[And it quite literally is a flash, as one instant he's elsewhere in the city and the next he's simply stepping through the doorway of whatever room she's in, dapper and charming and armed with a bag of fruit and a whimsical bouquet of cherry blossoms.]
[What a contrast he stands to her: covered in drops of paint and with her hair tied back, a little put out after the labor of the past few hours. Still, the front room is done to their liking, with a rather pleasing shade of red lighting it up.
He's a welcome sight, sweet gifts aside, and Rosalind smiles as he appears.]
I'm still quite put out that you retain our powers and I don't.
[She wipes her hands on her trousers (her trousers, though they clearly one belonged to a man, but they serve her well when she's forced to get dirty) and nods towards his gathered items.]
I'm still frankly baffled how it is that I've kept them and you haven't. Perhaps our overseers were wise enough to realize that you'd be the far more dangerous to them, if left with them?
[It's sort of serious, but mostly an idle compliment. It's not as though he's any more docile than she is, really, and the fact of the matter is leaving either of the Luteces a set of capacities is effectively the same thing as giving both of them access to it anyway.]
I took them from the ever-blooming tree, of course. I thought they'd be better suited to ever blooming in your hair.
[That's the third time she's brought that up. Odd, that, and yet Rosalind doesn't appear to notice.]
Come along.
[That, called over her shoulder as she heads towards the room they've designated as their bedroom. Most of her clothes are here. Most of their things are here, really; moving is marvelously easy when one of you can simply teleport. The only thing left to transfer is their scientific equipment, which Rosalind doesn't want to risk potentially contaminating. Who knows what teleportation might do to their experiments?
Well, they will, because that's an experiment she intends to conduct. But not right this second. Right this second, Madam Lutece wants nothing more than to look a bit more elegant than she currently does.]
Quite engaging, really. The rundown parts are less palatable to walk through, but I suppose it just makes the up-to-scratch parts hidden amongst them all the more of a delight to uncover.
[He follows along with her automatically, and takes up a place just inside the door, where he can have a view of the whole room but also discreetly angle himself to afford her a touch more privacy if and when she decides to start getting changed.]
I dropped in and saw the boutique run by your seamstress. It's a pretty little storefront, all told.
[It's one of those dresses Rosalind is putting on now, actually, as she sheds her clothes briskly. Either he's looking or he isn't, but really, after so long, she's hardly shy.]
A good thing, too: the only other method before was scavenging, and frankly the less said about that, the better. Tell me, though, when you're wi--
[Wait. Rosalind blinks, then turns, glancing back at him.]
You can teleport us.
[Obviously. But she hadn't realized the implications up until now.]
You can teleport us distances. Oh, hell, I've put off my investigations of anywhere beyond a few days journey til now, but we've run of the place!
[He says, which completely ignores the important subject at hand, but you know what, there's this business of the dress right here in front of him, too.]
I should imagine so, yes — it doesn't feel any different than the usual getting-around that we used to do. Simply wanting to be somewhere, and then...being there.
Was there somewhere in particular you were hoping to go?
[She flaps an impatient hand. Dresses, who cares about dresses when there's science to talk about?
. . . bu-ut she also comes over and turns, presenting her back to him, so perhaps dresses can be granted a moment's thought. Still, she looks over her shoulder, trying to catch his eye.]
Of course. Everywhere-- it's hardly a bestiary if it ends at the woods. There's the mountains, and I haven't yet made the journey towards either of the coasts, never mind the beaches . . .
[And with Robert able to teleport them, there's no chance of danger. She won't be caught again, because the second something feels wrong, they'll simply spirit away.]
[Oh, boy, that did it. For all that the science is exciting and thrilling him, there's just something about the fantasy of the promise of dragons that drags the Young English Lad™ in him right out to the forefront.
Dragons! Knights and kings and tales of glory! Dragons! Fantastic, unthinkable, wondrous, magical —
Dragons!
Dragons!!
He rushes through fastening her up, fingers working easily over each separate button and hole, and when he's done he uses their positioning to his advantage and refuses to let her get away, catching her around the middle and pulling her back against his chest instead.]
[Oh, well, hello, that's her caught, isn't it? Rosalind smiles despite herself, more preoccupied with his hands than the prospect of any fantastical creatures. It's not the first time he's caught her like this, of course. It isn't even the first time he'd caught her like this here. But it's only been two weeks, and she's still reeling over the fact he's here at all.
She relaxes against him, her head tipping back.]
I'm not precisely certain where the proper ones live-- I've heard stories pinpointing them to the mountains, but I'd rather a bit more reconnaissance work before we simply leap there.
