[Here they are, and for a long few moments she stares at the wall, trying to decide what it is she wants to do with that.]
. . . I won't ask you to stay, if you don't want to. If you're not willing to, to-- if you don't want to do this, I shan't hold it against you. I'll give you a ride home and we can pretend this never happened.
[But hangs in the air between them, unspoken but implied. But if you want to stay . . .]
[She stares at the wall, and he just watches her through his careful now-gray eyes, waiting patiently for the moment when her attention will return to him — because he knows it will.]
[And that, it seems, is the right response-- or at least, the response that makes some of the tension ease out of her. All right, and though her hand goes absently to her throat, she focuses her gaze back on him.]
. . . we might as well sit.
[She does, at least, sitting in the same spot she had when he'd come over to grade those undergraduate papers.]
I'd offer you wine, but I don't think that'd be a good idea. Not tonight.
[He's not precisely sure why he keeps hold of the book as he goes to sit near her. Maybe it's because he knows full well that it's the catalyst of her pain; maybe it's because he thinks if he keeps hold of it, then somehow its potential to hurt her will be blunted.
Either way, it ends up with the two of them sitting, his body angled toward hers almost instinctively as they find their positions.]
I think . . . I think whatever was in those chapters was something important.
[She nods towards the book, still safely contained in his arms.]
I've never published a book. Papers, yes, but I've never had enough material to justify publishing an entire book. But she has. She thought she had something to say that was so important that she was justified in doing so. So whatever theories she had, they had to be particularly radical.
[She drums her fingers on the table.]
I looked it up. Why she calls herself Madam. The first woman to get a doctorate in the nineteenth century was in 1874, and she was in Germany. England was fairly conservative during that time. I can't imagine that Rosalind could have gotten it.
Perhaps they were more than theories. Or rather, that what she had to say went beyond theories. Maybe these pages...maybe what they took out were her discoveries.
["Her." Does it make it easier, talking about the person she once might've been as though she's a completely different entity to begin with?]
Her era worked against her even more than your own circumstances did, is what you mean.
. . . I lost my temper at Majima this morning. We were talking about fighting, and I told him I couldn't understand the urge to brawl. He replied it was because I was a woman.
He didn't mean it offensively. But I took issue with it, and rather chewed him out for it, far more than was called for. And in part, I think, it was because of that thought. That this other self, this . . . other Rosalind, dealt with so much more sexism than I have. So much so that she couldn't even accomplish getting her doctorate.
I doubt it had anything to do with her accomplishments. Put that way, it sounds like..."if she'd just tried harder, perhaps she could've been". But it had nothing to do with that, and everything to do with the bastards who wouldn't recognize her no matter what she did.
[It does feel that way, though. That if only this other self had worked harder, put in more hours, outsmarted those bastards-- but no. She's being stupid. She knows for a fact that it wasn't a matter of laziness or dull wit; too many women in history have been overlooked and dismissed solely for their gender.
Perhaps it's a case of her being too hard on herself. It isn't that she doubts this other Rosalind; she simply holds herself to an impossibly high standard, and hates the thought of falling short, no matter in what context.]
Perhaps that's why she published the book. To spite them. I'm surprised it was published at all, in those circumstances.
. . . you're right, though. And if her theories really were so radical, perhaps that's why they wouldn't give it to her. Because they dismissed her as someone too fanciful.
[There are a handful of reasons why she might've brought that last bit up, of course. Perhaps she's trying to connect with him in some meaningful way, to share the experience that's taking place. Perhaps she's simply objectively noting a similarity.
But it's also possible that she's trying to deflect discussion off of the topic of her and these enigmas onto a different, less personal tack, and while he can respect that, it also rubs him wrong to let the topic of conversation turn onto him and his frivolous anxieties when he's supposed to be supporting her instead.]
The fact that you snapped at Majima this morning...you're bottling this up, without giving it an outlet. But sooner or later it's going to get free in some capacity, you know that.
[She wishes, suddenly, that she had wine. It's a stupid idea for half a hundred reasons, especially tonight, especially with him, but perhaps this would all come a little easier if she was tipsy.]
The truth is, Fawkes, I haven't any idea how to give it an outlet. I don't usually-- I don't. Ever.
...It's not hard to guess what might make you angry. And I don't care if you need me to be a target for your anger. If it ends in catharsis for you, I'm fine with it.
[It might work. He certainly knows her well enough to bait her, and she's on edge enough that it wouldn't take very much. She'd get angry, and she'd snap and yell and tear into him for no reason at all save that it would vent her fury, and he'd endure it all for her sake.
But she's been angry all day. And despite the fact he's willing, Rosalind doesn't want to get angry at him, not him.]
. . . I'd rather a distraction. I know it's not, perhaps, what I ought to be doing, but . . . it's what I want.
