The air was one of breathless anticipation as all off duty personnel - military and civilian, Aian and Marosi - lined the viewports to watch the Starfleet ship come in to dock. Murmurs raced through the watching crowd at her strange design, at the unfamiliar words emblazoned across her hull
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Which meant he was going to mingle his way over to some food, grabbing a glass of champaigne-type drink on the way over. Both party essentials, Robert was ready.
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"That was interesting," he mumbled under his breath. He gave a glance to who he was next to and smiled. "Robert," he said easily hiding his unease. "Haven't seen you since the ping pong 'tournament'"
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He'd also put some thought into mimicking his department colors. Blue on top and a darker blue pinstripe pants to match the vest. His cuffs had gold bands which signified his rank, and he was wearing the Enterprise insignia pin on his vest.
He studied the crowd silently for a while.
"I'd be lying if I said I wasn't a little anxious," he admitted, finally. He gave Robert a glance and a smile. "How's the food?"
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He all but plastered himself to a far off wall as soon as they arrived and idled himself with his PADD and tricorder. He blindly grabbed off a passing hors d'oeurves tray and popped whatever it was in his mouth.
This was about as much his scene as desert was a fish's favorite vacationing spot.
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He raised his glass in acknowledgement as he spotted Donnie lurking against a wall at the edges and made his way over. "Alright?"
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He nodded and shrugged in response. He glanced up at the blue drink and a longing look came on his face. He liked blue drinks. He wanted one. But not enough to cut through the loud, smelly, overheated crowd. His heartbeat quickened just thinking about it.
"I don't get it," he finally said, almost whining. "We haven't even done anything. Can't be anything but posturing," he mumbled. He didn't know everything about social etiquette but meaningless dinner parties were something he'd grown up with.
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Moving to lean against the wall near the doors, she watched everyone else socializing as she counted down five minutes.
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A moment's deliberation decided the Yeoman was most likely to bolt first, so she doubled back to the door and approaced Daniela. "Hey, sweetie," she said said, smile bright as she stepped beside her. "How are you?"
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"Oh, hi. Um, I dunno. Feeling a little... off. So I might head back to the ship early." She didn't want to make up some illness that Christine could easily treat, nor did she want her friend to worry about her, so she decided to be as vague as possible. Though Christine was such good company, Daniela was questioning whether she wanted to bail so quickly. As long as she could talk to her friend, there was no reason to rush off, was there?
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"Okay," she said with an understanding nod, reaching out to give Daniela's shoulder a squeeze. "Anything I can help with?"
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The politicians were easy to spot. They moved differently from the soldiers, watched differently, and as the murmur of the crowd returned to normal they circled like buzzards. Creed sighed internally and tried to look uncommunicative. Politics made her head ache.
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She found herself beside the Enterprise's Chief of Security, whom she knew by sight but had never spoken to, and wondered briefly what she thought of their armed but smiling hosts. She wasn't quite sure if she should ask, but she smiled in greeting anyway. "Commander."
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It was a trait that she was grateful for as she watched the crowd, memorizing faces that would eventually be matched to names she would be required to remember. That watchfulness also gave her a chance to search for people that she knew, getting a general idea of which members of the crew attending in case she needed some familiar company.
A basic layout of the party fixed in her mind, she took a deep breath and slipped into the crowd, ready to make polite, if boring, conversation and learn whatever she could about their hosts.
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Steering clear of the knot of conversation that had formed around both sides' respective leaders, he made his way around the periphery of the crowd, discreetly observing.
It was on his second circuit of the room that he encountered a young woman in the uniform of the Federation ship, moving through the crowd with an air he found indefinably intriguing. As good a candidate as any. "Welcome to Shi Maro," he greeted her in passable if slightly accented Standard.
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