But I do know for a fact there's miniature ones to be found on the beaches.
[Ugh. It seems almost a crime to invoke Columbia and its sights by name somehow, as if voicing the name makes them that much more real in a place where he'd like nothing more than to let them fade into obscurity.
But still, the prospect is exciting. A real beach — a real ocean. Battleship Bay had been as much of a man-crafted farce as the rest of Columbia, and really that just makes the promise of the real thing all the more delicious.]
We could make a day of it — at least an afternoon, certainly...
[They've never done that before. Oh, once they'd gone down to Battleship Bay, if only to say they had, but Madam Lutece could never be seen in something so frivolous as a bathing costume. Eating ice cream and walking around the docks had been risky enough, and even that they'd done quickly. There was no question of dancing, nor staying til dusk just to watch the sunset. They'd come and gone quickly, ignoring all the usual pleasures a beach might bring because they'd had to.
But here . . .]
We could go swimming. All those lessons at Girton would finally pay off.
Or you know, loath as I am to volunteer for any more rowing...
[He's thinking of the same things, of course — the breathtaking freedom they've been afforded here, all the things they used to do with none of the strict decorum attached, all the things they'd longed to do and never could because the risk was far too great.
Window-shopping along the boardwalk. Sharing an ice cream. Holding hands. Dancing.
God, they could dance. They can do anything they please...]
Perhaps we might find a little boat, just the two of us...
[Rosalind twists in his arms, facing him properly, so he can see the way she's beaming.]
But I hardly see why we have to choose. We can go rowing, and then swimming. We can build ourselves a bonfire and take our evening meal on the beach, and watch as the sun sets and the stars appear. And when we tire of it all, we'll simply return home.
[It's not as if she hasn't known that for five months. It's not as if she hasn't already tested out her newfound freedom in a hundred different ways. But it's so different with Robert here, because he represents the biggest and best freedom of them all.]
There's nothing we can't do here, darling.
[She cups his cheek, pressing her lips together to try and keep her own smile under control.]
My darling. I could call you that in the midst of a crowd here and no one would care. I could kiss you there.
[A beat. She pulls her arms back, though she doesn't try and squirm out of Robert's grip.]
Most of them simply celebrate the fact that-- well. You're here. [She lets that linger for a second, then adds quickly:] And we're in a place where we can enjoy being in public without repercussions.
Tell me. I know it's on your mind, you've mentioned it more than a few times now in passing.
[And because they'll do everything, of course, but she wouldn't be singling this out in particular if it weren't destined to be special in some unique capacity. That's what he needs to know, all told. He needs to know how to make that rare dream of hers a reality.]
Don't leave it to me just to guess, or I'll end up going off and plagiarizing Marlowe or somesuch again.
[That earns a quiet laugh. Rosalind glances away, though, her fingers curling anxiously in his shirt.]
. . . I--
[It's so stupid, is the thing. It's such a silly little fantasy, more befitting a teenager than a grown woman. It isn't as if she thinks Robert is going to laugh; god knows he's the one usually more inclined to these kinds of things. But perhaps that's why she's so hesitant to say it: this isn't her role, but his.]
I want to indulge in, in all the things normal couples get to. In public, I mean, I want--
[Hrgh.]
There's so much we're allowed to do now, Robert. Everything we once had to pass on, picnics and-- and walks on the beach and kissing and dancing, it's all ours for the taking. That's what I want. I want us to be able to celebrate our first Valentine's day in public. Dinner and dancing and-- and all the romantic trappings therein. I want to eat in public, and walk down the street under your arm, and kiss you at the end of the night, and not once be treated as if we were anything but ordinary.
[As it turns out, he actually does laugh, but it's not mean-spirited in the slightest. Quite the contrary, it's one of those erratic, breathless, surprised sorts of laughs that come out when one tries to fill a space without quite knowing how, when recognition bubbles up and tickles from the inside out, and giddiness escapes in little bursts like soap bubbles making rainbows in the sun.]
Start to finish — the whole ticket? A real, proper bout of courting you. Pick you up at the door, fumble the flowers I've brought you in my nervousness, babble something about how fine you look and cross two sentences together in my haste? Dinner, dancing, not wanting to say goodnight, making excuses to stretch out the night a little too long, keeping you out in the open air in a dress with no shoulders just to gallantly come to your rescue with my suit coat...
The first time that we've never yet had. That's what you'd like?
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[And it quite literally is a flash, as one instant he's elsewhere in the city and the next he's simply stepping through the doorway of whatever room she's in, dapper and charming and armed with a bag of fruit and a whimsical bouquet of cherry blossoms.]
