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[personal profile] xmarkstheshot 2025-07-14 12:36 am (UTC)(link)
[Now there's a thought. Gustave tilts his head a little at the idea. Maelle is a Paintress and she did live in that manor once; why wouldn't she be able to create a door from her memories?]

It certainly seemed large enough. Surely there's some crawl space or storage room we missed that could take us back in.

[How that all works remains a mystery to Gustave. Even though he lives in a world where debris from the Fracture hangs suspended in time above and around him on a daily basis, he's still a man of scientific leanings. Engineering relies on logic and facts that are absolute, not merely feelings or flimsy ideas. But those manor doors all led to one place despite the impossibility of their locations Sometimes there are just things one has to accept.

Like the idea of this Europe being mind-numbingly larger than Lumiere and the Continent as a whole. Gustave blinks at the map, as if seeing it with new eyes now that Verso had cleared up a few things.

Well, cleared up is generous. What a country is continues to elude Gustave, but going by context clues, he thinks he understands some idea of it. If Lumiere is one city, and countries can consist of hundreds of cities, then this world, this Canvas, can act like its own small country. Right?

Verso continues and he leans in a little closer to look for this place that he points out with the butt of his pen. A very small country, compared to its neighbors.]


...Oh.

[Thinking about how often he stared out across the ocean toward the Monolith, the distance always felt so vast. What was it that he had written all those years ago for Emma? That they'd let the Paintress' body lie at the end of the world? If the Monolith is the literal edge of the Canvas, the all-too-real end of their world, and it's only as big as that sliver of a country in this book, then what might other countries' views look like?

Gustave studies the shapes for a moment again, his finger tracing those lines separating the names once more. Then, a ridiculous thought crosses his mind and he breathes out in amusement.]


Imagine trying to throw rocks to the end of some of these places. My arm's good, but it's not that good.
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[personal profile] xmarkstheshot 2025-07-15 04:44 am (UTC)(link)
[He could stare at the map and notice something new every time he blinks, but movement in his periphery distracts him. Verso sets out a stack of napkins on the table between them and Gustave looks almost longingly at the pain au chocolat in the other man's hand. It truly does look magnificent, the right amount of flake, the slight sheen of sweetness, the tease of chocolate inside that peeks out from where Verso has bitten into it. Gustave feels his mouth water and he swallows before remembering that the entire box is on offer.

All right. All right! Just one.

He reaches into the box and pulls out another pain au chocolat, smiling in thanks toward his host before taking a bite. It's a testament to his strength that he holds back a moan when the perfect combination of sweetness and texture hits his tongue. Mathilde is blessed with more talent in this one area than he suspect he'll ever possess. Lumiere is so lucky to have her.

Gustave indulges in another bite before he even realizes it, but picks up a napkin to dab at his mouth just in time to softly laugh into the fabric at Verso's answering jest. International holds no meaning to him, but he can guess as to its intention all the same.]


If a rock can cause so much trouble, then I worry for this Europe.

[Then again, it isn't as if Gustave understands what relationships between countries are supposed to be like. Maybe it's similar to neighboring apartments and their inhabitants. He imagines throwing a rock through someone's wall or window would earn him angry looks and shouts. An incident, indeed. Perhaps Europe's sensitivities aren't as misplaced as it may seem.

The short lull in conversation gives him time to continue eating, at a reasonable pace, of course, and not at all like he hasn't had a simple pastry in approximately thirty years. It's only been a week, in actuality. Such a lack won't have him wasting away any time soon.

Silences can't last forever, though, and Verso breaks this one with a question Gustave should be able to answer easily, but instead leaves him at a momentary loss. The act of throwing rocks had always been an outlet for his frustration, nothing much more. Growing up in a dying city, simply waiting for his turn to either fade away, too, or do something about it left Gustave somewhat restless, after all. But to think that that one useless hobby passed itself onto Maelle...

Gustave sets the napkin and pastry down, his smile sobering.]


Yeah. Yeah, I guess she did.

[Legacy takes many forms. Or, at least, habits can be learned.]

She gave me more grief for it than anything, though. Tough critic, that one.

