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[personal profile] xmarkstheshot 2025-08-15 02:46 am (UTC)(link)
[Gustave shrugs in turn and cocks his head to the side, a crooked little smile gracing his lips.]

Maybe.

[An agreement, an acknowledgment that while he believes mankind, painted or otherwise, absolutely has the capability to push forward through hardships, they are all still people. It's possible. That doesn't mean it's easy or seems attainable. It's a common ground between himself and Verso and one that Gustave is satisfied with leaving in this state for now. A hopeful kind of reality. They can always revisit it on another day, assuming Verso would be amenable to his company again. Gustave would look forward to it.

A kernel of pride swells withing him at the praise. The Lumierans really have done a lot. There are the Expeditions that, while all but 33 failed, still laid the path for the following years, making every step toward the Monolith that much easier, or left behind advice and warnings. Even Expedition 66, although having not perished in any heroic way, left knowledge for the future: Don't eat the mushrooms in Esquie's Nest! Every little bit helps. Every little bit counts.

And even back in Lumiere, for the people who didn't go to the Continent, they still lived. Life would go on no matter what, despite the Monolith's cursed number shining upon them at all hours. People still fell in love and had children. Those children played in the streets and celebrated birthdays. The bakeries and marketplaces prepared for each new day. Death may have been coming, but they all knew when. Like Sciel told him at the Expedition Festival the night before they left, Tomorrow comes, but it ain't here yet.

Gustave's smile widens slightly.]


We've had to. It was either adapt and overcome or roll over and die.

[...Hm.]

Well. I mean. Some people still chose that, but...

[That's not what's important and that's not what Verso meant. Gustave waves his prosthetic hand, as if to shoo those negative thoughts away, then glances down at it again. His arm isn't the most intricate it could be, but neither is it completely rudimentary. Hearing prosthetics like his own don't exist in the world beyond boggles his mind. If his apprentices could cobble this together with only the resources Lumiere had, then why wouldn't the other world? Are they in a bad way, too?

So many questions, questions Gustave will probably never have answered. He exhales and looks at Verso again, playfully wiggling his fingers.]


You wanted to swap war stories, right? This isn't really one, but I'm sure you're curious about what happened to my arm. Everyone is. Short story, it was an accident. An accident that waited at the end of a string of bad luck, if you're generous. Or the result of stupid decision after stupid decision, if you're brutally honest.

[He pauses, debating whether or not to give Verso the option to ask for more details or decide his curiosity has been sated. The latter seems unlikely, though, considering Gustave has remained vague about it and will undoubtedly pique more interest than not.]

Longer story? I, uh... I guess it started when Sophie and I broke up.
Edited (just tweakin' some dialogue) 2025-08-15 04:04 (UTC)
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[personal profile] xmarkstheshot 2025-08-17 04:53 am (UTC)(link)
[Watching Verso settle more comfortably puts Gustave more at ease in turn. Not that he was ever truly uncomfortable, just...a little tense. Their choice in conversation hasn't exactly been the greatest, but when one turn flows into another... His own war story of sorts treads safer waters. It shouldn't be. The trauma of losing his arm hardly counts as fun talk, and yet here they are.

Gustave leans back with a soft laugh, shaking his head.]


I'm sure she did. She didn't really know Sophie very well back then, but she always told me we never should have broken up.

[Maybe Maelle was right, though Gustave can't fault Sophie for her reasons back then. And even if he had disagreed, her happiness would always overrule his own. He would never force her to bend to his wants.]

It was mutual, but it left me in a rough place all the same. I, uh...never really got over her. I guess that's obvious.

[You know, since they're married and parents.]

I tried to act normal and go back to my life apart from her, but everyone noticed I wasn't...quite right, you know? I think my sister got the worst of it. We had always butted heads as kids; we have temperaments that don't always mesh well. Em's pretty serious, to say the least, and I try to be open-minded and optimistic. So me being miserable was wrong and she got pretty tired of me being miserable and thought I should have gotten a hold of myself quicker than I did. Not because she's cold or anything like that, but probably because she works better with order and I disrupted all of that.

So I was still a mess over Sophie and butting heads with my sister, but I needed to work on Expedition preparation. Thirty-three was still four years out. I usually worked alone, but I'd help some of the others with research when I could since it was a team effort, in the end. I'd do that more often just to distract myself. And I'd end up staying in the library or elsewhere longer and later than expected, neglecting my own health. And, uh...