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He's a welcome sight, sweet gifts aside, and Rosalind smiles as he appears.]
I'm still quite put out that you retain our powers and I don't.
[She wipes her hands on her trousers (her trousers, though they clearly one belonged to a man, but they serve her well when she's forced to get dirty) and nods towards his gathered items.]
Dare I ask where you got those flowers?
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[It's sort of serious, but mostly an idle compliment. It's not as though he's any more docile than she is, really, and the fact of the matter is leaving either of the Luteces a set of capacities is effectively the same thing as giving both of them access to it anyway.]
I took them from the ever-blooming tree, of course. I thought they'd be better suited to ever blooming in your hair.
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[That's the third time she's brought that up. Odd, that, and yet Rosalind doesn't appear to notice.]
Come along.
[That, called over her shoulder as she heads towards the room they've designated as their bedroom. Most of her clothes are here. Most of their things are here, really; moving is marvelously easy when one of you can simply teleport. The only thing left to transfer is their scientific equipment, which Rosalind doesn't want to risk potentially contaminating. Who knows what teleportation might do to their experiments?
Well, they will, because that's an experiment she intends to conduct. But not right this second. Right this second, Madam Lutece wants nothing more than to look a bit more elegant than she currently does.]
How are you finding your exploration of the city?
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[He follows along with her automatically, and takes up a place just inside the door, where he can have a view of the whole room but also discreetly angle himself to afford her a touch more privacy if and when she decides to start getting changed.]
I dropped in and saw the boutique run by your seamstress. It's a pretty little storefront, all told.
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[It's one of those dresses Rosalind is putting on now, actually, as she sheds her clothes briskly. Either he's looking or he isn't, but really, after so long, she's hardly shy.]
A good thing, too: the only other method before was scavenging, and frankly the less said about that, the better. Tell me, though, when you're wi--
[Wait. Rosalind blinks, then turns, glancing back at him.]
You can teleport us.
[Obviously. But she hadn't realized the implications up until now.]
You can teleport us distances. Oh, hell, I've put off my investigations of anywhere beyond a few days journey til now, but we've run of the place!
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[He says, which completely ignores the important subject at hand, but you know what, there's this business of the dress right here in front of him, too.]
I should imagine so, yes — it doesn't feel any different than the usual getting-around that we used to do. Simply wanting to be somewhere, and then...being there.
Was there somewhere in particular you were hoping to go?
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. . . bu-ut she also comes over and turns, presenting her back to him, so perhaps dresses can be granted a moment's thought. Still, she looks over her shoulder, trying to catch his eye.]
Of course. Everywhere-- it's hardly a bestiary if it ends at the woods. There's the mountains, and I haven't yet made the journey towards either of the coasts, never mind the beaches . . .
[And with Robert able to teleport them, there's no chance of danger. She won't be caught again, because the second something feels wrong, they'll simply spirit away.]
I've heard there's dragons, Robert.
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[Oh, boy, that did it. For all that the science is exciting and thrilling him, there's just something about the fantasy of the promise of dragons that drags the Young English Lad™ in him right out to the forefront.
Dragons! Knights and kings and tales of glory! Dragons! Fantastic, unthinkable, wondrous, magical —
Dragons!
Dragons!!
He rushes through fastening her up, fingers working easily over each separate button and hole, and when he's done he uses their positioning to his advantage and refuses to let her get away, catching her around the middle and pulling her back against his chest instead.]
Well, we've simply got to see those!
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[Oh, well, hello, that's her caught, isn't it? Rosalind smiles despite herself, more preoccupied with his hands than the prospect of any fantastical creatures. It's not the first time he's caught her like this, of course. It isn't even the first time he'd caught her like this here. But it's only been two weeks, and she's still reeling over the fact he's here at all.
She relaxes against him, her head tipping back.]
I'm not precisely certain where the proper ones live-- I've heard stories pinpointing them to the mountains, but I'd rather a bit more reconnaissance work before we simply leap there.
But I do know for a fact there's miniature ones to be found on the beaches.
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[Ugh. It seems almost a crime to invoke Columbia and its sights by name somehow, as if voicing the name makes them that much more real in a place where he'd like nothing more than to let them fade into obscurity.
But still, the prospect is exciting. A real beach — a real ocean. Battleship Bay had been as much of a man-crafted farce as the rest of Columbia, and really that just makes the promise of the real thing all the more delicious.]
We could make a day of it — at least an afternoon, certainly...
