On Thanksgiving, since they were going to see Cooger's family, Daizi didn't dress quite as extravagantly as normal. Instead, she wore a silk, ankle-length slip dress over a black turtleneck. The slip dress was a dusty green and patterned with ravens. She wore her hair up, chose more-normal sunglasses, and accessorized with a death moth necklace and a string of pearls, and of course she still wore earrings in every hole in ears.
...So maybe it wasn't that understated, but the sleeves were a normal style, they didn't flair or puff out at all, there was no lace, and only a single layer of skirt. Dark dressed in his usual black suit, although he chose death moth cufflinks and chose a similar shade of green to the darkest hues in Daizi's dress to match her. They dressed Ivy in a little black and red overall dress with sunflower buckles over a sweater. In a way, despite her not wearing the same colours as her mother, she looked like she was matching her mom, although that wasn't the intention.
The night before, they had prepared an Egyptian dessert to bring to the table, and while they were in the car, they did take a moment to remind the twins of the behavior expectations for the day and impress upon them those expectations also applied for while they were in the car. It was an almost two hour drive to Cooger's parents' home.
When they arrived, they were welcomed in warmly by Shelley Cooger. Having grown up in West Virginia, she still had a touch of a southern accent, but it had mostly faded so it only came out on certain words. Having spent her career as a lawyer, this was very much by design. In contrast her husband, Scott, whom she met in law school, still sounded very much like the born-and-bred New Yorker he always had been, although they had moved away from the city after retirement, bringing them closer to their only son. The rest of the house was a swarm of relatives--Cooger's aunts and uncles, his cousins, and their children. Already, some of the older men were asleep "watching" football while some of the younger ones were throwing the ball around outside. Because the family was primarily boys, Ivy was immediately fussed over for simply not being one herself.
Cooger had been in the kitchen, helping his dad with the turkey, but when his family came in, he let it be for the moment and gave all of them except for Xander (who got a solid fist bump) a fierce hug.