[Here, Gustave trails off, gaze sliding to the side as a certain memory flickers back to life for a moment.

Late at night, it was just him and Lune poring over old books. Something about Expedition Zero, he thinks, or maybe that's a detail from another memory seeping in. The two of them accompanied by the warm glow of lamplight. Lune's face illuminated in such a soft way, softer than he'd ever seen her, or at least that he'd ever paid attention to. Lune can be decisively blunt, not the type of woman a man would usually describe as comforting

Nothing like Sophie.

But she was beautiful. She is beautiful, Gustave can admit objectively, and they got along well enough, and he respected her drive and intelligence. And maybe it was the way she held her head up in a hand. Maybe a lock of her dark, dark hair had fallen into her profile as he looked at her - he had looked. Maybe he had gone too long without the touch of a woman - Sophie - and simply didn't know how to act. Maybe he was so fucking tired and had lost all sense.

He kissed her in that library. And then he couldn't bring himself to return for weeks, like a coward.

Gustave keeps all of this in the confines of his chest. Sophie knew, somehow. Probably. Even if Gustave never breathed a word of his failing to anyone, and it seems Lune never did, as well. Verso doesn't need to know. It's not an important detail to this story. He clears his through before continuing, summing up this decision simply.]


I thought I might have ruined a relationship with a colleague.

[His hand finds its way through his hair again, a fidget to keep himself from dwelling on that memory and focus on the here and now. To continue.]

I wasn't taking care of myself, like I said, but I was working on a prototype of the Lumina Converter at that time. Four years isn't long, not when I didn't know what the final product was going to be, so I had to do what I could, when I could.

[An inhale, and he sits up a little straighter. This is where the story ends.]

The prototype was big, much larger than the final product, but I had been running into the problem of the Converter taking in more Chroma than it could feasibly fit. It would all bottleneck before actually converting to Lumina, which would slow down the process considerably, as well as risk the Converter shorting out or worse. Things just...they just wouldn't fit, they wouldn't work. And I was tired and everything else seemed to be going wrong in my life and I couldn't let this one thing go wrong, too, not when it was the only thing I had left going for me. People relied on me. I couldn't fail them.

[Gustave's right arm comes to his left, once again resting on the bicep, just above where the prosthetic connects.]

I don't remember much after the explosion. Probably for the best. Apparently I had tried to load in too much chroma, despite knowing better, and the process went just a little too fast and the chroma grew just a little too unstable and... Well. I was told the blast didn't take my arm off entirely, but it was close. It couldn't be saved. Really, I'm lucky it was only my arm and not my chest or head. I'm grateful I was the only one in the workshop at the time. I'd never forgive myself if anyone had gotten injured or killed because of my recklessness.

[Gustave looks at Verso again and gives another half-smile, then waves his prosthetic about a little bit.]

So, there you go. That's what everyone wants to know. I lost my arm because I was an idiot.
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[personal profile] xmarkstheshot 2025-08-17 10:04 pm (UTC)(link)
[Gustave laughs again, giving his head another little shake.]

Hindsight is still a hell of a thing. I, uh...I definitely could have handled things better at the time.

[And yet, if he had kept his head on straight and not ended up in that workshop at that specific night and not lost his arm as a result of his exhaustion, then Gustave knows that events might have unfolded differently when it came time the depart for the Continent. Although the Lumina Converter is his opus, the contribution to 33 for which he's been remembered, this arm gave him a personal edge, no matter how small.

Sure, even if he didn't have it in the Flying Waters, they probably would have gotten by just fine, but the electric advantage only helped their momentum forward. And elsewhere, when that element took a step back, it still kept him from simply being a man with only a gun and a sword. There are doubtless hundreds of other paths his life could have wandered down from that point that might have changed something just slightly enough, but thinking about them is an of futility. Maybe a little fun for a while to theorize how things could have gone differently, but ultimately not useful.

Gustave shrugs a shoulder in response to Verso's own reply.]


Hey, one less Nevron is one less Nevron. A contribution doesn't have to be big in order to still be productive.

[Though, if the Nevrons hit him back, that implies...]

