[ she's got herself steeled for rip at his most formidable -- sharp, maybe, and with a sternness that can match her own mark for mark. peggy has armed herself (internally) against the parts of him she's come to appreciate when they're on her side of a line, but which become considerably more daunting when she expects to find them arrayed against her.
but it's a night of burst expectations, it seems, because there's something rather off-kilter about him when he answers his door. enough so to take some of the wind out of her sails, but only a gust or three. the rest stays present and hot. volcanic, really. his plight should engender at least a splash of pity, but mostly it makes her madder.
peggy pushes past him with a brief and chary touch. back of her hand, flat against his arm, nudging him aside. it's not about visiting so much as it is about getting inside and finding a measure of privacy so that what follows isn't broadcast to the rest of the second floor hallway. ]
And you're drunk.
[ she doesn't look at him. how can she, when his words hang like the ghost of someone else's flirtation in the back of her mind. you're late, you're late, you're late. a person is always late, she realizes, right up until the point where late morphs into gone.
she waits for him to shut his door, drinking in the scene. the book, the notes, the rum. that bottle was on the shelf, last week. she recalls it having been full. oh, hell. ]
[She pushes back and Rip lets her--hell, he likely would've stepped aside but visit or not, there's some satisfaction to be found in knowing she wants to walk into his room, if not for any of the right reasons. Yet he closes the door all the same, because as he'd reminded Tony Stark earlier, Peggy is a private person. She won't just let anyone hear her business, oh no.
If she wants to shut a person out, she'll set about to do it completely.]
In case you've forgotten, we're meant to be drunk on Wednesdays. [Not on rum, but alcohol is alcohol, and really, he's much closer to being in the right in this situation than she is. Rip even goes back to his place on the sofa, drops back down and pointedly looks between Peggy and the chair.
She knows how this goes. How it's supposed to go, and Rip expects she'll stubbornly refuse to sit and more: she's take the bait and snap at him, tell him off in someway that might hint at just what the truth is behind her absence before, and her presence now.
He think he rather deserves that truth, point of fact.]
[ she fishes around the back of her throat for the best first barb. about a half-dozen swim there, rising like bile. peggy doesn't look at him again until he takes up his position on the sofa and waits (expectantly) for her to fall in line.
there's her chair, it occurs to her, and he wants her to sit in it. does he want her to recreate what he's missed? one of those comments sitting chambered behind her teeth is a caustic reminder that wednesdays were never about getting drunk. maybe at first, yes, but over time the liquor was only a bonus to everything else.
-- which is exactly why she dismisses that option out of hand. it doesn't serve her purpose one bit. nor does chiding him for his taste in mystery authors. nor, indeed, anything said about his drink of choice. so she stands her ground somewhere between the chair and the door, arms akimbo. ]
Yes, well, I've just spent the better part of my Wednesday evening patching things up with Tony Stark. And for the second bloody time this month. [ --and both thanks to you, she almost spits out, but stops herself just shy of that line. ] Which, by the way, I've been asked to pass on a warning that ringing him up again in future might actually result in an armoured fist colliding with your face.
[As predicted, and while Peggy sees fit to stand with hands on hips, Rip reaches for his glass just in time to hide his grin as everything proceeds as he expects it to. He may be drunk but Rip is hardly a fool.
Though some may wish to argue that notion, and he barks out an annoyed huff when she brings up the name Tony Stark.]
At this point I'd expect him to punch me for breathing in his general direction. [So far as Rip is concerned, he's done utterly nothing to warrant such a reaction from the man--thus he looks up at Peggy with apology in his eyes after he takes another swallow, puts his now empty glass on the table.] I don't suppose he bothered to explain to you just what he's got against me? I am quite aware that most people find me generally unlikable, but honestly, that man has been irate with me from the start.
[Certainly during their conversation at the bar, and before. Rip doubts he's made a single statement that Tony hasn't taken some form of issue with.]
Oh, and for the record? [As there is a point yet to be addressed, and far be it from Rip to let Peggy have the last word tonight.] I wouldn't have rung him at all if you had answered my calls, or informed me of your room number, or shown up here in the first place.