[They haven't yet started those lessons, but perhaps now is as good a time as any. Her fridge isn't particularly well-stocked, but nor is it bare; she's certain they can pull something together. And she'll be able to focus all her attention on the lesson, instead of that damned book.]
...All right. Do you happen to have eggs and rice?
[English recipes, she'd said, and maybe that's what he ought to be trying to come up with instead, but when she'd mentioned cooking his mind had immediately gone to comfort food, and obviously his definition of comfort food has its roots somewhere else.]
[It's instant rice, but it's a full box, so they'll have plenty. She gets to her feet and tugs out a box of a dozen eggs, then glances over at him, waiting for instruction. This is going to be something Japanese, clearly, but that's perfectly acceptable. It'd be more interesting than an English breakfast anyway.]
[For a second, he hesitates, visibly seeming to debate with himself about something. But whatever answer it is that he settles on, he seems to be committed to it, folly or not.
Which is why, when he crosses over to her, personal space goes a little by the wayside as his hands come to rest on her shoulders and he steers her over to stand in front of the stove where he wants her.]
The proper ratio for rice is a half-cup of water for every third-cup of rice. That's an important ratio to remember because one third-cup of rice is approximately one portion. All right?
[Oh. Oh, well, and though she doesn't resist, she does blink down once or twice at the stove, taken aback by the way he moves her so efficiently.]
--all right. So a cup of water, then, and two-thirds of a cup of rice, if it's for us.
[There's a pot already on the stove, and she has a set of baking cups, so soon the pot is filled. It doesn't look like much water, and that doesn't sound like a lot of rice, but she trusts him.]
That's right. Water only first; you'll not add the rice until it's up to a boil.
[He reaches over, finding the top that fits the pot in question and retrieving it for her.]
Bring it up to a boil first, and then call me. I'm going to see what else you have in the refrigerator.
[Which is a liberty so egregious it's almost an invasion of privacy, in a way — and yet there's something of a change that's come over Fawkes right now, it seems. He's more decisive than usual, more gently commanding in the way he's smoothly steering things, and the obvious implication here is quite simply that somehow, this sort of crisis management — or this sort of tending to someone in distress — is something he's done plenty of times before.]
[Having little else to do, she leans back against the counter, watching him curiously. It's odd to see him so commanding, but not so strange she finds it disquieting. He gets a little like this when she puts him in charge of things in the classroom: doing a lecture instead of her, or instructing the students before an exam. But she's never seen it like this, in so intimate a setting. He moves as if he has every right to be here, going through her refrigerator and picking out what he likes.
It's fascinating to watch.]
There's bread, if you want to add toast to all this.
[But beyond that . . . she has most of the staples. There's some chicken breasts and ground beef; quite a few vegetables, which suggests Rosalind is planning on living on salads for a bit. Quite a few leftovers, too.]
[Oh, well. Good, vegetables are just what he wants, really, and he sifts through them with quiet purpose, picking out the ones he wants and bringing them over to her — onion, carrot, garlic if he can find it.]
We'll see how you like it without, first. You don't happen to have soy sauce somewhere, do you? I know that might be a bit of a particular thing to stock.
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[He falls quiet, just for a moment.]
...But you did. So regardless of all of that...here we are.
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. . . I won't ask you to stay, if you don't want to. If you're not willing to, to-- if you don't want to do this, I shan't hold it against you. I'll give you a ride home and we can pretend this never happened.
[But hangs in the air between them, unspoken but implied. But if you want to stay . . .]
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[She stares at the wall, and he just watches her through his careful now-gray eyes, waiting patiently for the moment when her attention will return to him — because he knows it will.]
I'm not going anywhere.
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. . . we might as well sit.
[She does, at least, sitting in the same spot she had when he'd come over to grade those undergraduate papers.]
I'd offer you wine, but I don't think that'd be a good idea. Not tonight.
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Either way, it ends up with the two of them sitting, his body angled toward hers almost instinctively as they find their positions.]
No, I think you're right about that.
[For several reasons.]
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[She nods towards the book, still safely contained in his arms.]
I've never published a book. Papers, yes, but I've never had enough material to justify publishing an entire book. But she has. She thought she had something to say that was so important that she was justified in doing so. So whatever theories she had, they had to be particularly radical.
[She drums her fingers on the table.]
I looked it up. Why she calls herself Madam. The first woman to get a doctorate in the nineteenth century was in 1874, and she was in Germany. England was fairly conservative during that time. I can't imagine that Rosalind could have gotten it.
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["Her." Does it make it easier, talking about the person she once might've been as though she's a completely different entity to begin with?]
Her era worked against her even more than your own circumstances did, is what you mean.
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[She hesitates.]
. . . I lost my temper at Majima this morning. We were talking about fighting, and I told him I couldn't understand the urge to brawl. He replied it was because I was a woman.
