Elizabeth (
tearmeanewone) wrote2013-07-13 11:13 pm
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deux + voice/action
[Voice]
I've-- Oh, wait. Hello Luceti! [Right, she can't just start talking like you do with Voxophones.]
I've recently, this past New Feather cycle, brought two more people into my apartment. Up until now I haven't been... cooking, exactly. [She's been eating whatever she can get ready-made, namely.] Does anyone have any... somewhat simple cooking recipes for two adult men and one slightly smaller girl?
And can someone explain to me how to work the oven...?
[Action]
[Later in the day, Elizabeth ventures out to the grocery store to pick up things for her first cooking adventure! Though it's a trial, even at the store. Elizabeth keeps looking between different things and consulting her journal and looking back at the shelves... and frowning. Because this is all extremely complicated. No wonder this was done for her every day... This would probably take her weeks to figure out.]
I've-- Oh, wait. Hello Luceti! [Right, she can't just start talking like you do with Voxophones.]
I've recently, this past New Feather cycle, brought two more people into my apartment. Up until now I haven't been... cooking, exactly. [She's been eating whatever she can get ready-made, namely.] Does anyone have any... somewhat simple cooking recipes for two adult men and one slightly smaller girl?
And can someone explain to me how to work the oven...?
[Action]
[Later in the day, Elizabeth ventures out to the grocery store to pick up things for her first cooking adventure! Though it's a trial, even at the store. Elizabeth keeps looking between different things and consulting her journal and looking back at the shelves... and frowning. Because this is all extremely complicated. No wonder this was done for her every day... This would probably take her weeks to figure out.]
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I'm looking forward to living with you both and doing everything that goes along with it. I never had to do any of these things for myself, I want to learn how to do it.
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They're adjusting just fine.]
If you want to, then, by all means, do. I simply don't want you to feel it is necessary.
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For now.][Elizabeth smiles and puts a reassuring hand on Robert's elbow.] You're very kind Mr. Lutece. But given you sometimes forget to eat, and Booker... well, his eating habits aren't the best either-- if we're going to live here, I'm going to make sure you both don't starve.
Now-- [She pulls out her journal again.] Is there anything I should avoid for you?
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Nothing at all. I'm not particular with my meals.
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[He opens his mouth to speak, then... stops. After a few moments, he's forced to admit:]
But I can't recall what.
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...You'll let me know if you remember, won't you?
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I don't find it too difficult, the adjusting. Though I think Mr. DeWitt is having a more difficult time than I am.
[...Aside from the "talking to himself."]
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But it's deserved.]
And Mister DeWitt has you.
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But here... he will have to settle for building on top of what's happened. [We both will.]
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I suppose the only thing that could make this better was if Ms. Lutece was here.
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It's a reminder that his world is not only outwardly different but that a key component to his life for the past twenty years is no longer present. In no way, shape, or form.]
I believe Mr. DeWitt and I disagree there.
Re: action:
[Even if it felt like she was holding Booker up right now. It was better than before.]
Well 'Mr. DeWitt' actively looks for reasons to be cantankerous. [Elizabeth smiles softly.] If you miss her, isn't it better to see her instead of waiting and worrying?
[And while Elizabeth wouldn't say this out loud, she thinks Robert's condition would improve markedly if there actually was someone finishing his sentences.]
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Then, Elizabeth goes on, and his smile alters. First thinning, then... he can't keep it up at all. It hits on a thought he's been nursing since he could truly take in what happened since his arrival here.
He'd intended to see Elizabeth back to the New York in which Booker DeWitt lived. He hadn't foreseen how stunning her powers would prove or how resolute she and DeWitt would be. He had not known how to break the cycle of events, how the story would end. And he had only begun to fathom the cost of it.
Without a Comstock, Rosalind would struggle. It was the work of a driven zealot that had funded her grandest creations, that had made her more than just a woman strangely interested in physics. That genius would go unregarded. They might each, in their restarted timelines, discover the Lutece Field again. Perhaps they'd even open the window again. But without Comstock, there would never be a Lutece Tear. They would always be separated.
Robert sighed softly.]
I would like it very much if she was here.
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[After a moment of hesitation, Elizabeth reached out and lightly rested her hand on Robert's elbow.] Well I'm not your sister by any stretch, but I'm here for both you and Mr. DeWitt. I owe you at least that much, for the whistle.
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But he did place his other hand lightly over hers, a small acknowledgement of the gesture.]
If anything, the whistle made us even. I... was deeply in your debt.
[After all, there could be no second guessing how deeply involved he and Rosalind had been in studying Elizabeth all those years, in working for Comstock. Who else could have even begun to understand what she could do naturally, other than the two people who had learned to do it with machines?]
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I saw people throw their lives away for Comstock's sake. And I saw people throw their lives away because Comstock gave them no choice. What would have been accomplished if you had let me out before I could actually escape?
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It's a thought that, over the last half decade, consumed Robert's mind. Rosalind was of the mind to always look forward; Robert often looked back, too. Rosalind did not worry about what she could not change; Robert felt regret.
He sighed softly, withdrawing his hand.]
A great deal.
[He even shifted a bit, as if to loosen her light hold on him, to reinforce that distance.]
It would have been the simplest thing to have taken you to our home. No one would have questioned me, possibly not even Comstock. [Not if Robert had realised his mistake early enough, not if he'd been quick enough.] And there... with our machine? Rosalind and I could have seen you well out of his reach.
[That, perhaps, had been the worst part his last years alive and the years after that: knowing how powerful he had been and how many opportunities he'd squandered.]
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Why didn't you, then? [She pulled her hand back, her expression more confused than angry or betrayed.]
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Because I... [He let out a soft sigh.] I was too focused on my work to look at a wider scope.
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