that there was work happening, techs resetting lights, laughing about ridiculous ideas (who were the techs of the in-universe PPC? What stories could they tell, of broken hardware and last-minute fixes and maybe finding who you really were along the way?), the house was quieter than it had been all summer. The house was calmer than it had been all summer, the intensity, the purpose of a show in progress gone.

The house was, Kaitlyn was somehow not surprised to find, where Huinesoron was also spending time. Saying goodbye, perhaps, in his own way, from a seat on the stage.

Kaitlyn didn't join him, exactly. She took her own seat, left him enough space that they could each be alone with the moment, if they wanted. Let the moment happen around them. If it had been a play they might have soliloquized, two actors reading thoughts from their own scripts in turn.

"I'll see you next year?" Huinesoron asked.

"Always," Kaitlyn promised. "The grind's just a grind, it won't keep me."

A light flickered on, sweeping across the stage before a tech in the rafters unceremoniously unplugged it, unhooked it from the rack. In the wash of its beam, the glitter in Kaitlyn's dark hair sparkled like stars.

"You'll be here?" she asked.

"I don't go far," Huinesoron said.

Kaitlyn went to stand, pushing herself off the hard plywood. Starting the journey away from the theater, away from the family who'd cared enough to sand the stage so it'd stop snagging her costumes. Away from the warmth of lights on plastic leaves, the hushed glee of waiting for their scene to begin. Away from...

She looked back. Huinesoron was looking at her. In that moment, as another light came on, they were center stage. There was no one else to dress up, no puppets to hide behind. It was just them. It had, perhaps, always been them, one short summer at a time.

"Stay?" Huinesoron asked.

Oh.

Kaitlyn didn't answer with words. She just stepped closer, sat close enough that they were together. One couple, one dialogue, instead of two individual soliloquies.

Reply Return to messages