[ at this point, he might as well expect much the same from her. at least there is a kind of telling curl in her knuckles as they sit camped against her hips. once, dugan took an opportunity to warn her that she and the men were running headlong into a trap. at the time, she'd responded with 'that's why we bring the guns,' and peggy feels quite similarly in this moment. whatever pantomime rip's planned, worked and reworked, rigged up in his mind over the past few hours? she's arrived under the full understanding that stepping into his room is a lot like stepping into a staging area: his, and his alone.
but as vindicated as he feels, she feels it equally as much. maybe a touch more when he goes so far as to accuse her of negligence. it's just as well, really, because chasing the topic of tony stark's dislike would only uproot the kinds of confessions she doesn't much care to make. not now, perhaps not ever. ]
Oh, pardon me, [ she hisses, sarcastic, ] I didn't realize I was somehow obligated to be at your bloody beck and call come the middle of the week. Are you somehow owed my company? I think not. What right have you to go combing through my contacts trying to track me down when I should think it's rather obvious I'd prefer to be left alone?
[ it's a bold offensive to take. almost too bold, really, given the fact that she doesn't for a second believe this is about rip suddenly transforming into the prototypical chauvinist laying claim to a woman's time, attention, energy...
but nor does that stop her from bringing out those aforementioned guns: ] Captain Lance was right, it seems. Certain behaviours never change -- not over decades, not over centuries.
[Well, she would hardly be the first to punch him in the jaw should she go that route; hell, she wouldn't even be the first woman. But where she holds back her fists and whatever answers she might have about Tony Stark and his disdain of Rip, Peggy shoots loose and free with all she does spit out at him next. His words come back, twisted into something crude and archaic, and it would seem that Peggy's decided to lump Rip in with so many other men she has no doubt encountered during her time.
It has him rising to his feet, suddenly, smoothly--smoothly outside of a single wobble, at least, one quickly recovered from as he snaps right back at her, leaning forward as the heat of the moment carries him onward.]
Rather obvious, was it? Because my first thought was perhaps that something else had happened to you during the event, or that maybe bloody Wonderland had sent you back to 1947.
[He'd been worried. Worried that some shadow had offed her, worried that this damn unpredictable world had sent her off--
Worried for her.
Worried that someone else he's come to care for would just be gone from his life.
And perhaps it might still be so. She wants to be left alone, suddenly sees fit to see Rip as less a person and more a generic man, complete with idiotic chauvinism guiding his thoughts. It's a sting to be sure, a sign once again of this distance she's suddenly decided to put between them.
But why? It's the one thing he can't figure out.]
Certain behaviors don't change, but yours suddenly have. [He motions towards her with one hand, the other coming to rest on his hip. They don't mirror each other, but damn if it isn't close, with anger and frustration showing in both their eyes.] You were the one who showed up at my door, Miss Carter. I never asked you here, not once, but there you were, every Wednesday without fail, until tonight.
[He's come to count on it, and perhaps that's more his fault than hers. It hardly makes it any less true, however. Hardly makes the sting of it all any less.]
So no, I'm not obligated to your time or your company, but I bloody well think I deserve an explanation as to why you've suddenly decided I don't warrant either!
[ until late morphs into gone, she'd thought. and there, just there, she very nearly betrays a fissure in all her carefully constructed righteousness. because he'd been worried, worried for her, and she's gone and spat all over that worry -- the same breed that had brought her to his hallway when their worst memories were playing on loops.
(god above, is tony right? peggy's eyes dart off rip, only briefly, while she considers whether all this running around isn't somehow juvenile. beneath them both. but then she remembers her 'dark side' and how deeply every claim cut...)
look at his disappointment, she tells herself. she invited it upon him when she underestimated his friendship. she saw it as something not serious enough to rate a check-in, nothing so much as a simple not tonight, mister hunter, when he'd rung her up. all because she turns coward when it comes to pursuing the authentic, the real, the whole. the good. ever since steve...
god! and it's not even about romance. not really, although the first spark of fear found itself lit somewhere near that tender, still-stinging place left behind in her heart. she'd started back-peddling before the event. after they'd danced. what her shadow said only encouraged her.
and maybe he realized it then, but he's only taking her to task for it now. drunk and angry and sitting in the rubble of his routine to which she'd laid waste. ]
You're right. [ too easy, too generous, wait for the other shoe to drop. ] You never did ask me here, not once, not ever. That's on me. I'm the one who showed up at your door. Exactly.
