[She stares back at him, and for this moment, at least, this conversation, there's none of her usual arrogance. There's as much pride as he has, but nothing that seeks to establish dominance or triumph over him.]
I'm certain you do.
[She is. She knows she'd likely be no better if she was in his position. She might not lash out the same way, but she would lash out, sharply and repeatedly. She'd tear down anyone not wearing that mark, because she'd inherently loathe them. Perhaps she could befriend a few, but she'd loathe them on principle, because they had the audacity to have something effortless that she never could.
She thinks of home, then. Of being a woman in a male dominated field; of how hard it had been, day in and day out. How she'd faced all the leers and insinuations and snickers, the patronizing comments and coddling words, and she'd constructed a mask to deal with it all. It hadn't been so different from her normal personality, really-- she'd just made it stronger. She'd learned how to combat people, to shut them down, to turn every situation into her advantage, until at last that mask had simply become her personality. Until she had such trouble letting anyone in, anyone at all; until she finds she has no idea how to be anything other than that mask.
She thinks of Tumenalia, then. Of being a puppet caught at the end of Stephen's sadistic strings; of being at Akande's mercy and needing to beg him to let her go. Of that gang of men that had followed her and Dinah, laughing and drunk; of Takasugi, his eye glimmering with cruelty, forcing her to strip and stand bare before the city, all because she'd had the gall to resist him.
Oh, yes. She understands his simmering rage. His resentment, his humiliation, his feeling of hideous helplessness. She understands better than he can imagine.
Her eyes flick down for a moment, focusing on the line marring his throat, before she glances back up at him. She takes a step forward.]
I know you're intelligent. I wouldn't bother with all of this if you weren't. Regardless of who ends up winning, I believe we can both agree we're around the same level of genius, albeit in differing areas. We might call it a talent, hm? Something you're proud of, something you've worked towards honing. You're very accomplished, and so am I.
Those things would sting if they were taken from you. They would sting for anyone.
But I think it's a little worse for you. And it would be a little worse for me, if I were a Submissive.
[She speaks so calmly, carefully. This isn't a confrontation, nor a cruel way to bare his soul. This is . . . this is an attempt at reconciliation. I understand, she really does, conveyed clumsily but genuinely.]
It always is for us. Isn't that the price of genius? You're so much better than everyone-- it's just fact, you simply are. You surpass your peers and your siblings and your parents by the time you're ten, if not earlier, and fairly soon you simply teach yourself, because it's easier than sitting through dull lectures led by people who don't know the subject as well as you. You never truly fit in. You're isolated, friendless, so terribly lonely . . . but you're brilliant.
And that's all that really matters.
[A breath. If he's looking, if he knows how to read people, he might see something like grief in her gaze. Rosalind has not dealt with her own humiliation during Tumenalia, not at all; she suppresses her trauma and moves on, she always has.]
Except here. Except here, it doesn't matter, does it? I wasn't appointed a Dominant because of my intelligence. Yours wasn't considered at all. They sort us arbitrarily, and in doing so take away the only sturdy, steady thing we've ever had in our lives.
So yes. I'm sure you do find that disagreeable. And while I can't say I'm very fond of the way you lash out at me . . .
[ she's earnest. in speaking, she bares more of herself than she needs to, paints a picture of a life he's known but isn't obliged to admit to - her story is her own as much as it's his. personal enough (his brother was always his better, his mother a genius in her own right) to separate, shared enough to enable his silence, a lack of intervention.
quiet is a lack of denial. it says plenty and nothing at once.
when she's finished, his quiet remains for a while longer. the seconds stretch with him blinking, eyes casting down as his focus recedes within... a blink, an inward breath, and he seems to land on whatever it is he's going to say. ]
I won't promise it won't happen again.
[ but it's not obstinance that has him say it. it's honesty. she's given him truth, the least he can do is the same.
[A truce indeed. She can't promise she'll always react so nicely to his tantrums, but at least they understand each other a little better. Rosalind nods shortly, an acceptance, and leans her hips back against the lab table.]
no subject
I'm certain you do.
[She is. She knows she'd likely be no better if she was in his position. She might not lash out the same way, but she would lash out, sharply and repeatedly. She'd tear down anyone not wearing that mark, because she'd inherently loathe them. Perhaps she could befriend a few, but she'd loathe them on principle, because they had the audacity to have something effortless that she never could.
She thinks of home, then. Of being a woman in a male dominated field; of how hard it had been, day in and day out. How she'd faced all the leers and insinuations and snickers, the patronizing comments and coddling words, and she'd constructed a mask to deal with it all. It hadn't been so different from her normal personality, really-- she'd just made it stronger. She'd learned how to combat people, to shut them down, to turn every situation into her advantage, until at last that mask had simply become her personality. Until she had such trouble letting anyone in, anyone at all; until she finds she has no idea how to be anything other than that mask.
She thinks of Tumenalia, then. Of being a puppet caught at the end of Stephen's sadistic strings; of being at Akande's mercy and needing to beg him to let her go. Of that gang of men that had followed her and Dinah, laughing and drunk; of Takasugi, his eye glimmering with cruelty, forcing her to strip and stand bare before the city, all because she'd had the gall to resist him.
Oh, yes. She understands his simmering rage. His resentment, his humiliation, his feeling of hideous helplessness. She understands better than he can imagine.
Her eyes flick down for a moment, focusing on the line marring his throat, before she glances back up at him. She takes a step forward.]
I know you're intelligent. I wouldn't bother with all of this if you weren't. Regardless of who ends up winning, I believe we can both agree we're around the same level of genius, albeit in differing areas. We might call it a talent, hm? Something you're proud of, something you've worked towards honing. You're very accomplished, and so am I.
Those things would sting if they were taken from you. They would sting for anyone.
But I think it's a little worse for you. And it would be a little worse for me, if I were a Submissive.
[She speaks so calmly, carefully. This isn't a confrontation, nor a cruel way to bare his soul. This is . . . this is an attempt at reconciliation. I understand, she really does, conveyed clumsily but genuinely.]
It always is for us. Isn't that the price of genius? You're so much better than everyone-- it's just fact, you simply are. You surpass your peers and your siblings and your parents by the time you're ten, if not earlier, and fairly soon you simply teach yourself, because it's easier than sitting through dull lectures led by people who don't know the subject as well as you. You never truly fit in. You're isolated, friendless, so terribly lonely . . . but you're brilliant.
And that's all that really matters.
[A breath. If he's looking, if he knows how to read people, he might see something like grief in her gaze. Rosalind has not dealt with her own humiliation during Tumenalia, not at all; she suppresses her trauma and moves on, she always has.]
Except here. Except here, it doesn't matter, does it? I wasn't appointed a Dominant because of my intelligence. Yours wasn't considered at all. They sort us arbitrarily, and in doing so take away the only sturdy, steady thing we've ever had in our lives.
So yes. I'm sure you do find that disagreeable. And while I can't say I'm very fond of the way you lash out at me . . .
I can understand why you do.
no subject
quiet is a lack of denial. it says plenty and nothing at once.
when she's finished, his quiet remains for a while longer. the seconds stretch with him blinking, eyes casting down as his focus recedes within... a blink, an inward breath, and he seems to land on whatever it is he's going to say. ]
I won't promise it won't happen again.
[ but it's not obstinance that has him say it. it's honesty. she's given him truth, the least he can do is the same.
he reaches up to remove his scarf. truce. ]
no subject
Now. What do you know of Adderall?