uncertainrelation: play it, sam, play as time would have had to have had gone by (BOGART ⚛ here's looking at you kid)
Robert Lutece ([personal profile] uncertainrelation) wrote2020-03-19 06:15 pm
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originallutece: or are you going to join me? (talk; are you going to just stand there)

[personal profile] originallutece 2017-04-22 01:21 am (UTC)(link)
Fugo is paired off like that, you know.

[Though he hadn't been quite so enthusiastic about telling Rosalind. She presses in closer, just to feel his arms tighten fractionally around her.]

. . . a fresh start.

[She stares at nothing for a few seconds, then tips her head back, catching his eye.]

A start for what, though, precisely?
originallutece: yes i did it in ink, do you want to see? (talk; just finished the crossword)

[personal profile] originallutece 2017-04-22 01:40 am (UTC)(link)
Not yet.

[She does and she doesn't. Rosalind hesitates, then adds:]

I simply . . . there's so much we haven't yet done. There's so many worlds we haven't seen, and times we never got to visit. There's so much I can't remember, all that knowledge we once had. We were taken too early. I want that domesticity, I do, I want . . .

[Her eyes flicker down for a moment.]

. . . all of it. But to settle into this role feels akin to willingly giving up that other life.
originallutece: (sad; .3 seconds away from crying)

[personal profile] originallutece 2017-04-24 10:19 pm (UTC)(link)
[Rosalind stares down at nothing for a long few seconds. Her breathing is shallow now, quick inhales that betray her nerves.]

In that hallucination. With-- with Astor.

[She doesn't dare use his first name. Bringing him up at all feels like a bad idea, and Rosalind is growing tense in Robert's arms, but he has to understand.]

It was domestic. It was-- we lived in a mansion, and I was his wife, his, his perfect wife, I was everything a lady ought to be. I had to be, because that was the way he wanted it, and god only knew what would happen to me if he grew so displeased that he kicked me out. So he was happy, because I was the bloody light of our home. And when he'd fallen asleep, that was the only time I was able to practice my little hobby, when he couldn't see me and disapprove.

God, Robert, I was so miserable. I was so . . . you wouldn't have recognized me.

It's not that I think you'd force me into that. God, even if we had a, a, a child, I don't think you'd ever force me into that, that's not it. But I don't want to . . .

. . . we've never been able to be domestic. Not properly. And I suppose I'm afraid that if I allow myself to give into that, I'll end up precisely where I was with Charlie Astor: miserable and cut off from all that makes my life worth living now.
originallutece: way more exclusive a club than Rapture's (neutral; columbia's best and brightest)

[personal profile] originallutece 2017-04-24 11:31 pm (UTC)(link)
I've never been able to have both.

[It's good he's tugged her in so close. It means that if her mouth trembles, if her voice shakes, if she admits that she's weak and vulnerable and scared, no one will be able to see. Rosalind squeezes her eyes shut tight, burying her face against him for a long few seconds.

She's always, always known what she wants, and her life has always revolved around achieving it. She'd looked to the future and wanted desperately to be a reputable scientist, someone who had gone farther than anyone else, and known even as a child that she could do it. She was brilliant beyond compare, and there was nothing that would stop her from exercising that brilliance.

But in order to accomplish that, she'd had to become ruthless. She'd done whatever it had taken to accomplish her goals, and forcibly cut out those elements which would seek to hold her back. Friends, family, lovers, all of them were entirely unimportant in the face of her goals. And emotions . . . oh, she'd long since learned to suppress those. Grief and anger, yes, but most importantly: regret. She had no time for regrets.

But that doesn't mean they weren't there.]


Wife or scientist, pretty or respected, friends or success, a baby or a career . . . good god, Robert, when have I ever been able to have both?
originallutece: and i know what i've done (talk; oh i'm a guilty one)

[personal profile] originallutece 2017-04-25 01:39 am (UTC)(link)
. . . it seems too good to be true.

[There, at last, is the problem. It's nothing to do with Robert, nor their circumstances. It's nothing tangible. It's just . . . thirty-eight years of defenses built up, all of them screaming at her not to trust this golden opportunity.]
originallutece: there's just us (sad; there is no justice)

[personal profile] originallutece 2017-04-25 02:59 am (UTC)(link)
I know.

I want it. I do want it, I want . . . I can so well imagine what it might be like. It wouldn't be a, a concession to you. I want . . . all the things you do as well.

[She closes her eyes again. A long few seconds pass.]

. . . I want to talk about it. To start with.
originallutece: but i for sure am (talk; not all who wander are lost)

[personal profile] originallutece 2017-04-25 08:23 pm (UTC)(link)
[And indeed, she does smile: thinly, yes, but genuinely all the same. And with that smile comes a slight easing of tension. She's still upset, yes, but not quite as panic-stricken as she'd been a few moments ago.]

. . . do you want to get married?
originallutece: like say founding an entire city, that's a pretty big regret I have (neutral; do you ever have a regret)

[personal profile] originallutece 2017-04-25 08:57 pm (UTC)(link)
[Her eyes flick downwards again, her breath leaving her unsteadily. They're only just getting used to telling other people about what they truly are, and that's nervewracking. Each time she tells someone, she has to steel herself for the worst. The thought of a giant party loudly boasting that fact is . . . uncomfortable. Never mind the fact she'd be expected to be emotional, not just in front of Robert, but everyone . . . god, what a prospect.

It's not that she's opposed to the idea. Marriage itself, the ring and the state of being both, that suits her just fine. It's all the fuss surrounding the event she has trouble squaring away, but that fuss is precisely what Robert wants.]


Tell me why.

[She reaches for one of his hands, gripping it tightly.]

Do you . . . is it because we've never gotten to be affectionate in public before?
originallutece: that's really original (talk; oh another sexist remark)

[personal profile] originallutece 2017-04-26 10:43 pm (UTC)(link)
[She sees it: the moment his enthusiasm fades and reality sets in. His expression fades, the light and enthusiasm flickering out of his gaze. Who would they invite? Her students? Her friends? But they all of them are still hers. Oh, they're all friendly enough to Robert, but-- well. Urameshi had only meant it as a compliment, but he'd put it quite well: we already have our Dr. Lutece.

It stings. It had stung twenty years ago, too, when he'd asked about their parents and friends and realized that neither group would ever know who he was.]


. . . we'll indulge it.

[She meets his eyes. It would be for him, yes, but not entirely. The ceremony, the fuss, the party . . . that would be for him, and she would deal with it, for his sake. But the state of marriage itself-- that, Rosalind would enjoy very much.]

We can do it here. Or we can wait, and . . .

[She hesitates for a long few moments.]

If we resume our other state of being. We could do it in your universe.
originallutece: and we live on a flying city, fuuuuuck (sad; i'm all out of conditioner)

[personal profile] originallutece 2017-04-29 11:05 pm (UTC)(link)
. . . yes.

[Not entirely. But certainly she'd found more joy and freedom in being extraordinary than she ever had being ordinary. She tips her head back again, catching his eye.]

. . . normal for you was a vastly different experience than what normal was to me. And mine . . . I was not miserable, not for all of it. Not after you came into my life. But . . .

Normal here is a vastly different thing than it was in Columbia. I'm still learning about normalcy here. God, I'm still shocked every time one of my students gives me respect without thinking. And . . . I don't mind being ordinary here, not all the time. I miss our other state of being, but I don't loathe being human, not the way I would have in Columbia.