Karen Filippelli (
callofkaren) wrote2008-09-06 07:17 pm
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[For Pam]
Karen liked to think she knew Jim Halpert pretty damn well, and that was one of the reasons she'd decided on doing what she was going to tonight.
Jim was king of running away from his problems, and Karen had known he'd clam up as soon as he got Pam to the compound and settled in. She hadn't been surprised to hear Pam was in the crash room, and Karen felt for her. It was a little strange, but she did. A year and a half had passed since she'd shown up, had her own problems to sort through (most of which involved Jim) and some things had changed.
Of course, others stayed the same, or changed back, too. With an irritated thought toward Jim, wherever he was, Karen made her way down to the crash room.
She poked her head in the door, and smiled when she saw Pam. "Come on, Beesly," she announced, walking in. "I'm breaking you out for a little fun. Or, at the very least, to get you drunk." Karen held up the small bottle of moonshine to show Pam. "What do you say?"
Jim was king of running away from his problems, and Karen had known he'd clam up as soon as he got Pam to the compound and settled in. She hadn't been surprised to hear Pam was in the crash room, and Karen felt for her. It was a little strange, but she did. A year and a half had passed since she'd shown up, had her own problems to sort through (most of which involved Jim) and some things had changed.
Of course, others stayed the same, or changed back, too. With an irritated thought toward Jim, wherever he was, Karen made her way down to the crash room.
She poked her head in the door, and smiled when she saw Pam. "Come on, Beesly," she announced, walking in. "I'm breaking you out for a little fun. Or, at the very least, to get you drunk." Karen held up the small bottle of moonshine to show Pam. "What do you say?"
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At the sound of Karen's voice, she glanced up from where she'd been sitting cross-legged on the bed she'd temporarily claimed, and a smile spread across her face instantly. All things considered, she didn't think she'd ever been quite so glad to see Karen before. Back home, she probably never would have been, anyway. If she'd gone through with what she'd intended to say after the coal walk, there would've been no better way to make things permanently awkward between them.
That hadn't happened here, though, and Pam was on her feet before even responding. "I say I definitely can't turn down an offer like that," she replied with one short nod, and crossed the rest of the distance to the doorway. "Where to?"
Not that it mattered. Anything would have been preferable to the crash room.
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Karen wondered if Pam actually knew what the Hub was, and decided explaining couldn't hurt. "The Hub's across the path, by the way. It's like an open bring your own alcohol kinda bar. Most of the time people throw parties there."
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"I thought you'd wanna get out a little, you know. I remember what it was like when I first showed up." Of course, finding out Jim wasn't her Jim and he'd been married to Pam and expecting a baby wasn't as bad as Pam showing up and finding out she'd been married and had a baby. Well, maybe they were almost equal.
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That was an understatement, to be sure, but she still wasn't quite sure where she stood with Karen. They may have been friends before, but that wouldn't necessarily mean anything; she'd been married to Jim, and she hadn't so much as caught a glimpse of him since he dropped her off at the crash room. She had now to figure it out, though, she supposed, and any reservation left from their time in Scranton could be pushed aside to appreciate some familiar company, and a distinct lack of awkward stares.
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That much, Karen knew from experience.
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As hard as she tried to sound casual about it, there was no hiding the worry in her voice, even if his avoiding her probably made obvious how he was. Though she knew she couldn't be blamed for it, she couldn't help but feel bad, anyway. The situation wasn't fair for anyone involved.
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She led Pam over to one of the smaller tables in a quiet corner of the Hub. It was going to be hard not to talk about certain things, and Karen was sure Pam didn't want anyone overhearing their conversation.
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"I just don't get it," she admitted after a pause, her frown only deepening. "How any of this works, or why things like this had to happen. It's just so..." Trailing off, she shrugged. There was no good word to describe it that she could think of, and it wasn't as if she expected Karen to have any answers.
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She held the bottle out to Pam, offering her the first drink. "I made this myself. Well, my friend Paige and I made it. She inherited her brother's still when he disappeared." Taking his wife (Padme, of all people) and kid with him, but Karen kept that to herself.
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Without a word of that, though, she lifted the bottle in a mock toast, then tipped her head back to take a long sip. It was certainly strong, moreso than she'd expected, but she figured if there were ever an occasion to get drunk, it was then. She was in no way in a position to get picky, either. "Not bad," she said, when she'd set the bottle back on the table. "You really made this?"
It was kind of hard to imagine someone who'd worked at Dunder Mifflin for years producing alcohol, but that might've just been her.
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"You should meet Paige, I think you'll like her. She looks like Kirsten Dunst and was part of the X-Men." Though, Paige had known Pam before, including having watched their show. Karen was going to need to smooth a few things out before.
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"Have you met many other people? Like...people who knew you before."
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"There've been a few," she continued. Truth be told, she wasn't sure just how many there'd been, just that it had been uncomfortable with almost all of them. "I've kinda been trying to stay out of the way a little, at least until this all settles down more."
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She shrugged, and gave Pam an apologetic smile. "I promise I'll stop bringing up awkward topics from now on."
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Hearing that Karen could sympathize was, admittedly, the least bit relieving, anyway. Pam hadn't stopped to think much about what it must've meant, Jim being from so early and Karen being from so close to her, but in retrospect, that had to have been difficult, too. "That's what it feels like now. Only instead of everyone knowing Jim, everyone knows me."
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It also felt more than a little weird being the one in this position when things had been reversed so long ago when Karen had first shown up. Of course, she wasn't in a relationship with Jim, but still.
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"That's great," she said, and meant it, too. "I'd really like to meet him sometime, if you'll introduce me." Probably she'd known him before, but Pam figured that Karen would know she knew.