Andrew was fixing some fine food: tomato soup and grilled cheese. An American classic. There was a fairly large pot of the soup, and he had enough bread and cheese to share if anyone else was hungry
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Wafting slightly down the hallway (sometimes, people just had a nose for such things) was the vague scent of something being cooked. Tomatoes were involved, from Adah's best guess, and she found it noticeable enough to be a distraction. Of course, the fact of the matter was that anything was mostly a noticeable enough of a distraction from where she was, trying to read in her room down the hallway and failing miserably for her half-brain's need to, instead, try to think about things. She set the book aside, replaced it with a notebook held against her chest and a pen settled in her hair, behind her ear, and made her limp down the hall, leaning in the doorframe of the common room as she peeked in, neck stretching, turtle reluctant out of its shell, to access the situation and peoples involved.
Andrew was busy flipping hot grilled cheese on the stove, but he glanced back towards the door and saw the girl who had been looking at him so strangely at the pool.
The smile was returned with a vague expression back as Adah looked at him a moment longer. Her eyes then left him, giving the room another slow and careful consideration. When they circled back toward Andrew at the stove, they fell first to the food he was preparing. She made a slight movement into the room, around the doorframe, still keeping against the wall, still clutching her notebook like armour to her chest, before her eyes dragged back toward the chef. So that was the faint underlying of something else she had picked up beyond the soup, and, better yet, it looked like he could make them without burning them, unlike her sisters. Would she still be able to enjoy grilled cheese without the lingering taste of char to accompany it? She quirked a questioning, slightly hopeful eyebrow. Was the chef willing to share his culinary expertise so that she might find out?
Holding a steady gaze toward the chef a moment longer before she dropped her eyes to the offered plate, Adah lamented to herself the woeful tendencies of the properly-brained to take advantage of having sufficient use of both arms. Of course she couldn't hold it against him that he didn't even think she might not have a hand to take the offering when she held her notebook, and she took a moment to consider. She gave a sharp, slightly jerking nod of her head, to show him that she was interested as she pushed a little off the wall she leaned on to support herself. She limped over to the kitchenette, a slow determination sped up slightly not by a reluctance to keep him waiting, but by the desire to not have her limp be watched. Once she reached the counter, she very carefully leaned forward against it, hip digging slightly painfully into one of the knobs of a drawer. She held her arm out away from her chest; the notebook slid free, flopping imperfectly onto the countertop. She took a moment to straighten it, lift it and quirk it so
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Adah grinned at the fact that she very naturally and out of habit brought her hand to her mouth, which was chewing the first bite of her sandwich, as she nodded, as if she was worried by breaking some social taboo by talking with her mouth full. As if she'd actually talk tonight. Either way, she nodded, figuring that she could manage well enough with the counter here, or maybe move to the table, but she'd been sitting all day, she sat mostly every day, so a chance in position was good for her legs. She set down her sandwich and plucked the pen out from behind her ear. She figured it worked out well that the time it would take him to fix a bowl would be enough time for her to write down a response and slide the notebook closer for him to see.
It was marked, so far, with just a single word: "Adah."
Andrew ladled in some soup for the girl and grabbed a spoon and napkin as well.
He slid it in her direction. "Adah," he read. "Pleasure to meet you, Adah. Would you like crackers with your soup this evening? Maybe a glass of water?" He sounded very much like a waiter.
She'd noticed, and it caused another quirk of her eyebrow as she eyed him, quietly working toward passing a judgment, but still not quite sure of which judgment it would be. Wasn't he the one in the pool on that unfortunate, disappointing venture into the deep subcockles of the school? Cooking on the second floor, which would lead her to guess that he lived on this floor as well. She took up her pen again instead of the sandwich or her soup, to write down another, singular word: "Water."
At least that was something Adah could answer without writing. She considered, carefully, looking at the sandwich as if considering it instead of ice, and then gave a casual shrug, sure, why not?, before dipping a corner of the sandwich into the soup and stirring it idly. Grilled cheese and tomato soup. A staple of the Price household before Africa; a veritable feast of balance and nutrition afterwards.
Andrew grinned and went to fill her glass with ice and water.
He sat it down next to her bowl, and then went back to toss another couple of sandwiches on the stove, seeing as how people seemed to be hungry this evening.
"Do you like jazz?" he asked. "I could change the music, but I was just feeling the need for something upbeat."
Again, this time with an indifferent expression to match it, Adah shrugged her left shoulder, her attention still focused on the soup swirling as it moved around the path of the corner of the sandwich. Jazz wasn't exactly a commodity in her life; devil's music, as was most music, although Rachel had smuggled a record or two that never lasted long before they were snapped and she was sentenced with the Verse. It was nice. Like he said, upbeat, and, she realized idly as she paused her stirring, took a second to hold the dampened sandwich over the bowl to drip the excess of tomato soup, she was probably in the need for something like that, too. Carefully, she leaned forward, left leading, so that she didn't trail any soup on the counter or on herself as she took a bite. Soup dribbled lightly on her chin; she casually wiped it away with the back of her hand.
The nudge of the napkin didn't go completely beyond Adah's notice and she looked at Andrew slightly because, apparently, the fact that she did everything with one hand and that it wasn't exactly easy to manage several things with one hand was completely slipping from his notice. Either way, she let it slide like the food down her throat as she swallowed, and gave a nod. And then, carefully, slowly, she dipped the sandwich back into the soup and traced out numbers that disappeared almost as soon as she made them. A two. Lift, and then the sharp, singular drag of a one down the middle of the bowl, followed by the smooth, never-ending curves and loops of the eight.
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He smiled. It couldn't hurt, right?
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"The soup is from a can, but I think it's pretty tasty."
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It was marked, so far, with just a single word: "Adah."
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He slid it in her direction. "Adah," he read. "Pleasure to meet you, Adah. Would you like crackers with your soup this evening? Maybe a glass of water?" He sounded very much like a waiter.
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He sat it down next to her bowl, and then went back to toss another couple of sandwiches on the stove, seeing as how people seemed to be hungry this evening.
"Do you like jazz?" he asked. "I could change the music, but I was just feeling the need for something upbeat."
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He wondered if she had a condition or if she just really didn't like talking to people, but figured it would be rude to ask in either case.
"So are you on this floor?" He really should take the time to stick his head in more doors.
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"Or was that first one a three?"
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