[A glance toward Verso and a tilt of his head, signifying he doesn't mind such a presence in his life. But he casts his eyes downward again, eyes not focusing on the book still laying open between them, and speaks a little more softly.]

She only started throwing rocks when we were on the Expedition, as far as I know. I joined her once or twice, before...

[He trails off, smiling dropping completely. Years have passed him by and dulled some of his memories, but even with some fuzzy details surrounding that night, his death remains clear enough if he thinks about it. Which Gustave, naturally, tries not to do. Except the fact that he and Maelle were going to let off some steam by indulging in his hobby right before Renoir attacked him makes it nearly impossible not to dwell on the unfortunate truth of things.]

I didn't realize it would leave quite the impact.
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[personal profile] xmarkstheshot 2025-07-18 05:30 am (UTC)(link)
[The silence grows around them and Gustave regrets saying as much as he has, even if it hadn't been that much in actuality. It's made things awkward, surely; alluding to death is never a fun conversation, but especially not when its subject sits right here in the flesh, alive and well against all odds. Gustave doesn't want to put Verso on the spot like this.

And yet, Verso takes it well enough, though some moments pass first. They both have to regain their metaphorical footing, find safer ground so as not to truly spiral down within each other's company. Verso speaks again, a quirked smile offered in understanding, and Gustave raises his head to meet his gaze, genuinely curious what he has to say about Maelle's life outside of the Canvas. Except that life sounds...unhappy.

If his mother were the Paintress, though, Gustave wonders how he would act. But that's not a fair thought; what he knows of the woman is shrouded in so much resentment - misdirected anger, he is aware - that it would be difficult to truly sympathize. When so much of his existence had been dedicated to finding a way to free Lumiere of its death sentence, he couldn't just reconsider. And yet, he thinks of something he had told Maelle back on the Expedition. How the Gommage made people complacent.

Gustave glances down again and taps a finger against the table a few times before answering.]


I think...when someone considers an outcome hopeless, it's easier to just sit back and accept it. Why make an effort if you're sure it won't change anything?

[That doesn't make it right or okay, but it's human. It makes sense. Gustave isn't immune to those shortcomings, either.

The praise laid before him takes him by surprise. Gustave raises his head again, eyes a little wide, but then shakes it with a little smile of his own.]


No, it's... I just listened to her. Gave her space, but let her know she was always welcome and wanted with us. It didn't always work, but she was a kid when we took her in. A kid who lost too many people already. You can't just fix that.

[A small shrug.]

I've always been proud of her, though. Every day she woke up and gave even the bare minimum was still better than nothing.

[But then to hear that Maelle wants to take after him...

Gustave can't help it. He laughs softly, feeling his neck flush, and raises his flesh hand to rub at the back of his neck. It's too much. Not flattery - okay, maybe it's a little flattery - but some acknowledgment that his guardianship hadn't been a total disaster.

Gustave's tongue gets the better of him and before he knows what he's saying, it's already out there.]


Oh. Well. As long as she keeps all her limbs in the process.

[Is that a bad joke? That's definitely a bad joke.]
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[personal profile] xmarkstheshot 2025-07-19 03:26 am (UTC)(link)
Complacency is its own prison. The bars are just harder to see.

[Harder to see, but not necessarily as trapping. While the Paintress was active, Lumiere still functioned. People still went about their business. Did their work. Fell in love. Had unrelated celebrations. The looming shadow of death may have always been there, but happiness still shone through like errant rays of sunlight. That's probably what made it easier to give up on the Expeditions, though. Knowing that life was still livable and comfortable enough. Good enough.

Even Maelle fell into this trap, even if she always reminded him of how much she wanted to leave the island and felt like she never belonged. But she still spent time with him in their favorite rooftop garden. They would talk about silly things they had seen during the day, or Gustave would help her with her take-home lessons where he could, or they'd just stare across the ocean and whatever number damned them all that year.

37. 36. 35. 34.

It had just been a matter of time until they could do more than wait for their turn.