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[They've never done that before. Oh, once they'd gone down to Battleship Bay, if only to say they had, but Madam Lutece could never be seen in something so frivolous as a bathing costume. Eating ice cream and walking around the docks had been risky enough, and even that they'd done quickly. There was no question of dancing, nor staying til dusk just to watch the sunset. They'd come and gone quickly, ignoring all the usual pleasures a beach might bring because they'd had to.
But here . . .]
We could go swimming. All those lessons at Girton would finally pay off.
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[He's thinking of the same things, of course — the breathtaking freedom they've been afforded here, all the things they used to do with none of the strict decorum attached, all the things they'd longed to do and never could because the risk was far too great.
Window-shopping along the boardwalk. Sharing an ice cream. Holding hands. Dancing.
God, they could dance. They can do anything they please...]
Perhaps we might find a little boat, just the two of us...
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[Rosalind twists in his arms, facing him properly, so he can see the way she's beaming.]
But I hardly see why we have to choose. We can go rowing, and then swimming. We can build ourselves a bonfire and take our evening meal on the beach, and watch as the sun sets and the stars appear. And when we tire of it all, we'll simply return home.
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[It's almost breathless, the way he says it — like if he says it too loud, something will shatter.]
Columbia. Comstock. Dewitt. All of it — it's over. It's just us.
[He holds her tighter, an infectious sort of smile starting to pull at his mouth without him even realizing it.]
We're finally — it's finally just us...
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[It's not as if she hasn't known that for five months. It's not as if she hasn't already tested out her newfound freedom in a hundred different ways. But it's so different with Robert here, because he represents the biggest and best freedom of them all.]
There's nothing we can't do here, darling.
[She cups his cheek, pressing her lips together to try and keep her own smile under control.]
My darling. I could call you that in the midst of a crowd here and no one would care. I could kiss you there.
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[He leans into it fondly, starting to sway the two of them back and forth in an almost instinctive dance, just from the sheer merriment of it all.]
For science and all, you know.
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[Her hand slides down, both her arms wrapping around his neck as they sway.]
State it correctly, then, if we're doing it for science. Our hypothesis is . . .?
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[And around they go in an easy circle, spinning across the bedroom floor.]
And second: a kiss shared in present circumstances is measurably and demonstrably more satisfying than ones shared historically in Columbia.
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[She hesitates for just half a second, and then adds:]
Well? Shall we? There's no time like the present, and I should so like to come to a favorable conclusion before the end of the day.
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[Because "shall we" isn't even a question, is it — not when the delicious question is when shall we, rather.]
Valentine's Day. You have something in mind for it already, don't you?
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[A beat. She pulls her arms back, though she doesn't try and squirm out of Robert's grip.]
Most of them simply celebrate the fact that-- well. You're here. [She lets that linger for a second, then adds quickly:] And we're in a place where we can enjoy being in public without repercussions.
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[And because they'll do everything, of course, but she wouldn't be singling this out in particular if it weren't destined to be special in some unique capacity. That's what he needs to know, all told. He needs to know how to make that rare dream of hers a reality.]
Don't leave it to me just to guess, or I'll end up going off and plagiarizing Marlowe or somesuch again.
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. . . I--
[It's so stupid, is the thing. It's such a silly little fantasy, more befitting a teenager than a grown woman. It isn't as if she thinks Robert is going to laugh; god knows he's the one usually more inclined to these kinds of things. But perhaps that's why she's so hesitant to say it: this isn't her role, but his.]
I want to indulge in, in all the things normal couples get to. In public, I mean, I want--
[Hrgh.]
There's so much we're allowed to do now, Robert. Everything we once had to pass on, picnics and-- and walks on the beach and kissing and dancing, it's all ours for the taking. That's what I want. I want us to be able to celebrate our first Valentine's day in public. Dinner and dancing and-- and all the romantic trappings therein. I want to eat in public, and walk down the street under your arm, and kiss you at the end of the night, and not once be treated as if we were anything but ordinary.
no subject
[As it turns out, he actually does laugh, but it's not mean-spirited in the slightest. Quite the contrary, it's one of those erratic, breathless, surprised sorts of laughs that come out when one tries to fill a space without quite knowing how, when recognition bubbles up and tickles from the inside out, and giddiness escapes in little bursts like soap bubbles making rainbows in the sun.]
Start to finish — the whole ticket? A real, proper bout of courting you. Pick you up at the door, fumble the flowers I've brought you in my nervousness, babble something about how fine you look and cross two sentences together in my haste? Dinner, dancing, not wanting to say goodnight, making excuses to stretch out the night a little too long, keeping you out in the open air in a dress with no shoulders just to gallantly come to your rescue with my suit coat...
The first time that we've never yet had. That's what you'd like?
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