(this got so long im so sorry alsdfja absolutely NO PRESSURE to get anywhere near this length,,, i got away from myself with my blorbos,,,,,,,)
The rest of the day passes. Felix finds himself an (almost) blank notebook and immediately starts scribbling Rhyda's wedding plans for her. He'll ask a question over the volume of the fixer-upper HGTV show and Rhyda will respond in her casual lazy drawl. Felix will add her option to the bottom of his list containing his much better options. He had asked about a venue and she had shrugged and said Artemis's backyard. Her backyard!!? If Felix hadn't had a terrible luck with poker and a winning smile, he could surely be one of those insanely expensive wedding planners. Hell, he'll even plan birthday parties, bah mitzvahs, quinciñeras, divorce celebrations–literally anything people could celebrate, Felix is convinced that he could plan it better than they ever could. Shea's wedding was a hit, after all, even though most of them were far too drunk to remember the latter half of the night. Oh well. At least Abel, the only sober soul in the whole venue, managed to relay most of the details with only minimal laughter.
Well, speaking of Abel, the day is beginning to grow late. It's about four-thirty when Felix leaves his house, accounting for Vegas traffic and arriving at Abel's shop–Killer Fern–at roughly five-fifteen, only about forty-five minutes before closing. Felix parks next to a pair of black suburbans and enters the humid store, trying not to suffocate on the sheer amount of fog that hangs in the air. Abel is standing behind their register with a pair of large shears in their gloved hand. They're speaking rather terse with a few customers on the other end. Felix only catches a few words but he gets the gist. Apparently somebody wants a full refund for an entire order of plants that had died on them only two months after buying. They're convinced it's Abel's fault (though Abel is literally the best botanist in the Vegas area) and want a full refund of however many hundred dollars they spent.
Felix busies himself with staring at the rest of the plants in Abel's shop. They're all well taken care of, either stored in the darkness of the main room or stored in a twenty-four hour blue-light greenhouse just through a set of swinging double doors. The shop could've been a funky cafe before Abel took it over from how it's layed out. Eventually, the customers finally leave, looking far less happy than they should, and Felix finally approaches his friend.
"Oh my fucking God–" Abel mutters, letting their head fall to the marble countertop with a bonk. "You would think they would actually have the mind to read the care instructions, right?"
Felix laughs and shakes his head. "People will always surprise you with stupidity."
"Guess so." Abel sits up, slamming his sharp shears down on the counter. "Lets get that jacket of your friend's." Felix almost wants to correct Abel, but what would he even say? Erm, boyfriend actually– No. Abel would make fun of him for days. Abel disappears through a set of beaded curtains into some shadowy back, somehow even dimmer than the main store. Felix follows without being invited because of course he does. The jacket is laying on a card table, still half draped on a sewing machine. It's considerably more shiny and punk than before, even complete with a SCREW YOUR SYSTEM patch on the back. Felix could laugh granted that Damian is, well, part of the system. "Here ya' go. No charge, per usual, just make sure that it stays in decent shape. Always sucks when people break what I make."
And Felix accepts the jacket. He bids farewell to Abel and goes back out to his car, noting the time is just nearing six o'clock. Not quite dinnertime for Felix, but it could probably be dinner for someone of the likes of Damian Mae, the oldest thirty-four year old he's ever met. Almost on auto-pilot, Felix pulls out of Abel's parking lot and zones out the entire way to Damian's quaint house. He parks by the mailbox and exits the vehicle and finds himself at the front door for the second time in twenty-four hours.