anya (
homelovefamily) wrote2018-02-17 11:29 pm
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[no one falls in love under fluorescent lights]
The party had been different.
It certainly had more in common with the occasional ball that she remembers from her childhood with their bright lights and beautiful dresses and so much champagne than the few other parties she’s been too. Memories keep slipping in more and more each day, leaving her a little unsettled. How does she fit that life, those memories with their ups and downs against the last ten years? It feels like she is two people.
Still she had gone to the party and marveled at it, feeling both at home and strangely disconnected. The cocktail she’s had has done nothing to help those feelings. Deciding to not stay too late was for the best.
Her coat isn’t buttoned, the bright red standing out against the paleness of her dress. The curls in her hair have loosened to waves and she’s certain that she’s leaving a trail of glitter in her way as she walks home. It’s late, but it doesn’t feel far and the cool air feels good after the warmth of the crowd.
Valentine’s Day is a foreign holiday to her, dedicated to a saint that she can name and speak to, but feels no connection to. It’s supposed to be all love and romance, a day to cherish those you love and pursue those that you want to love you.
She doesn’t know much of that kind of love. Anya’s felt that quickening of her heart, the warm pleasant feeling that comes from the mere sight of someone special, especially when their attention is fixed on her.
Her mind might be full of tumbled up thoughts of love and the past and how far she’s come from where she started, but the years have taught her to always be hyper aware when she’s alone at night. Darrow might be safer than some places she’s been, but it is still a city. Movement coming from a cut through walkway catches her attention and she freezes under the light of a street lamp, body tensing for a fight.
The figure moves and is caught by the light from another streetlamp. Realizing who it is, she relaxes a bit. Not fully, but more than she was thirty seconds ago.
“Good evening Gleb,” she greets, trying to sound calmer than the adrenaline in her veins says that she is.
It certainly had more in common with the occasional ball that she remembers from her childhood with their bright lights and beautiful dresses and so much champagne than the few other parties she’s been too. Memories keep slipping in more and more each day, leaving her a little unsettled. How does she fit that life, those memories with their ups and downs against the last ten years? It feels like she is two people.
Still she had gone to the party and marveled at it, feeling both at home and strangely disconnected. The cocktail she’s had has done nothing to help those feelings. Deciding to not stay too late was for the best.
Her coat isn’t buttoned, the bright red standing out against the paleness of her dress. The curls in her hair have loosened to waves and she’s certain that she’s leaving a trail of glitter in her way as she walks home. It’s late, but it doesn’t feel far and the cool air feels good after the warmth of the crowd.
Valentine’s Day is a foreign holiday to her, dedicated to a saint that she can name and speak to, but feels no connection to. It’s supposed to be all love and romance, a day to cherish those you love and pursue those that you want to love you.
She doesn’t know much of that kind of love. Anya’s felt that quickening of her heart, the warm pleasant feeling that comes from the mere sight of someone special, especially when their attention is fixed on her.
Her mind might be full of tumbled up thoughts of love and the past and how far she’s come from where she started, but the years have taught her to always be hyper aware when she’s alone at night. Darrow might be safer than some places she’s been, but it is still a city. Movement coming from a cut through walkway catches her attention and she freezes under the light of a street lamp, body tensing for a fight.
The figure moves and is caught by the light from another streetlamp. Realizing who it is, she relaxes a bit. Not fully, but more than she was thirty seconds ago.
“Good evening Gleb,” she greets, trying to sound calmer than the adrenaline in her veins says that she is.
no subject
The completion of her question, the answer he doesn't tell her, all of that possibility just hangs in the cool air between them. Would he have told her that she was more to him than just a notion, a thing worth dying for? Would he say that she's a woman, flesh and blood, and that doesn't have anything to do with ideals at all? Anya wonders if she's a fool for thinking that she is more than just a failure of duty to him. If she was a friend and that is why he stayed his hand. She wants to believe that they are friends now, that she hasn't been fooling herself. That her heart isn't leading her astray. It hasn't before. It led her to Paris and while that didn't go quite the way that she had hoped for, that she had fled in angry tears back to the hotel, what Gleb has told her offers odd promising.