He didn't mean it offensively. But I took issue with it, and rather chewed him out for it, far more than was called for. And in part, I think, it was because of that thought. That this other self, this . . . other Rosalind, dealt with so much more sexism than I have. So much so that she couldn't even accomplish getting her doctorate.
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[He says, quietly.]
I doubt it had anything to do with her accomplishments. Put that way, it sounds like..."if she'd just tried harder, perhaps she could've been". But it had nothing to do with that, and everything to do with the bastards who wouldn't recognize her no matter what she did.
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Perhaps it's a case of her being too hard on herself. It isn't that she doubts this other Rosalind; she simply holds herself to an impossibly high standard, and hates the thought of falling short, no matter in what context.]
Perhaps that's why she published the book. To spite them. I'm surprised it was published at all, in those circumstances.
. . . you're right, though. And if her theories really were so radical, perhaps that's why they wouldn't give it to her. Because they dismissed her as someone too fanciful.
Rather like your fears on your own dissertation.
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[There are a handful of reasons why she might've brought that last bit up, of course. Perhaps she's trying to connect with him in some meaningful way, to share the experience that's taking place. Perhaps she's simply objectively noting a similarity.
But it's also possible that she's trying to deflect discussion off of the topic of her and these enigmas onto a different, less personal tack, and while he can respect that, it also rubs him wrong to let the topic of conversation turn onto him and his frivolous anxieties when he's supposed to be supporting her instead.]
The fact that you snapped at Majima this morning...you're bottling this up, without giving it an outlet. But sooner or later it's going to get free in some capacity, you know that.
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[She wishes, suddenly, that she had wine. It's a stupid idea for half a hundred reasons, especially tonight, especially with him, but perhaps this would all come a little easier if she was tipsy.]
The truth is, Fawkes, I haven't any idea how to give it an outlet. I don't usually-- I don't. Ever.
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[It's a tactful question, one that comes couched very carefully in a soft expression and the steady gaze of wide gray eyes.]
Like a brushfire clearing dead undergrowth. Sometimes a controlled burn can be a beneficial thing to the long-term health of the ecosystem.
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[She meets his gaze. It's so startling to catch grey eyes instead of green ones, and she wonders if it's just as shocking in return.]
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But she's been angry all day. And despite the fact he's willing, Rosalind doesn't want to get angry at him, not him.]
. . . I'd rather a distraction. I know it's not, perhaps, what I ought to be doing, but . . . it's what I want.
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[All right, well. No pressure. What does he do when he needs a distraction?
...Plays video games or scales the sides of buildings. Uh.]
Watching a movie of some variety, perhaps?
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[They haven't yet started those lessons, but perhaps now is as good a time as any. Her fridge isn't particularly well-stocked, but nor is it bare; she's certain they can pull something together. And she'll be able to focus all her attention on the lesson, instead of that damned book.]
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[English recipes, she'd said, and maybe that's what he ought to be trying to come up with instead, but when she'd mentioned cooking his mind had immediately gone to comfort food, and obviously his definition of comfort food has its roots somewhere else.]
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[It's instant rice, but it's a full box, so they'll have plenty. She gets to her feet and tugs out a box of a dozen eggs, then glances over at him, waiting for instruction. This is going to be something Japanese, clearly, but that's perfectly acceptable. It'd be more interesting than an English breakfast anyway.]
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[For a second, he hesitates, visibly seeming to debate with himself about something. But whatever answer it is that he settles on, he seems to be committed to it, folly or not.
Which is why, when he crosses over to her, personal space goes a little by the wayside as his hands come to rest on her shoulders and he steers her over to stand in front of the stove where he wants her.]
The proper ratio for rice is a half-cup of water for every third-cup of rice. That's an important ratio to remember because one third-cup of rice is approximately one portion. All right?
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--all right. So a cup of water, then, and two-thirds of a cup of rice, if it's for us.
[There's a pot already on the stove, and she has a set of baking cups, so soon the pot is filled. It doesn't look like much water, and that doesn't sound like a lot of rice, but she trusts him.]
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[He reaches over, finding the top that fits the pot in question and retrieving it for her.]
Bring it up to a boil first, and then call me. I'm going to see what else you have in the refrigerator.
[Which is a liberty so egregious it's almost an invasion of privacy, in a way — and yet there's something of a change that's come over Fawkes right now, it seems. He's more decisive than usual, more gently commanding in the way he's smoothly steering things, and the obvious implication here is quite simply that somehow, this sort of crisis management — or this sort of tending to someone in distress — is something he's done plenty of times before.]
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It's fascinating to watch.]
There's bread, if you want to add toast to all this.
[But beyond that . . . she has most of the staples. There's some chicken breasts and ground beef; quite a few vegetables, which suggests Rosalind is planning on living on salads for a bit. Quite a few leftovers, too.]
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We'll see how you like it without, first. You don't happen to have soy sauce somewhere, do you? I know that might be a bit of a particular thing to stock.
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