[ she breathes in, offering a small shake of her head while she echoes his words back at him. ]
Let's add it to my very long list of poor choices and bad calls, shall we? [ ah, there it is. there's a sort of look in her eye, as though she's daring him to be anything but livid. anything but hopping mad. challenging him to do anything but throw her out and tell her she may as well never come back. she'd rather see him angry than worried.
less concerned; more cross. it would do wonders for her guilty conscience. ]
[He could. God knows Rip has a temper, and he can act rashly. He's done so before, and to such great peril--death, in fact, or close enough that his crew and comrades watched him with coldness in their eyes.
Perhaps it's that memory that holds his tongue, or some pause provided by the drink, or even a spark of a better thought. But knows Peggy's admission won't be so simple as that easily offered you're right. She concedes in one step, tries to twirl in another, and Rip rolls his head back with a bitter grin even before that shall we? makes it past her lips.
He's angry still, but not stupid. Sometimes the wiser move is to lose the battle--and Peggy's clever enough to know that too.]
Bollocks. [His answer comes immediately, no hesitation or thought behind it. He lowers his head, shakes it (perhaps a bad move, with how it makes the room spin a bit), and now both his hands fall to his waist. He knows better than to fall into this ploy, this trap. Rip has had plenty of time tonight to go over their encounters, to pick through the words they've exchanged not only on Wednesdays, but the times outside of them.
And there's only one that Wonderland has made him forget.]
You said it yourself. You've enjoyed them, as much as I have. [Indeed, the first time she'd shown up at his door might have been when he'd needed it most. Certainly the same could be said of when she ventured into his hall, took a seat next to Rip as he watched over the door separating his memories from this world. Even if Peggy had somehow changed her mind about them, Rip refuses to see those times when she came to find him as poor or bad.
He will not do her that disservice, nor the one of following along with her dance.]
And if you mean to convince me otherwise, then you'll have to answer my question. [A different rhythm is set instead; another dare, and Rip eye's shift away, past her, towards the bottles of whiskey still neatly arranged on the table waiting to be shared.] What's changed to suddenly make this a bad idea?
[ he means to make her say it. trouble is, peggy can't exactly identify what it ought to be. except -- except that it's some amorphous companion to the chest-tightening moment when he'd assured her that somehow, in some way, she was important to him. not necessarily regardless of her service record, but certainly independent of it.
it's not often that she finds herself caught speechless. dooley, in fact, once voiced his very surprise that she ever learned how to keep her mouth shut. but for a little longer she holds her tongue while she watches him look aside, betraying (or is it revealing?) a yearning for his routine to be returned to him. whiskey bottles, criminally undrunk.
no one piece of truth alone would do it, she thinks, and she's unwilling to give up all of them. yes, she'd said it. yes, she'd enjoyed them. yes, it was damned difficult not to return earlier. no, she's not indifferent. no, she doesn't think he's like 'all the rest.' no, her opinions haven't changed. not at heart. she's only made a clumsy attempt to mask them.
clumsy because they'd both been very plain and honest with one another as they'd danced. if not in words, then at least in spirit. it's not simply these little visits -- she's enjoyed him. ]
That's just it, [ she finally opens her mouth -- and there's something nearly apologetic in how her red lips twist in their corners, ] it doesn't matter whether or not I convince you. It won't make a lick of difference.
[ measures must still be taken.
and she won't jump through that hoop simply because he's placed it before her. if he thinks less of her for that obstruction, then so be it. the same can be said for the way she shakes the stiffness out of her arms and turns back towards the door. she'd resolved to reject him before he ever got the chance, before getting tangled together only brought on a pain worse than this. ]
[Rip is not a man to forge bonds easily. He does not trust, nor often reveal the full scope of his plans; he makes decisions on his own, and quite frequently for others as much as for himself. Yet those who have found their way into that circle he holds dear mean more than words can express--and by that same token, their losses cut deep and true, each a knife to the best parts of him, the heart and the humanity that have remained no matter how the Time Masters strived to train it out of him.
