yuri_plisetsky: (sulking in his tent)
When even your cat gets annoyed with your tossing and turning and goes off to sleep with your coach instead, it's time to admit that your usual methods of falling asleep are not working. And when nothing on the Internet is enough of a distraction to shut your brain down, sometimes the only thing you can do is try to bore yourself into unconsciousness.

Which is why Yuri has taken his heavily thumbed school copy of Boris Godunov -- the other, more soporific option was The Brothers Karamazov, but he's not that desperate yet -- along with a large mug of mint tea to a quiet booth, and is listening to some Rachmaninoff piano music playing just loud enough through his earphones to block out the general hum of the bar. By the time he finishes the tea, he might be tired enough to try to go to bed again.

Or he could quit lying to himself, and just accept that he'll be getting almost no actually restful sleep for the next two days.

(Two more days, and he'll be in Moscow. Two more days, and he'll be home.)
yuri_plisetsky: (not yet begun to fight)
Seated at a booth, Yuri has a bowl of food in front of him and an expression of tight, absolute concentration more likely to be found on a surgeon in the middle of a major operation.

Today is the day that he finally gets it right.




The bar had listened to his somewhat vague request (plain noodles, some normal Japanese kind or something, and, uh, a bunch of steamed vegetables on top, cut a little small but not TOO small) and thankfully had provided about as close to what he'd wanted as he might have imagined. The noodles were plain yellow ones, though they were dressed with some sort of light sesame sauce that was keeping them from sticking together in clumps, and the bowl was piled high with chunks of steamed broccoli, carrots, and those little green beans that he'd had as a snack at Yu-topia a couple of times. (Edo-something? Whatever, he'd eat it.) The bar had also provided several napkins and, for some reason, not one but two pairs of chopsticks: the disposable kind in the wrapper, and a set of regular wooden ones.

(He can take the disposable ones home, at least.)

He's got his phone on the table next to the bowl, one headphone plugged into his ear and three videos queued up, and he's in the middle of the first video, using his left hand to try to reposition the chopsticks in his right hand until they look like they do on the demonstration. It's close enough to make a first attempt, so he keeps his eye on the video as he moves the chopsticks into position to grab a piece of broccoli.

He almost manages to make contact with it before his grip fails and the chopsticks cross.

An annoyed huff, and he taps the phone to restart the video, and goes back to repositioning his hand.
yuri_plisetsky: (those were some words)
He hadn't been certain that it would work. He's only ever reached this place through his bedroom door before, only in St. Petersburg, only at the end of the day. There's no guarantee that it would show up here in a random Moscow hotel room just because he wanted it to appear badly enough.

But it does. Perhaps because he does. When he swipes the keycard in his hotel room door and opens it a crack, the bar is on the other side.

There's no time to be surprised, or grateful, or concerned about what this might mean. Yuri simply pulls the door open wider and propels the Katsudon through it, steering him over to the nearest empty booth with one hand.

'Sit here,' he commands, with a touch of Lilia's steel in his voice. 'Don't you dare leave.' And he's off to the bar before he can hear a word of protest. Not that he'd pay attention to it if he heard it.

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Yuri Plisetsky

May 2017

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