Without all of her memories, her instinct and intuition is all that she has left. It is tell her something now. Encouraging her to keep going, that it will be okay. Another possibility remains.
"Yes, exactly. There are certainly worse things. It could be expected and unlucky," she lets out a small laugh, a mirthless thing as she tries to grasp at a levity that has fled as awkwardness returns. Did she bring it back when she moved her hand? She was just reacting to his lack of response, going forward when there was nothing telling her to stay that particular course. "But you're right. Luck will always matter, as will having a strong and steady heart."
Those words, thought months ago as she looked over Paris are echoed here. Fear, luck, and having enough courage to keep going. All of those are necessary, but for this city and for this walk. The smell of the cold ocean makes her sigh happily, memories of Russia carried on them mixed with sand and salt and fish. "When I close my eyes, the air smells like it does on the coast of St. Petersburg."
no subject
They've spent more than enough time on that subject for one night, though, especially when it's one they've never addressed outright before. Besides, she sounds too content when she mentions St. Petersburg — it doesn't occur to him to correct her on the name and point out that it's Leningrad now — for him to want to take that away from her. "At least it's one thing that's almost the same," he says, looking back over at her with a faint smile. The reminder of home, albeit not his first home, is indeed a welcome one, however different their surroundings might be. Then again, he doesn't much care where they are. To have her walking beside him is enough, even if it means resisting the temptation to take her hand in his or wrap an arm around her shoulders and draw her close. The chill in the air, mild as it is, might give him an excuse for the latter, but he would know his real motivation, and as such, can't bring himself to act on it. "It must be nice, living out near the water."
no subject
It will never be Leningrad. Not to her. Not even when it was changed to Petrograd could she give up on St. Petersburg. It was the city where she was born, where her father was born, where so many of her ancestors called home. It was the beating heart of a Russia that no longer exists. It was the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics when she left, the borders closing like a wall behind her as she jumped off that train. Sometimes when she passes by the train station, she can hear the song of farewell echo just as much as she can hear the gunshot that took Count Ipolitov from this world and into the next. He never got the freedom that she knew, never got his escape.
"It is," she says inclining her head towards him just in time to catch him smiling softly at her. A warmth heats her cheeks and she is glad that the cold and dark conceals it from him. How could she possibly explain it when she herself doesn't fully understand it? The heavy weight of the conversation from minutes before is shifting away. It is the most that they've ever talked about it, possibly will ever talk about it, but there had been a faint release in it. Like a breeze from a window that has been opened after being stuck shut. A smile starts to bloom across her face as the water comes into view and her apartment building along with it. "When the summer comes, I will have my windows open all the time, just to take it in. It is nice now, not so noisy or crowded, but we'll walk the boardwalk in the summer and just enjoy it, won't we?"
no subject
"Yes," he agrees, as if he could do anything else, his smile widening just a touch as he sees her starting to do the same in turn. "I suppose we will." The boardwalk is all closed down now, only a handful of shops open year-round, but the structures all still stand. It's easy to imagine how beautiful she would look, illuminated by the colored lights, but he tries to set the thought of that aside quickly. The present is far more important, even if he has to bury a faint disappointment that they're nearing her building. At least the discomfort from moments ago has subsided, leaving them to end the evening on what he hopes is a nice note. "Something to look forward to, perhaps?"
no subject
She gives him another smile before moving to extract her keys from her too-small purse. Holding them in her left hand, she guides them to her apartment door, glad that there aren't any stairs for them to walk up. In her heels that would be almost treacherous.
The conversation has turned back to a nice, mellow note, but here at the door of her flat, she is almost sorry that the night is truly finished. It always had to come to an end. They couldn't keep walking for forever, but part of her wishes that it could go on. But barring inviting him in — an idea that makes her heart pound — this is all that there is left.
Sliding her key into the lock, she turns it and opens it just enough before turning back to him. "Thank you for walking me home, I appreciate it," she says softly, as she looks up at him. Then an impulse seizes her and she takes a step and brushes quick kiss against his cheek. It's more of the ghost of a kiss than any actual contact.
Returning to the ground, she steps back into the doorway. "Goodnight, Gleb. Please get home safe."
And just like that, she steps into her apartment, sparing a brief glance back at him as she closes the door.