He can list them all by name. Leonard Snart, Mick Rory, Kara Zor-El, Sara Lance, Nate Heywood.
Carter Hall. Charles, and by his own hand.
Calvert.
Miranda Coburn.
Jonas Hunter.
And tonight, he'd worried that Peggy Carter would be added to that number. Her death would have been tragic, but at least also undone in the span of a day. Her vanishing, however, he can neither predict nor prevent. One moment she will be there; the next gone, as all who are brought to Wonderland will one day be.
His chest had grown tight at the thought. It does so again now, as she informs him with that unhappy grin that there's nothing to be done.
Nothing he can do to keep her from walking away.
Nothing.
But as time may indeed wish to happen, as this universe might well have some hidden agenda and flow, Rip will not merely let it occur. Not when there is something so final in the way she tells him goodbye, when she swears it won't make any difference at all.
He's the man who would stop at almost nothing to try and save his family. Over and over again.
Peggy isn't dead. She isn't gone--not yet. Rip can still reach out and touch her, so he does. Takes hurried steps when she turns towards his door, dizzied but determined, thrusts his hand forward to grip her arm and force Peggy back to face him. He's no more capable of defining it than she, this thing that's shifting, morphing between them. What has changed that she means to run away from, that perhaps he would as well if he weren't dizzy with anger and alcohol, and the unshakable thought that whatever it is, it's worth fighting for.
He doesn't bother to speak. She may hit him; lord knows he won't be able to much block it in the shape he's in. But he's not about to simply let her go.]
[ peggy believes, for a short while, that she's getting out of here without impediment. but that's different from leaving scot-free, of course, and she does feel an uncomfortable weight wedged between her ribs. in the bathhouse, during the event, he'd offered her so much of his faith. and in the wake, in the aftermath, she fears she doesn't deserve it.
or, instead, she fears that it makes her something lesser. that little bit less capable of standing on her own. how on earth, she wonders, had steve ever managed it? stitching a whole nation's belief into his body. peggy can barely stomach one person's support without turning on them. it happened before, it happened again and again, and it happens now -- even when that support is couched in aggressive, invasive terms.
because unlike her, unlike what she's done, rip hasn't gone as far as reducing her to accusations and flak merely for flak's sake. that had been her chief weapon in this conversation, whereas everything he's said only casts a harder light on how much goodwill and grace they've found within their acquaintanceship--
--friendship, she so stubbornly labels it. and how much he dreads losing any of it.
and peggy steels herself. as lovely as it's all been, what have most of these wednesday nights been but a distraction? from work here, from work at home, from the reminder that these things always seem to end badly for her. friendships and all. with that in mind, she's nearly to the door when he comes stumbling after. his hand on her arm; it's more urgent than she'd first anticipated.
he doesn't need to turn her back around. she makes that maneuver willingly. and with a sigh and a twinge of regret, peggy strikes him hard in the middle of his chest with her open palm. as blows go, it's hardly the worst she could have done. just enough to shock him backward so she can watch him reel a little, wobble on his feet, and watch her with no surprise in his eyes.
rip doesn't let go. instead, they teeter together -- him like a sinker attached to a fishing hook -- and peggy has to haul back on his weight just to keep them both from crashing. momentum brings him nearer to her than when he'd started, and peggy grabs onto the front of his shirt just to steady them both.
for a heartbeat, it's as if they're dancing again. more sluggish, more messy, more ornery. but dancing all the same. and peggy knows how to put an end to it. what he wants, what he's set as the price of her flight, is to know what's made her so determined to regret him. and ordinarily she might accuse him of playing dumb, of already suspecting what's at stake, but the smell of rum on him and the inelegance of the evening make her believe otherwise. does he not realize the sentiment he'd voiced in front of her shadow had been devastatingly mutual? he, too, is important to her.