Unless you're saying you targeted some of the bigger ones. In which case you have my sympathies. I had the...misfortune of experiencing the inside of one of those tall one's mouths, once.

[A grimace contorts Gustave's face and he cannot suppress a shudder.]

I swear I was scrubbing crusty drool off myself for days after.

[Drool, or whatever the hell was in that thing's mouth. Gustave doesn't want to know. If he can equate it more to a dog's slobber than some awful mystery liquid, then that's all the better. And then there was the stench. No matter how many times he washed his uniform, he never could quite get it out. Or maybe it was all mental, which is the worst opponent one can have.

Better not to dwell on that too long. His arm remains a topic of interest and one that Gustave is all the happier to focus on. His expression softens into one of fondness as he glances down at the arm still covered in his suit. His hand slides down length of it, resting on his forearm, and he nods.]


Yeah, they did. After I was released from hospital and was cleared to go back to work, it took a little while to find our rhythm again. Teaching was no different, but I wasn't as, um, hands-on as I used to be. And I could tell the boys felt helpless, too, though they jumped in the second they saw me struggling with something. They never made me feel out of place or less than I was. But things were still different, just a little bit harder. I gave them an assignment to make me a new arm, both as a way to include them in my recovery, and to test their skills.

[He flexes the fingers of his prosthetic, then curls them into a fist, and spreads them wide again. All smooth movements, still working as remarkably well as they did when he finally attached the arm to his stump for the first time.]

We had to tweak a couple of things here and there, of course, but this is basically what they came up with. I couldn't be prouder of them.
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[personal profile] xmarkstheshot 2025-08-20 05:26 pm (UTC)(link)
Fun, ah...

[Gustave tilts his head to the side and frowns. Fighting has never brought him pleasure. Satisfaction, sometimes, especially when it seemed the odds were against them but triumph sided with them in the end. Regret, at other times. If he had been braver on the Expedition or not so damn worried that everything, even the White Nevrons, was going to kill them all - though he considers that concern valid, still - then maybe he could have learned more about the world. Maybe he could have harnessed some of Lune's curiosity.]

Not very smart, though.

[Not everyone was immortal, Verso!

And Gustave doesn't particularly want to think about how such immortality keeps one from being digested, but he hopes he can school his face enough to not look disgusted. That just seems to be a part of Verso's existence. Unfortunate events followed by more unfortunate events.

His own curiosity is piqued with historical accounts and new technology, not necessarily unknown biology. But other talk of the creature in question, this Serpenphare, Verso calls it, does pull Gustave in. Wasn't there a strange snake-like creature that swam impossibly above them when he and Lune arrived at Flying Waters? Then again, quite a lot of creatures went about their business just out of the reach while they passed through. But a massive snake sounds right. Which reminds him...]


Wait. Expedition Fifty's Wheel was destroyed by a Serpent, wasn't it?

[And the Stone Wave Cliffs weren't too far from the Flying Waters. But who's to say this serpent couldn't travel vast distances? Especially if it could fly.]

Do you think it was the same one as your, uh, long-time adversary?

[To put it nicely. Maybe there were more than one flying about, Gustave can't know for sure. And, again, he doesn't want to stick his nose in dangerous situations where it isn't needed, any kind of curiosity be damned.

Arm designs come back up and he has to chuckle at Verso's idea before looking back down at his hand.]


You know, that's not far off the mark. I used to fight with a gun in this hand, and had a lightning pictos attached. Soph got a little tired of it. Kind of got in the way of, uh...

[Well. There are some details Verso is simply not privy to.]

Of taking care of a baby.

[Which is true! After Henri was born, Gustave lost all kinds of sleep, and not just due to a baby requiring constant supervision, but because of any number of anxieties that plagued him. At least having an electric arm was easily fixed, but his own worries have taken considerably longer to alleviate.

Either way. It's not worth dwelling upon.]


Though I suppose your idea would still have merit out in the wilderness. Or at the very least, it sounds fun. I won't deny that.
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[personal profile] xmarkstheshot 2025-08-24 08:21 am (UTC)(link)
Well, there's a difference between seeking out trouble and taking care of it if it seeks you out, but sometimes the end result still falls in our favor -

[But Gustave notices the amused tilt of Verso's lips just a little too late into his explanation, realizing that he's being teased. It isn't the first time he's been baited into an answer and it probably won't be the last. He can pick up on others' emotions well enough, Gustave thinks, and yet this keeps happening. He just easily gets ahead of himself. Too easily, sometimes.