Verso's laugh nearly shocks Gustave out of his thoughts. The other man has shown amusement tonight, but this might be the first genuine laugh he's heard. And at Gustave's expense. That's fine, though. If he can be a source of humor for someone who actually needs it, then he'll let himself be something like a clown.

Gustave's smile returns as he laughs in turn.]


Oh, she has taken me on one-handed. She's a much better fighter than I'll ever be.

[As much as Maelle felt she never fit in while living in Lumiere, she did take such a distinct interest in fencing and kept up with it enough to hone her skills. He was happy she had that kind of hobby, but had no idea how beneficial it would become later on. He can only imagine how useful her talents had been on the Continent after he was gone.

No need to think about that. Verso gestures to his arm and Gustave glances down at the prosthetic hand. This wouldn't be the first time he's shared the story of how he lost his arm. It isn't as if he's made it off-limits to Verso, either.]


Sure, I'll trade. Though I fear this particular story isn't all that exciting.

[He pauses, chewing on his lip for a second as he considers if his next words and suggestion are crossing a line. But since Verso did invite him over...]

I...might be a better storyteller if I had some liquid courage, though. If your offer still stands, that is. Ah, forget I said anything if you've changed your mind! I'm happy to just chat.
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[personal profile] xmarkstheshot 2025-07-22 04:12 am (UTC)(link)
[Hearing Maelle's skills be praised by someone of whom she thinks so highly gives Gustave a fluttery feeling in his gut by proxy. She really did make battling look so easy; Gustave's arm had been one of their trump cards, so to speak, but it could hardly compare to Maelle's talents.

He remembers on at least one occasion thinking that she was one of the people he was doing everything for. Those who come after. And if she already showed such promise at her age, then she would be such an unbelievable asset for the future. Except, Gustave realized just as quickly, her time had been that very same now, same as his. Same as Lune's and Sciel's. How fortunate her strength had manifested so well back then, but, at the same time, Gustave wishes there hadn't been a need for it. Or that it didn't need to be so desperate for their Expedition.

It's okay now, of course. He mustn't lose sight of that. But even as he smiles at Verso in agreement and pride of their shared sort-of sister, a distinct sadness settles into his gut. He tried his best. If only he could have done better and kept her out of trouble entirely.

The leg slapping breaks him out of his thoughts. Gustave gratefully allows it and follows Verso's nod to take note of the facilities before the man makes his way to the kitchen.]


Thanks, Verso.

[The urge to follow him to the kitchen nearly spurs him into action, the need to offer any help butting heads with the expectations of being a well-behaved houseguest, but Gustave finds the strength to resist. This is Verso's home and he seems perfectly capable of gathering up ingredients on his own. What Gustave can do is clear a space on the table they've been sharing. He wipes his fingers on the discarded napkin and takes the open book in hand again, glancing almost longingly at the map of Europe one more time before gently closing it. When the book is returned to the shelf, Gustave lets his fingers run over the spine of it, then momentarily over its neighbors. So much knowledge, right here, under his fingertips. Forbidden, in a way, but so close.

He resists the temptation to draw another book free and instead takes his seat again as Verso brings everything to the living room and begins the drink-making. Neither says anything for the duration, Verso focused on his task and Gustave almost entranced by the process. The sugar cube slowly melting, the green-hued drink lightening as the water mixes in, the glass filling ever higher.

Before too long, the drinks are finished and Verso offers one to Gustave, who reaches for it, only to be taken off-guard when it's pulled just out of his grasp.]


Oh. Oh, no! This is perfect.

[He takes the glass this time and raises it in a kind of salute toward Verso, waiting for the other man to do the same.]

Santé.

[As he brings the glass to his lips, Gustave can smell it clearly, warning him for what he's getting into. He takes a sip, the alcohol bitter on his tongue, but cut through with that sweetness. Still strong, though, and Gustave takes a moment to let it slide down his throat, a dull heat following in its wake.]