with another frown, she considers how that blindspot makes him just about as hopeless as steve rogers in that one regard and -- christ, the comparison does neither of them any favours. or maybe it does them too many. peggy can't rightly say while she's staring back at him, following the shifting focus in his drunk gaze. her attention sits stalwart for a moment, then slips down the bridge of his nose, hangs there -- precarious -- on the curve of his mouth.
she's got no words aside from a soft curse beneath her breath. this is exactly why she didn't want to come back here after everything that had transpired: this moment was always waiting in the wings, anxious to play out. building speed ever since they'd danced. and peggy has always preferred actions to words. alright, then, if he wants so sorely to know what's changed...
she kisses him. it's hard and just about as unforgiving as her earlier palm-strike, and about a dozen times more angrily done than the sweet and fleeting affection they'd been forced to share when an event turned him into a stagehand and her into a personal assistant. that, all of that, had been a lie. but this, right here, the way she twists her fingers in his collar and pulls him nearer -- it's honesty she had already decided would have been better left unsaid.
it doesn't last long. peggy decided when it begins; she equally decides when it ends. with a loud pull of breath and the lingering taste of rum, she breaks the kiss. she lets him go with another rough shove. and then she stares at him a moment -- bewildered by her own choices -- before stalking past him and slumping, defeated, into the chair that's long-since been considered hers.
her fingers tap on the chair's arm, electric and agitated. she won't meet his eye but instead busies herself by pouring a drink of (you guessed it) whiskey. friendship, she'd been trying to tell herself. not-bloody-likely. ]
[She sends him stumbling, and not only when she slams her palm against his sternum, knocks him back and threatens to send him sprawling. But he won't go alone, no; that is the one thing Rip has decided this night, and even if it means taking her with him, his fingers tighten around their purchase, hold steady and firm until Peggy too realizes that they stand or fall together. Fortunately she's sober of mind and steady of body; each overcorrection Rip makes is compensated for, and though they wobble they do not tumble down--
Not yet.
Stand together. Fall together--and hell if Rip knows just which it is when Peggy frowns and stares, when her eyes search his face for some spark of understanding, the certainty of that truth he will not let himself see because for all Rip has confessed, for all he understands, one step remains too far for him. It cannot be, it cannot be--
Until she kisses him. Angry and warm, with lips sweetly soft. She kisses him, and Rip's heart thuds heavy in his chest only once before he kisses back. It's not the first time someone has kissed him to shut him up, after all; some part of him must remember what should be done in a situation like this.
Some part must want to.
Yet there's no chance to move his arms about her, to remember that he can touch as well as taste, or let the kiss linger. Peggy's rules, start and stop, and Rip gasps out his surprise when she pulls back almost as unexpectedly as before. This time when she shoves he does step back, once, twice. Steps back and stares, unable to question if he isn't just drunkenly dreaming this all because he can still smell her perfume, and taste her lipstick on his tongue.
He doesn't move when she storms past him to finally do what Rip expected hours before: takes her chair, breaks the silence with the clinking of glass as bottle is raised, whiskey poured.
Rip echoes Peggy's earlier curse as he touches his lips lightly with his fingertips. She need not struggle too hard not to meet his gaze; he has yet to turn around to look at her. Peggy's got plenty of time to down the first glass before he does, though Rip knows from habit she won't need it. He expects she'll take it so much like a shot, one heavy swallow after the next, the liquid burning hot as it goes down.
The first time someone had kissed him to shut him up, she walked away after. He'd had days to think it through. Now, his thudding pulse ticks away the seconds, one after the next.