He fixes Verso with a mildly exasperated look, but huffs out a little laugh and gives a shake of his head.]


Yeah, yeah. Okay.

[Glancing back at the table, he notices the pastry he had abandoned earlier and leans forward to take it in his hands, tearing off a little bite. It's cooled down considerably since the conversation has started - and gone to some dark places - but the sweetness remains, bursting on his tongue afresh. It's a far cry from their talk of being eaten by Nevrons; Gustave takes a moment to let the chocolate filling overwhelm his tastebuds and push down any unpleasant memories from years past.

It also gives him a moment to consider what Verso reveals about one of the other Painters, though Gustave isn't sure who he means. Though he seems as if he knows her, so it must not be a random Painter. Perhaps Alicia's sister?]


Hm. Now that you mention it, I do remember most Nevrons being bipedal. What that says about anything, I'm not quite sure, though. I'm not great with metaphors.

[It isn't that Gustave doesn't understand the concept, but seeing past the surface level takes some real focus for him. It's a flaw of his, sure, but something he's accepted. Where Sophie might have sympathized with the Paintress once all those years ago, Gustave never saw past the entity who stole everyone's future. Where Lune could embrace her curiosity and desire to learn more about the Nevrons, Gustave always braced for the inevitable attack, or took the opportunity to strike if given. He doesn't like this about himself, but despite his idealism, Gustave knows that pragmatism is what keeps people alive.

He tears off another bit of pastry and looks at Verso again, taking in the pride on his features.]


So you finally got payback?

[He can't say he'd be any different. There's a certain satisfaction in overcoming a difficult problem, to put it lightly.

Talk of his arm, however, being anything but useful earns Verso another soft chuckle.]


Oh, I see. You're a form over function man.

[Makes sense for an artist, really.]
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[personal profile] xmarkstheshot 2025-08-28 12:49 am (UTC)(link)
[Gustave doesn't expect Verso to explain the metaphors, instead already having decided that it was a moot point. But he does and Gustave fingers slow in their tearing of the pastry as he listens, trying to take it all in and make sense of it.

The monsters we already know. Thinking back on the few types of Nevrons he encountered, Gustave can't say he could connect them to anything in his life before the Continent. They all were just exotic enough in their appearance and so many degrees separate from humans that it was easy to label them as dangerous or enemies. Even if most stood on two legs and clutched weapons with two arms, they weren't like him.

They were monsters. The creatures on the beach with their huge hands that covered what should have been a face, but instead revealed a terror of light. Those same oversized hands that called forth hideous attacks or simply swiped his fellow Expeditioners away. What are they supposed to represent aside from impartial destruction? Though, Gustave thinks, for him, they only inflict fear. Fear and his damned failure by freezing up when he should have made some effort to fight back. So many people died that night. Lucien died for him...

No. No, he can't let that guilt consume him again, not right now. Clea. He lets the name settle in his mind, vaguely familiar after discussions with Maelle, mostly, though she doesn't mention her sister very much, or the rest of her family, really, except for Verso. This Verso. But that's who Clea is. Alicia's sister. He remembers.

From what else Verso shares about Clea, though, Gustave tries to form a better understanding of the woman. A co-creator of this world who also created the very monsters that attack its inhabitants. Isn't that a contradiction? Or did she create the Nevrons because the Lumierans were the Paintress' creations and she wanted to protect the Canvas, as well as remove her mother? It probably isn't something so easily summed up, but then people hardly ever
are.]


I did meet Francois. He was surprisingly formidable.

[Considering he's a rock. Turtle. Rock turtle. And if he was created when things were still peaceful in the Canvas...]

Do you know if he's a reflection of what Clea is like? Because she sounds...

[Unpredictable? Dangerous? Angry? None of these descriptors are what Gustave wants to say aloud to a man who is her brother, of sorts. Verso probably holds affection for her, even if she did try to kill him at first. Gustave is sure he would still love Emma if their situations were similar.]

She sounds complicated. But who isn't, right? We've all got something going on in our lives, even on good days.