...Well, that is certainly potent. But not unpleasant.
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[personal profile] xmarkstheshot 2025-07-23 02:50 am (UTC)(link)
[Lifting his glass for another sip, Gustave pauses as his gaze drifts over Verso's own glass. A glass that is considerably less full than his own. Concern etches itself across his brow, but he says nothing. Verso isn't a friend, barely even an acquaintance, so suggesting that the man slow down in his own home feels like overstepping. Even so, witnessing this act alone speaks volumes. People don't generally drink liquor like this as if they're dying of thirst. Even the idea of gulping half the glass down nearly makes Gustave shudder.

As he sips again, taking this at a steady pace, Gustave silently vows to keep an eye on Verso. At least for now. At least until the spirits eventually dull his own senses and thoughts as he's sure they will. For Verso's sake. For Maelle's, too, since she loves Verso dearly. Everyone deals with things differently. It's just that Gustave hasn't the slightest idea what Verso is dealing with in the first place.

He won't push right now. Gustave gets the feeling in his gut that Verso wouldn't be apt to share. On the other hand, maybe artists being strange people bears some weight and Verso genuinely likes the taste of absinthe. Best not to make any assumptions. Just watch. Listen. Be kind and attentive as long as he's able.

The question deserves some consideration and Gustave gently swirls the cloudy contents of his glass as he thinks.]


I still find wine preferable, but I understand the appeal here. There's a...

[He struggles to find the words regardless of his efforts, the hand of his prosthetic turning in circles like it can stir up the correct sentiment.]

A bite that rouses the senses and the mind. Wine is smooth, while this almost seems to say, 'Hey, don't fall asleep yet.' Or is that stupid? Pretentious? I dunno. But moonshine, eh? Did you make it yourself?

[Verso spent decades out on the Continent, after all, so he wouldn't exactly have access to proper drinks, as far as Gustave is aware. Unless the Gestrals had their own vineyards or breweries. That's an interesting thought, though, and he can't help but smile into the glass as he takes yet another sip.]
Edited (hello html my old friend~) 2025-07-23 02:51 (UTC)
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[personal profile] xmarkstheshot 2025-07-23 09:17 pm (UTC)(link)
[Earlier, on their walk from the Opera House to Verso's apartment, their conversation about the Fracture and differences between the world outside and Old Lumiere and this Lumiere hadn't been...stilted, exactly. Verso still answered when Gustave asked, but it hadn't been information he seemed eager to share. And this brief glimpse into an aspect of his life on the Continent probably isn't much different, but it's more than a simple yes or no answer. So Gustave listens, rapt in remembering anything about their old history, forgotten and untended. Personal bits and pieces that wouldn't make it into a history book anyway. The life of a single man, out there in the wilderness. Alone.

Gustave's chest aches at the thought. Time spent to oneself is always important; he needs it pretty often, despite the joy others bring him and the love he desperately wants to share. Verso feels like a solitary creature, too, but where Gustave's moments of privacy are meant recharge, this apartment in all its darkness and near emptiness almost stifles. Does Verso feel the same way? Or does he prefer the solitude? And yet, he had invited Gustave in so easily.

He swirls the drink once, twice, then sips again, his tongue and mouth acclimating to the bold taste more each time.]


You make do with what you have, right? I'm sure you became intimately familiar with the land, too, in order to master that aspect of it. Though, it...must have been terribly lonely. I can't even imagine. I was only on my own for about a day, after...

[Mm. No. That's still too much.

Gustave inhales a little more sharply than he intends and takes a larger drink this time. Time to start over, focus on something else that doesn't embrace him within the arms of shame and anxiety, even after all these years.]


I never made a habit of drinking moonshine, but I remember when I was ten or eleven, I think, I snuck a taste of my father's whiskey. My grandfather had passed not long before and I remember these little snippets when I was much younger of seeing the two of them drink together in the evening. They looked, you know, refined and comfortable and...I dunno, I must have been sad. Maybe just curious. Probably both, to my detriment.

[A little laugh and a shake of his head.]

Let's just say, I wouldn't go near the stuff for years because of its taste. I sympathize.
Edited (changed some dialogue wording~) 2025-07-24 03:56 (UTC)
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[personal profile] xmarkstheshot 2025-07-27 07:49 am (UTC)(link)
[Ah, right. Immortality. The others had told him about Verso before, of course, and the other man's special circumstance, but it still takes him off-guard to hear it mentioned so casually, eyes widening for a moment. Then again, Gustave supposes when he's lived so long, it's only natural to speak so nonchalantly, as natural as breathing. He recovers quickly enough and shakes his head with a little laugh.]

