The drink Remy was sipping was not a strong one, which was probably just as well because she rarely drank herself to excess. Her wit and self-awareness were some of the best tools she had in her bag of tricks, and being drunk did not exactly put her in the right mindset to be making the best of those artifices. She had a soft spot for tequila, though, which is why she avoided it on nights like tonight, when she was here strictly on a business venture.
The club was already busy, with bodies sliding past one another both on the dance floor and off. Her dark, perceptive eyes darted from place to place, observing the controlled chaos around her. Here and there, a man caught her eye, either for his appearance or the noticeable expense of his attire, and Remy flagged them as she continued to search the room for some combination of both. Although she was rarely in a position to be all that picky, Remy did have standards; there was no use exerting her not unimpressive skills on someone who could give her nothing in return. If that something happened to be a good partner in bed or a few hundred galleons depended on the situation and her mood, but tonight she was open to the possibilities.
Sipping slowly, Remy’s eyes were scanning mostly for men, but it was impossible not to notice the women around them. It was pitiful, really, watching the desperation written across the faces of some of the women in the club. Their facial expressions, the way they hung close to their men, the sheer amount of cleavage spilling out of their too-tight dresses; all of it reeked of neediness. One woman had even taken it upon herself to sit on the lap of one particularly distracted looking gentleman, whose wandering eyes showed just how ineffective the woman’s tactics were.
They were going about it all the wrong way, Remy knew, but she wasn’t about to inform them of this and increase her competition. They weren’t likely to listen to her tactics anyway, because they were likely the type of women that still believed that men loved them for their souls and their personalities and all of that nonsense. People like other people for what they bring to the table and the bedroom and not much else. Men like to do the chasing; they do not like to be chased.
And, Remy thought with a smirk over her glass at the scene she was still watching with amusement, They most certainly do not like to be sat on in public.
Having had her fill of internally mocking those women less experienced in the art of attracting men, Remy had been ready to find another more interesting scenario to observe – perhaps one with more worthwhile players to watch – but as her eyes went to make another sweep of the dance floor, she heard the voice of the bartender from behind her, calling someone’s attention in a voice loud enough to be heard over the music, and she turned to see who he was addressing.
The man to whom the bartender had been speaking seemed to have caught on now, and was engaged in what Remy thought seemed like an overly awkward exchange for something as simple as ordering a drink. He was a tall, lanky individual that stood out above the heads of the bar-goers around him. He was definitely not the most attractive man in the room, but he was passably handsome with the type of wide-set eyes and overlarge features that held Remy’s attention, at least until he placed the coins on the counter and pushed them toward the bartender, which was a distraction she could not ignore. The amount a man tips is usually a strong indication of his personal wealth – and willingness to share that wealth – so Remy was mildly pleased to see that the coinage he doled out was far greater than what his firewhiskey would have cost.
Writing him off as a prospect, much the same as she had done for many other men in the room, Remy looked away from the young man, still mildly entertained by the exchange she had just witnessed. She raised her glass to her lips once more and felt the sting of alcohol as it passed down the back of her throat, only to have that sensory input replaced a moment later by a voice beside her. Turning slowly on the stool to face the newcomer, Remy was not altogether disappointed to find it was the man she had just been observing.
Remy followed the man’s gesture as he spoke, leaning around him slightly to see that the creep that had bought her drink hadn’t taken her not-so-subtle hint to bugger off. Having seen what he was referring to, Remy let her eyes slide up the man – Skeeter, he said his name was – until they were connected with his lighter-colored ones. She smirked slightly in response to his overenthusiastic greeting and introduction, though she did not hesitate to take his hand when he offered it.
The size of his hands were proportional to his height, and Remy felt her smaller one disappear in his. His hands were not calloused, which suggested he did not do manual labor for a living, which also boded well for his income level. Now that he was closer, Remy could see that he was dressed well, perhaps not in the most expensive of threads but nicer than average. As she quickly ran his name through her rolodex of people worth knowing she came upon a small note that tied his name somehow to the ministry, but beyond that she had no details. But he was passable in both of her important categories, at least as far as she knew, and obviously interested seeing as he had approached her. Remy really had nothing to lose by sticking around long enough to find out if he was worth pursuing.
“If that is an offer, I would love some,” Remy intoned coyly, looking up at Skeeter from beneath her eyelashes. Though this might have been a flirtatious maneuver Remy would have employed in a multitude of situations, this was really more logistical than coquettish; Skeeter was far taller than she had even anticipated while looking at him from a distance, and though he was leaning on the bar, he was still much higher than her eye level.
“And I’m Remy,” she added, letting her hand slip slowly from his after making her intentionally-surname-less introduction. She found that leaving off her last name allowed her to maintain a certain sense of anonymity, though with all the lying she did about her identity, the people she met rarely made any connection from things they may have heard through the grapevine.
“So what brings you in tonight?” Remy asked conversationally, turning her body subtly to face Skeeter. Remy had found that body language served as a greater attraction to men than most anything she said or did explicitly, and she did not hesitate to use this tactic in Skeeter’s case. From the looks of him and the line he had used in approaching her, Remy guessed that he was rather more awkward with women than she was with men, but that wasn’t necessarily a bad thing. Men who had less experience in the realm of women were usually the easiest to take advantage of, as had been the case with poor whatever-his-name-was.