[Verso rounds up the Serpenphare anecdote with an an acknowledgment that fills Gustave with warmth. He smiles despite himself, ducking his head a little.]

I'm glad the Converter helped. And the others, of course. That was the whole point of it, but...you know, it's...it's nice to hear. To know.

[That his contribution truly did help after he was gone. For those who come after, indeed.

With some appetite returned to him, Gustave pulls off another piece of the pastry, thinking over Verso's words some more. Specifically how Clea asked him to keep an eye on Maelle. She mentioned once how Verso saved her from the beach, a fact that Gustave is simultaneously grateful for, but which also hurt to know. Could he have saved any of the others? Of course, Maelle would have been most important to him, but...but what if? Even if Maelle has brought everyone back, what if one more person could have been spared the terror and the pain of death?

Stop. Dwelling on this won't help, either. What's done is done. He saved Maelle when Gustave couldn't. That should be appreciated. Gustave takes another, smaller bite, but then tilts his head as he thinks. Verso took her away from the beach. They found Maelle in the Manor.]


Hey. If you were watching over Maelle, then that means... It was you who left the message at the Indigo Tree, right?

[This is probably fairly obvious, but every solved mystery, no matter how small, still feels like a victory.]
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[personal profile] xmarkstheshot 2025-08-30 04:06 am (UTC)(link)
Oh.

[This shines a sudden light on Francois' grumpiness and Gustave suddenly regrets simply thinking of him as only a rock. When there were so many wondrous sights on the Continent, why shouldn't one being such as Esquie's neighbor have his own complex feelings and an actual history? And if he misses Clea, then Clea must not visit often, or for reasons aside from business. Gustave tries to imagine if Maelle were to leave one day and never come back despite how much she obviously cares for him. Would he, too, eventually grow bitter and angry and lonely?

But maybe Clea doesn't visit because she misses her brother and immersing herself in an entire world that he created would be too much. That's a valid response, too, he thinks. Why should she torture herself unnecessarily? It's just that, at the end of the day, it seems someone will always hurt.

He watches Verso drink and lift his glass, assumedly toward where Francois still resides across the sea. Because surely he hasn't actually moved, despite his threat to the contrary. Since he has no drink left, Gustave instead bows his head in his own moment of recognition, however late it is.]


No one deserves to be left behind.

[Or forgotten. Or unloved. Or whatever the case may be between creator and creation. And yet, even as Gustave softly speaks, he knows it's a futile statement. Just because some things shouldn't be doesn't mean the world listens. Sometimes, far more often than not, fairness doesn't get its time in the sun.

And then, another thought pops up with a sense of relief. Maybe it's better in the long run if Clea doesn't visit again. He can't imagine her presence would be harmless, not if her visits according to Verso are anything to go by. Maybe it's better to let some things be.

Thoughts of Clea and poor, unfortunate Francois are easily swept aside when Verso confirms Gustave's theory. There's a fleeting surge of pettiness that rises up within, a nasty feeling, when he thinks that he was right to have believed that message and not worry about it being a trap like Lune had. He breathes in and squashes it down, though. They had both been acting on limited information back then, as well as heightened emotions. Every decision presented to them had been rife with cons.

He breathes out, and allows the warmth of gratitude to bloom in that space instead. Raising his head, Gustave offers a small, but still genuine smile.]


Thank you.

[Then, a little laugh as he shakes his head.]

Who knows how long Lune and I would have stayed there without any other communication. I dunno, I probably would have still set out on my own and either gotten hopelessly lost or -

[Or killed, but he doesn't need to spell it out. He doesn't want to spell it out, not when that fate still found him in the end. A few moments pass with Gustave looking back down at the rather destroyed remnant of pastry in his hand and finally sets it back on the napkin.]

Well. It helped. Having a lead.
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[personal profile] xmarkstheshot 2025-08-31 12:55 am (UTC)(link)
[Gustave's brows knit together as he looks back at Verso. He hadn't really expected any kind of reaction, but especially not an apology. The early days on the Continent were difficult, to be sure, but after that message giving them - or at least Gustave - a metaphorical kick in the pants to go somewhere, they made good progress. Meeting Noco told them how to get to the Gestral Village and Golgra. Golgra directed them toward Esquie's Nest for his help. Francois, of all people - of all creatures - put the Stone Wave Cliffs as their next objective. They all managed to keep moving, to keep getting just a little bit closer to the Monolith and the Paintress.