A horse? That really must have been some dreadful stuff.

[Gustave imagines how desperate he would have to be in order to drink something that reprehensible, regardless of mortality status. The thought of the taste alone would probably ward him off, but the idea of drinking to either forget or drown - not foreign concepts - makes his chest hurt for Verso's sake. Assuming that's what Verso was doing, but then why drink something awful for fun?

Gustave lifts his glass for another sip, but stops short as Verso continues. There are worse things to be than lonely. That...makes him think, lowering the glass and swirling the contents slightly. Loneliness has gripped him more times than he'd like in his past and it always left him feeling morose and melancholic and without someone else to be a buffer to his thoughts, his mind - usually an asset - turned into an enemy, telling him things that hurt and cut and made him doubt.

To think that that isn't the worse experience for some people.

His eyes follow Verso's empty glass, its contents gone worryingly quickly, but when he doesn't prepare a second drink, Gustave relaxes somewhat. Pacing. That's good. Something he should tell himself but doesn't, finally taking that new sip.

Loneliness feels awful, but he gives Verso the benefit of the doubt and considers his other point. The word freedom jumps to the forefront of his mind, but that doesn't seem quite right. That word usually constitutes more joyful imagery, not drinking homemade alcohol because there's no other option.]


No more constraints.

[Said quietly, head cocked slightly to the side.]

I don't know if I would have ever looked at it that way. But different experiences breed different results, right? It's...definitely something to think about.

[Perhaps a little too quickly. It strikes him, then, that Verso, who has been existing and living out in the wilds, has returned to Lumiere. Does he still feel the same way?

Gustave looks to Verso again and, with tongue already loosened by the absinthe, asks.]


Would you still rather live out there?
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[personal profile] xmarkstheshot 2025-07-27 10:56 pm (UTC)(link)
[He shouldn't have asked it. Gustave immediately wishes he could backtrack the last few seconds and just not have said anything. What a stupid question, first of all. If Verso wanted to live elsewhere, why would he sequester himself here when he undoubtedly has connections on the Continent? Then, worst of all, it's personal. It would be as if someone asked him if he would rather have his flesh arm back. Of course, he would, even if the prosthetic has its own advantages.

Gustave bows his head marginally in embarrassment, but Verso laughs. It brings Gustave's gaze back to his face, where he sees neither sadness or anger written there, but something more like...acceptance. As if this question is leveled at him often or the thought crosses his mind regularly. And then the reason he stays here becomes clear, obviously so.

A small exhale and a little shake of his head precedes Gustave's answer.]


Sorry, that was... I got ahead of myself again.

[A corner of his lips quirks up.]

I guess you could call it an old habit. We knew we didn't have a lot of time left, so no time to beat around the bush. Probably.

[This time he takes a sip of the drink and sets it down, lazily tracing one side of the rim with a finger. Maelle. She really feels like the lynchpin to...everything. Of course, she saved helped save this world, but even before all that, back when Gustave was still part of the Expedition, he couldn't immediately discount the nightmares she had. Why had those mysterious people visited her, the youngest of their group, and not, say, Lune, who was clearly the brains of the operation? She had been important somehow, but Gustave would never have guessed to what extent. And now, despite the Expeditions having come to an end and the original Paintress being ousted from her Monolith, Maelle still manages to hold them all together.]

She has that effect, doesn't she? I blame her eyes. They're very...big. It's like she could cry at any second if you tell her no. Not that she would. She's too stubborn for that. But the threat is there.

[Gustave would laugh, too, except Verso's returning question pulls his brows down into a slight frown. Has Verso noticed something he hasn't?]

What do you mean?
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[personal profile] xmarkstheshot 2025-07-29 03:23 am (UTC)(link)
Oh. Right.

