Dejah Thoris (
dejah_thoris) wrote2015-05-06 01:50 pm
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[oom] A Pot of Tea
This is the part of the project she enjoys the most. The design phase, where ideas start to take form and the project takes on a certain life of its own. She has compiled all the research she needs. She's relatively certain she's aware of all the issues that must be addressed in the final design. Now it's time to synthesize these ideas and put her pens to paper. As form follows function, and evolution has handled refining the design, all she needs to do is adapt the technology to the original biological schematics. Layers upon layers, she builds up the image, from structure to power, sensors to servos. She can't help but put her own aesthetic into the work, and in sketching, she decides that she'll have to fabricate several of the parts by hand.
Woola found his way back and was snoozing in front of the fire. She'd been up since the wee hours of the morning. The rats had brought her morning meal without her even having to ask. Now, she sat at her drawing board, her long hair pinned back from her face, speared through with a quill. At her elbow, a growing stack of dirty tea cups that would have to be addressed sooner or later.
But not right now. She wanted to get the last few pieces of the external forearm onto the vellum, just as she'd imagined it.
Woola found his way back and was snoozing in front of the fire. She'd been up since the wee hours of the morning. The rats had brought her morning meal without her even having to ask. Now, she sat at her drawing board, her long hair pinned back from her face, speared through with a quill. At her elbow, a growing stack of dirty tea cups that would have to be addressed sooner or later.
But not right now. She wanted to get the last few pieces of the external forearm onto the vellum, just as she'd imagined it.
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Maybe a week's longer on Mars than it is on Earth. Who knows. But still, he was expecting to hear something like two months.
"I'd ask if you need help with anything," he says, a bit wryly, "but..."
As previously stated, this isn't his wheelhouse.
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"I wouldn't mind the company. And I suspect you would enjoy a little forgework. It's hot work, but gratifying."
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He slants a puzzled look her way.
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Cautious, he says, "Don't know what I'd use a sword for."
Smaller blades...that's another matter.
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Something to barter with, so that he wouldn't feel beholden to anyone he might have to trade with.
"Or you can just come and keep me company." She reaches a hand out as if to reach for his, but at the last moment, she touches the teapot. Adjusts the tea cannister. The spoons.
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(The question is whether they'd be up to the standards of everyone else here. Everyone who isn't used to working with what they've got, never able to ask for more.)
Curtis watches her fidget with the tea setting; after a moment, he sighs softly and says, "I'd like that."
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It's short-lived, though. The tea is abandoned and she curls her hands in her lap.
"So I spoke to Edgar. Earlier. By the lakeside."
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Already resigned, "What'd he say?"
And just how much of a lecture is Curtis going to have to give him?
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"Nothing too terrible. He shared some of your history with me. And he wanted to know -- 'what the deal was' between us."
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When he looks back to Dejah, though, a touch of wry amusement emerges. "What'd you tell him?"
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"He was very curious to know. I told him the truth. I do not know."
She shifts her mug a quarter turn in her hand.
"I mean, we are friends. And he knows -- that I care about you."
Understatement.
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"Told him pretty much the same thing," he murmurs. "That we're just friends."
His mouth quirks.
"Guess he wanted to hear it from you, too."
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She deflates a bit.
Mmm tea.
"He was -- ah -- very adamant that I should -- um -- be careful."
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"Let me guess." Even more wry. "You break my heart and he'll kill you?"
Goddammit, Edgar.
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"No, it was nothing so dramatic. He was very respectful about it. He cares for you, that's all." Her words taper off.
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The thought puffs away under Dejah's touch, like ice dissolving under the sun. For an instant, his mind stutters before regaining its equilibrium.
"Yeah," he agrees. "I know. He -- " Like the first time he tried to explain, Curtis finds himself faltering again. "We look out for each other."
It used to just be Curtis looking out for Edgar. But as Edgar got older, it shifted a little closer toward something mutual, equitable.
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"Good," she says. "You need someone to look out for you. And he is certainly formidable. Or will be."
She sips her tea, watching him over the rim of her mug with wide blue eyes.
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He hated the way Mason said it. How she taunted him with it. Like Curtis tossed Edgar aside as easily as she would fling unwanted scraps back to the tail, like making that choice to keep going forward didn't mean anything.
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"Oh?"
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"He fought hard," he says. "He fought well. It wasn't his fault he died."
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"Whose fault was it, then?"
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"Mine."
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"Did you spill his blood with your own two hands?"
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