Would it have been nice to have had a guide, someone who knew the world perhaps even better than the Gestrals or Esquie, to get them to their goal? Of course. Maybe they wouldn't have wasted so much time wandering the Ancient Sanctuary trying to find the Gestral Village. But they still found their way.

Gustave's expression softens.]


You did enough. We were able to continue, thanks to you.

[Though, Verso's other point earns him an acquiescent hum and tilt of the head.]

I want to believe that I would have given you a chance had you come to us then, but...

[He can be honest, too. Gustave doesn't always live up to his own expectations or ideals of others, or himself. He lifts a shoulder in a little shrug and laughs softly.]

But I probably would have been pretty wary of you. Defensive. One unknown Expeditioner had already proven himself a threat, who was to say he acted alone, right?

[That's just good logic, and reasonable expectation. That constant sense of danger really put a damper on the beauty of the world, though, and Gustave's own curiosity. Add that to his list of regrets from his former life. But, like Verso said, hindsight.]

Yeah. It's hard to wrestle with it. And far too easy to get bogged down by thinking of what you could have done instead. I don't know if it helps, but I try to remind myself that, at the time, I did what I thought was best. I didn't have all the information, so I acted on what I did have and what I could see as potential outcomes. It's...sometimes it's an act of forgiving yourself. And that's hard, too, but... Well, that's another subject.
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[personal profile] xmarkstheshot 2025-09-01 12:09 am (UTC)(link)
[Maybe Gustave got a little carried away there, offering more advice than is necessary. Verso is a grown man, after all, but he puts it down to simple habit. When he and Emma had taken Maelle in, he assumed his role once more of older brother, being her guide in a world that had been anything but stable and consistent. Maelle wasn't...a difficult child, not in Gustave's opinion, but rather unmoored. Adrift. Afraid, too, of latching onto anyone else by the time she came into his life. He just needed patience and understanding, and that willingness to try when it seemed everyone else had given up on her.

And more recently, with Henri, though Gustave still isn't sure he knows how to be a father, he's fallen back into the role of mentor. Raising his son has been different from raising Maelle, of course, since he's known Henri since he was born, but a part of it has been made easier because of his time fostering. Though his life may not be the richest or full of countless experiences, he still finds he can draw from enough to help and relate.

Again, Verso probably doesn't need it. He's lived far longer than Gustave ever has, maybe more than he ever will, and lived through far more. His answering affirmation doesn't surprise Gustave, either; this is probably nothing groundbreaking for him.

Except his voice breaks. Gustave leans forward slightly, as if that change in posture will help in any way. Something inside his chest aches for the man despite not knowing why. All Gustave really suspects is they're not speaking of the same thing anymore. Why would Verso feel so terribly over not meeting the 33s face-to-face earlier than he had? Things had turned out okay until Renoir caught up to them again.

There's no way he'll know without bluntly asking and with the new apology given, as well as that clear sendoff, Gustave doesn't dare pry further. Besides, Verso is right, and has clearly reached the end of his social rope. If that isn't Gustave's cue, then he doesn't know what is.]


Right. Yeah. It's late, isn't it? Soph'll think I fell into a hole somewhere.

[He pushes himself to his feet, a little too quickly judging by how his head swims for a moment from the alcohol still marinating in his system, and takes a moment to collect himself. Looking down at Verso, he wants to stay, regardless. Offer a silent presence while the other man works through whatever's going on in his head. He's done it for Maelle and Sciel before, and Sophie, too, but the difference here is that Verso isn't his friend. Even if he's been invited into this apartment, it was more of a social call. And that dismissal, however incompletely given, is final enough.]

Thanks, though. For the drink and the pastry. And the time. It's been...

[Well, nice doesn't feel quite right, but there are worse ways either of them could spend their night, he's sure.]

It's been good.

[That seems a decent compromise. He pats his thighs and takes a few steps toward the door, but turns back.]

I'll let you get some rest. We both probably need it. But, um...I hope to see you around. Have another drink or something, or... Yeah.

[Another moment of hesitation, but then Gustave nods to himself and sees himself out.]