[Figuring herself out makes sense, Gustave supposes. Maelle had confessed similar to him on the Expedition, but she had been sixteen then. That age comes rife with confusion and frustration and he hadn't been surprised by it, especially not with the added stress of the Continent being anything but welcoming for them.

She had been sixteen then, not now, and yet Gustave still doesn't lay any blame on her. Just because they all grow older doesn't mean the world suddenly reveals its secrets to them. It isn't as if they hit thirty years old and Know What To Do. Having a more stable life makes things easier for him, sure, but he remembers the fluttering of uncertainty in his gut on multiple occasions after his resurrection:

Sophie answering yes. Sophie placing his hands on her still-small belly. Holding Henri in his inexperienced arms for the first time.

That unpredictability shared by all living people is where the similarities end, though. Even imagining the memories of two separate lives, let alone trying to keep them separated, nearly gives Gustave a headache. The alcohol doesn't help, swirling in his body in his mind and dulling critical thinking, even after only half a glass consumed.

Well. What's another drink going to hurt at this point? Gustave lifts the glass and takes a larger sip, the burn still noticeable but warming more than attacking now as he grows used to it.]


Very stubborn.

[Gustave sits back on the couch, cradling the glass against his chest as he thinks on his next words. I can't imagine struggling with two lives is a pointless echo of earlier sentiments and his own helplessness. Maelle told me of the fire feels a little too blunt, especially with the Verso-that-wasn't sitting right across from him.]

We all lost some kind of innocence on the Expedition, I think, not least of all Maelle. But then I'm sure she never expected to remember she had another life outside of here. Before, she couldn't wait to leave Lumiere, but now she almost treasures this place. I think the Continent put things into perspective for her. I know it made me question my decisions at times.

[Another pause before Gustave drinks again and softens his voice as he meets Verso's gaze.]

I assume she has a better life as Maelle than she does as Alicia. From what she's told me. I can't blame her for struggling with...with any of it.
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[personal profile] xmarkstheshot 2025-07-31 04:06 am (UTC)(link)
[Verso makes his second drink of the night and Gustave takes note of it, though the concern he felt for the other man's eagerness for drink earlier has lessened, either due to his own imbibement or the conversation feeling suitable for it. How did they get to this point? Wasn't Gustave supposed to share the story of how he lost his arm? But they've gotten far more than their toes wet in this discussion; he can't back out now and pretend it never happened, nor does he really want to. Yes, the subject matter hurts, yet it feels almost necessary. Maelle - Alicia - is important to both of them. If she's struggling with anything then they have their duty as family, in any manifestation of the word, to help her.

Verso shares more, his words doing little to nothing at all to, well, paint the Paintress in a positive light. Gustave never got the chance to meet that Alicia, only knowing vaguely of her existence due to Maelle's nightmares. To hear a mother blame her child for a family tragedy doesn't sit well with him. Was Alicia responsible? Gustave has no idea, but even if she were, shouldn't her mother still display some love and loyalty toward her? Instead she painted another version to bear her...anger? Resentment? It seems cruel. And if that Alicia were just a representation of the Paintress' true feelings, then what is Maelle's life truly like in that family?

Apparently Verso has an answer for that unspoken question, too. He summons a journal and holds it out for Gustave. From the Paintress herself.

Any other time, Gustave's excitement to study anything with historical significance would leave him practically vibrating. To think that he would be so lucky to not only read, but touch an artifact of the Paintress' true life would have been an impossible dream before. Now, even understanding what he does about that woman, it still feels like a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity. Really, it is.

He leans forward and puts his glass down, taking the journal in his hands carefully and with a kind of reverence. It's easy to imagine this journal being displayed in the museum, a memento of a human woman set against a backdrop of an unreachable villain. Is this the only one of its kind? Are more snippets available on the Continent? How many other people have gotten this chance to hold such a monumental object?

But he actually takes in the words and all those previous thoughts blur away into nothingness. The beginning, which must be about the Verso she lost, grips Gustave's heart. The thought of losing a child, a son, terrifies him. Henri is so young still and while the world is safe now without either of Alicia's parents in it, Gustave is no stranger to unfortunate accidents. Humans are fragile beings. People can still die in an unforeseen instant. Sciel's husband did. Sciel nearly did. People get sick. Babies aren't born with all the strength they need. Others had decided to rob the Paintress of the success of the Gommage by beating her to the punch, so to speak, back when she was to blame. If...anything were to happen to his son, would Gustave sound different from the woman who never stopped grieving her own? He may not.

