That's twice now we've met up to ponder the mysteries of mysterious parcels. Really, this is getting to be a habit.
[But he glances up, surprised by the question, and his brow furrows as the oddity of the remark gives him pause.]
He...
[He frowns, then closes his eyes as he tries to imagine it, and absently his hand comes up again, thumb up and index finger extended, as he makes a sort of "bang" motion with his hand.]
...A bullet wouldn't reflect off a mirror. He had to have thought it would behave like light would. Light reflects...and I remember him aiming.
[She nods. That seems to be the answer she was expecting, and she's pleased by that. Rosalind's eyes skim up and down Fawkes' form, a gaze purely evaluating, before she nods.]
Perhaps I'll have gotten something new by the time you come by this Saturday.
[For cooking, she means. For when he'll come by her house of his own volition to teach her how to cook, and talk to her, and generally spend a pleasant evening together. Her fingers curl again.]
And ensured I didn't spend all of my college years hiding in the library, yes. I wouldn't have gone out at all had it not been for her. As it is, I can now proudly boast I've gone to a club all of three times.
Ah — no, I like it. The high school prom was rather an extension of that, I think. I like the noise and the energy of a crowd, and the opportunity to simply lose myself for a little while.
[He pauses a moment.]
Admittedly there's a loneliness about it, too. Sometimes a crowd is nothing so much as it is...isolating. But sometimes it's a wellspring of energy, and you can make yourself a conduit for that.
no subject
[But he glances up, surprised by the question, and his brow furrows as the oddity of the remark gives him pause.]
He...
[He frowns, then closes his eyes as he tries to imagine it, and absently his hand comes up again, thumb up and index finger extended, as he makes a sort of "bang" motion with his hand.]
...A bullet wouldn't reflect off a mirror. He had to have thought it would behave like light would. Light reflects...and I remember him aiming.
[His eyes open, slowly.]
But I don't remember a gun.
no subject
Perhaps I'll have gotten something new by the time you come by this Saturday.
[For cooking, she means. For when he'll come by her house of his own volition to teach her how to cook, and talk to her, and generally spend a pleasant evening together. Her fingers curl again.]
no subject
[And that's not actually what she meant, and he knows it, but he interprets it that way anyway, knowingly and willingly.]
What are we making this Saturday? Any requests?
no subject
[And that's the signal for them to relax fully, it seems, because Rosalind settles back against the chair.]
no subject
[He says, as the thought brings a faint smile to his face.]
no subject
no subject
...You have a lot of fond memories of Victoria, don't you?
no subject
[She smiles faintly.]
In truth, I think we worked because we were so different. I was a stark contrast to her typical friends, and she was . . . vivid. Very vivid.
no subject
no subject
no subject
[He glances to the side, chewing the corner of his lip.]
Well, then. I've got you beat in that respect, it seems.
no subject
[Or at least, she hadn't been. Nowadays it seems as if she's a part of it, one way or another.]
You enjoy it, then? Or is it more that your friends drag you along?
no subject
[He pauses a moment.]
Admittedly there's a loneliness about it, too. Sometimes a crowd is nothing so much as it is...isolating. But sometimes it's a wellspring of energy, and you can make yourself a conduit for that.
no subject
[You should show me sometime, she doesn't say, though the words are on the tip of her tongue.]
I'll leave more of your Friday nights open, in that case.