anya (
homelovefamily) wrote2018-12-14 11:37 am
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[its beginning to look a lot like syvatki]
Somehow an idea had become lodged in Anya’s head and gotten thoroughly stuck there.
She was going to have a Christmas tree. Very little could be done to talk her out of it and fortunately thus far no one had truly tried. Passing by the various stands and stalls that had popped up across the city as she had gone about her daily business had put her in the spirit of the holiday in a way she hadn’t been in years. The day that they were all counting down to might be wrong (it was January 7th not December 25th), but she was going by getting a tree later in the month it would last the entirety of Svyatki.
Last year she hadn’t quite been ready to celebrate the holiday, hadn’t known quite what to do. Christmas had gone away with the Bolsheviks and Gleb had arrived and she had been all over the place. This year would be different. This year she was making it count.
Dressed for the damp and cold weather, albeit in fewer layers than she would have back home, she’s carefully studying each of the trees in the small lot. Her breath is forming a gentle fog around her, her expression serious. Gleb is thoughtfully by her side. There had never been a question in her mind of whether or not he would join her. This celebration was just as much for him as it was for her.
Then she spots it.
Giving Gleb’s hand a gentle tug she scampers over to a tree that is a bit on the scrawnier side. “This is it,” Anya declares, letting go of his hand to run her hand over the branches. “It’s perfect, don’t you think so?”
She was going to have a Christmas tree. Very little could be done to talk her out of it and fortunately thus far no one had truly tried. Passing by the various stands and stalls that had popped up across the city as she had gone about her daily business had put her in the spirit of the holiday in a way she hadn’t been in years. The day that they were all counting down to might be wrong (it was January 7th not December 25th), but she was going by getting a tree later in the month it would last the entirety of Svyatki.
Last year she hadn’t quite been ready to celebrate the holiday, hadn’t known quite what to do. Christmas had gone away with the Bolsheviks and Gleb had arrived and she had been all over the place. This year would be different. This year she was making it count.
Dressed for the damp and cold weather, albeit in fewer layers than she would have back home, she’s carefully studying each of the trees in the small lot. Her breath is forming a gentle fog around her, her expression serious. Gleb is thoughtfully by her side. There had never been a question in her mind of whether or not he would join her. This celebration was just as much for him as it was for her.
Then she spots it.
Giving Gleb’s hand a gentle tug she scampers over to a tree that is a bit on the scrawnier side. “This is it,” Anya declares, letting go of his hand to run her hand over the branches. “It’s perfect, don’t you think so?”
no subject
Carefully she walks in a deliberate circle around the tree, admiring it from multiple angles. There is a pretty sizable bald spot that she'll just turn toward the wall, but nothing horrible. It's sweet, almost earnest. Coming around the other side of the tree, she looks up at him expectantly.
"I've thought it was ours for quite some time now. I mean, it isn't practical for you to have to stay so far away. It's almost wasteful really, when it could be useful to someone else and you fit so well with me by the sea." Pausing, Anya takes a deep breath. "Don't you like the idea of it being ours?"
no subject
She's hard to say no to, though, and she does, in a roundabout way, have a point about practicality. They don't really need two separate apartments. They'd pay less rent, and he wouldn't have to travel most of the way across the city just to see her. There's something that feels fairly incredible about knowing that she would want him there, anyway, that she would be willing to take that step despite all the reasons they'd have not to.
As far as he's concerned, he can't cross much more of a line than he has already.
"I didn't say that I don't," he points out, certain that she must understand what a serious subject is at hand here. "Just that no one ever told me that I moved in." And he hasn't, though he occasionally finds belongings of his at her apartment. It's just what she seems to be asking of him. He offers her a thin little smile. "Usually, as far as I know, that's a conversation, not something one person decides."
no subject
The comparison to her parents is one that Anya will keep to herself. They don't often speak of the tsar, but they were more than figureheads to her. They were her family and he knows that. But that's different from having it rubbed in his face.
She gives a little nod of acknowledgment. It certainly is typically a conversation, but she had decided that he was hers and she had said as much. She wasn't going to give him up and having him properly in her flat made so much more sense. "You are correct, but I felt that we could skip the conversation as we already know how it will end," she points out as she moves to step closer to him, tangling her fingers in his scarf. "I know it isn't proper, but I would be your wife in an instant if you asked me. I just want my home to be yours too as well as be practical about it."