Booker DeWitt (
amonglions) wrote in
lucetilogs2013-12-24 10:05 pm
Christmas tiiiime
Who: Bioshock Family House! (and friends)
What: ITS CHRISTMAS! And they're going to be civil to each other dagnabbit
When: Christmas?
Where: The Bioshocker House!
Summary: Everyone is happy! Food! Presents! Puppies? Proposals! WAIT WAHT?!
Rating: P for words starting with P.
Tree? Check. It's pathetic and almost half the pine-needles are missing from getting dragged into the house.
Ornaments? Check.
Christmas dinner? Well...there's food, at least! Robert and Booker might have raided the supermarket for all the microwaveable and appropriate foods to have for Christmas. There's microwaved chicken, microwaved mashed potatoes, microwaved green beans that are really soggy and smell funny, microwaved rolls, and microwaved ham. Because there should be variety, damnit. There's also a pie sitting in the microwave, waiting. And vanilla ice cream.
Booker wouldn't call it a feast or anything but it's not like there's absolutely nothing to be seen.
They haven't gone all out or anything for the first Christmas they're spending together, nobody here really has the Christmas spirit to do it. Either the Luteces don't remember how to do Christmas or they just don't care - the latter is more likely and Booker hasn't done Christmas in decades so it feels off to even find a tree. Booker doesn't know if Elizabeth ever got to celebrate the holiday in her tower but as far as he's concerned this should be good enough.
What: ITS CHRISTMAS! And they're going to be civil to each other dagnabbit
When: Christmas?
Where: The Bioshocker House!
Summary: Everyone is happy! Food! Presents! Puppies? Proposals! WAIT WAHT?!
Rating: P for words starting with P.
Tree? Check. It's pathetic and almost half the pine-needles are missing from getting dragged into the house.
Ornaments? Check.
Christmas dinner? Well...there's food, at least! Robert and Booker might have raided the supermarket for all the microwaveable and appropriate foods to have for Christmas. There's microwaved chicken, microwaved mashed potatoes, microwaved green beans that are really soggy and smell funny, microwaved rolls, and microwaved ham. Because there should be variety, damnit. There's also a pie sitting in the microwave, waiting. And vanilla ice cream.
Booker wouldn't call it a feast or anything but it's not like there's absolutely nothing to be seen.
They haven't gone all out or anything for the first Christmas they're spending together, nobody here really has the Christmas spirit to do it. Either the Luteces don't remember how to do Christmas or they just don't care - the latter is more likely and Booker hasn't done Christmas in decades so it feels off to even find a tree. Booker doesn't know if Elizabeth ever got to celebrate the holiday in her tower but as far as he's concerned this should be good enough.
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"You won't have to pick." It was a promise of sorts, though she would have no idea just what the real meaning behind it was yet. "I think we've come to a sort of truce for the moment. Chalk it up to the spirit of the season."
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But he'd eat it anyway, because it was the thought that counted most, and he wanted to make her happy. Not that she seemed to be lacking in happiness at the moment, not with that sparkle in her eyes and the pink flush on her cheeks from the chill of the air. This entire evening had been perfect so far... with any luck, things would continue that way.
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When Elizabeth ran up that snow drift, he only hesitated for a moment before climbing up after her, curious as to what she wanted to do up there. It wasn't hard to see when he got to the top, however: they had a nice view of the plaza and the surrounding houses, many of which had been decorated for the holiday with lights or assorted other decorations.
A quaint scene, if Gai did say so himself. Very fitting for Christmas. And though Christmas lights still brought back unpleasant memories, even he had to admit that they provided a beautiful contrast to the white blanket of snow.
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"It's a nice view. The snow and the extra lights makes it better than it usually is."
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He turned to look down at her and slipped one arm around her waist to help balance her as she leaned on him. The view was nice, yes, but this wasn't exactly the most stable place for them to be standing. The last thing he wanted was for them both to end up in a heap at the base of the snow drift because one or both of them lost their footing.
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Living in Columbia, above the cloudlevel, Elizabeth had realized that she didn't get cold as quickly as most people, but the heat nearly killed her. Not that she wasn't getting cold out in the snow, but she figured Gai would be cold soon and they would want to go back inside to the fire.
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True, Japan wasn't known for being extremely cold, but he was bundled up enough that he didn't really feel the chill too much even despite the falling snow. Besides, he had no intentions of going back in until he'd accomplished what he'd asked her out here to do in the first place. All he had to do was get her to the bridge nearest town...
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It would be worth it if it got her to laugh, as it no doubt would. Still, he was going to save it for after the very important question, because nothing would kill the mood faster than being soaking wet and freezing cold.
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If the smile on his face was any indication, he clearly had something in mind by this.
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"We can't go back to your place, you know. Booker will have something to say about it, and I wouldn't be able to take your side."
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He was risking a playful punch and he knew it, yet it was the truth-- Gai was an opportunist and hardly the shy sort. Besides, despite what it might have seemed like sometimes, he wasn't ALWAYS thinking about sex, especially not when there were more important matters at hand.
"This has nothing to do with that-- I promise."
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"Well if it doesn't have anything to do with you making advances on me, what else could it possibly be about?" she said teasingly.
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She did ask for it, after all.
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supposedlyand a while for Elizabeth too. But now that things were calming down with her return to Luceti, she was starting to remember things like how long it had been since she and Gai had been alone."It's why I haven't been making much of a concentrated effort..."
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Had he not been planning what he was, he wouldn't have objected at all if Elizabeth had wanted to continue things in that vein. The pleased look on her face doesn't escape his notice, that much is for certain. But he brought her out here with a purpose in mind; anything else is secondary to that.
It's with no small bit of reluctance that he takes her hand once more to lead her out onto the bridge, where he stops in the middle, just admiring the falling snow and the silence of the evening.
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Elizabeth was very unsure of what was happening now. One minute Gai had been warming her up very nicely, the next he was pulling her back to the bridge--away from the fountain, she might add--and stopping to watch the snow. Of course, when Gai stopped, Elizabeth did too. And she watched, and swore she could almost hear the snow collecting in their hair it was so quiet. After a minute or so of watching, the weight of the moment got to her and she turned to Gai, looking worried.
"Gai... is everything alright?" He was, in her opinion, acting strangely.
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Nervous though he was, the smile on his face was genuine and held not even the slightest hint of conspiratorial intent, belying the force with which he gripped the ring box in his pocket.
He could do this. He wasn't going to back down now. All he had to do was ask one question... how hard could it really be?
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"I know you must be tired of hearing me say this--" Elizabeth chuckled and brushed at her nose when a snowflake landed on it. "But I'd never dreamed I would ever end up here. Watching the snow, on the ground, while in love."
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He'd planned the entire thing out, written out how he was going to broach the subject and lead into the question itself the same way he would have planned out one of his missions at home. Now, however, in the face of the actual moment, he found that everything he'd come up with just seemed so... trite.
Maybe some things really were better unplanned.
"I could never get tired of hearing that from you any more than I could get tired of experiencing this." A deep breath. "And I want to keep on experiencing things like this with you, now and for the rest of our lives. I want us to be able to watch the snow together like this every winter for however many winters we have, and in several years I want to take our children out to play in it the way we never could."
His heart was hammering, his voice betraying the faintest hint of uncharacteristic nervousness as he spoke.
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