That empathy cracks when she speaks of Alicia, though, and Gustave finds himself frowning even more deeply. It's the dismissal of her own daughter that hurts him. Instead of trying to face their grief together, she instead leaves Alicia alone. Did Renoir help Alicia in the aftermath?

Gustave sets the journal down on the table, still carefully despite his opinion on the secrets therein.]


I, um. I don't know what to say that isn't uncharitable.

[It would be simple enough to expound on his negativity toward a woman he never met, but he hasn't forgotten that she is Verso's mother. This Verso. He still has enough wits about him not to immediately speak ill of her in front of her son's face, painted or otherwise.

Instead, he takes another sizable drink of and exhales while gazing into the cloudy remains of the absinthe.]


I just...I hope I can do better by Maelle than her mother has. I hope we both can.
Edited (oops html eating my dialogue) 2025-07-31 04:07 (UTC)
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[personal profile] xmarkstheshot 2025-08-02 03:21 am (UTC)(link)
[Verso's honesty shocks a little laugh out of Gustave, which he is too slow to cover with his hand. It isn't funny - quite awful, actually - but the situation is ridiculous enough or Gustave is tipsy enough that if he doesn't want to let anger wash over him, all he can do is laugh. He still won't say what's really on his mind, even though Verso has all but allowed it, but that offer makes things a little more comfortable, in a strange way. As if they're on slightly more equal footing and understanding. Just two men commiserating over the same injustice.

He picks up the glass again and swirls the little bit of drink remaining. Verso praises his work with Maelle and Gustave feels his skin flush for reasons not alcohol-induced. It isn't embarrassment, not really. Gustave has never had the grace to accept compliments well, generally mumbling his thanks and shrugging a shoulder. His engineering accomplishments, while admittedly his own, have always been for the betterment of Lumiere and its residents. He shouldn't reap all the rewards when their lives are meant to be simpler and more fulfilling. Humility plays its role, yes, but so does the desire for a kind of anonymity. Too much attention feels terrible to him, like a lantern shined right in his face, blinding and disorienting.

It's similar with his relationship with Maelle and how others have commented on it in the past. She didn't open up to him at first, and she was even more hesitant with Emma, but she did eventually come to trust him. Not that this has ever felt like a competition to Gustave, like he was the one to win her over or keep her from running away from home every so often. Like he told Verso earlier tonight, he just listened to her and openly cared. There was never some huge secret he uncovered to being an older brother or teen-raising that no one before him missed.

Now, to hear the same appreciation from someone who should have a degree more familiarity with Maelle...]


No, I...I just care, that's all.

[Caring got him killed. Caring made her cry and scream and watch as he could do nothing but buy her moments he's still not sure would have mattered if Verso hadn't arrived just in time to save her.

Fuck. The glass trembles in his hand just enough to send ripples in the liquid. Gustave takes a breath, then finishes the drink in one gulp, setting the glass down on the table a little heavier than intended. Sorry.]


Thank you. For looking after her, when I...

[...Well. It doesn't need saying, really. Still, Gustave clears his throat and pushes on, still avoiding certain words, but gaining some of that courage he had sought before.]

When things got fucked. Though, I guess you don't need to be thanked when you did what I imagine was natural. It's still... Well, I'm glad. That you got to see Alicia in her.

[Gustave still sees the Maelle he knew in her, despite the white hair and the ever-present worry and the added maturity, but he misses the teenager who would call him old and needle him into friendly fights. People change. They grow up and find new focus. No one is ever they same person they were as a child.

But he still misses it. Maelle doesn't smile the same as she did. The lines around her mouth and eyes speak of years of life, but he doesn't see happiness etched within. But that's not surprising; everything changed for all of them, perhaps most of all for Maelle. Gustave breathes out and speaks softly.]


She's different, now. Obviously.

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