Seconds, or days. Rip suspects he still wouldn't know just what to think--save one thing.]
she does exactly as he suspects she'll do: she pours, she downs, she lets her head fall back against the chair -- eyes shut -- while warmth blooms on warmth in her chest. like pouring liquor on a fire. unhelpful, considering the effort she'd made to douse it. peggy's sigh is audible. soon after, she sits straight once more and pours herself a quick second. oh, hell, she is far far too sober for this. rip's got the right idea in keeping that leading edge dull.
before her next 'shot,' she presses the tips of her fingers against her lower lip -- drums them, briefly, as she considers her folly. peggy's no stranger to rash gestures of both temper and affection alike. this one had encompassed a bit of both. and she resents him, just a little, for having cornered her into it. it's a confession, albeit an unspoken one.
but she wasn't ever really cornered -- no matter how insistent he'd been that she should answer his question. she could have hit him again. she could have shaken him off and stormed away. she could have done and said nothing. she could have used words and simply told him how much she'd felt like kissing him.
but in the end he's right -- a realization that makes her laugh a hollow little laugh -- because his question has been answered. everything had changed. ]
Yes. [ her voice lifts strong and certain, only a little tarnished after a second measure of whiskey taken once again like a shot. she stares at his back, at a point between his shoulders, and can't decide whether she's willing him to turn around or crumple in place. ] Yes, I suppose it does. Satisfied?
[ she asks with bite, with vexation, with a scrape of annoyance. rip gets what he wants: an answer, and peggy sitting here where she's meant to sit. whiskey in her belly. ]
[Funny; Peggy envies his drunkenness, yet at this moment Rip is not sure if he is entirely too drunk or somehow too sober for all of this. For the second time in less than the span of a week he's wound up wearing a shade of lipstick belonging to Peggy Carter--hell, go back further, and this is by some definition the second time they've kissed. But what the events have spawned are only true in parts and pieces, in matters of physicality more than anything else.
The smudge that comes off onto his fingertips when he worries his mouth (not to rid himself of the lipstick, mind, but rather out of habit) is truly, genuinely her shade.
He's caught staring at it a moment longer before Peggy shoots her bitter question over his shoulder. She mad at him, again, and all for a choice she's made--except Rip knows it not so simple. Much the same way he's never asked her to come over on Wednesdays, but somehow expects it all the same.
His head lowers with a dull huff. She should recognize by now the sound of his unamused laughter.]
I'm truly not sure what I am just now--though satisfied is far from it. [At last he turns, even steps forward to reclaim both a place on the sofa, and the bottle of rum that's been his constant companion this evening. As he had at the start Rip forgoes a glass, merely lifts the bottle by it's neck and drinks straight from the source. Surely she'll understand why.
And if she doesn't--well. Rip is a bit past the point of caring.]
[ they hunker down in this no man's land together, stuck somewhere between should have known better and taken entirely unawares. peggy watches him -- eyes pinned to his frame -- as he reclaims the couch. it's getting easier to look at him. although she can't rightly tell if that's on account of the whiskey shots or the paradoxical confidence swelling in her chest now that the tides have retreated, leaving flotsam and jetsam and driftwood on the shore. she shouldn't feel it, this confidence, but feel it she does. what a coup, to catch him off his guard!
but it all drains away the moment she thinks on how he'd returned her kiss. and peggy has to ask herself whether or not she already regrets ending it. rather than answer this silent internal investigation, she takes her lead from him and forgoes the crystal tumbler (hers, much like the chair) for the whiskey bottle. formalities are eroding by the heartbeat.
oh, but it had been good while it had lasted. the kiss, that is. she'd like to argue that she'd done it to prove a point -- because a point it had most certainly proven. but the uncomfortable truth is that she'd wanted to be roughly so bold for a short while now. there had been a moment, adjusting his lapel at the end of a dance...
peggy swallows a mouthful of whiskey, as if in a bid to catch up. by now she has managed to wash away the rum taste, but just watching him take his own swig reminds her of that sickly-sweet flavour. yes, the kiss had been good while it had lasted -- would it have been better without the tinge of fermented sugarcane? ]
That makes two of us. [ at odds, yet nevertheless on even footing in their uncertainty. she'd stayed away because she was convinced this would all peter out far more smoothly without something like genuine affection mucking it all up.
mock-idle (although she's anything but), peggy leans forward and snags his arthur conan doyle off the table. there's a willful incivility to the way she cards through the pages, losing his spot. ]
Holmes. I'm not surprised. [ she's derisive, sliding her attention onto his choice of mystery -- as though it could ever, ever, ever buy her a deflection from the real topic at hand. as if it could ever distract either of them from the plain fact of what'd just happened between the two of them. what she'd done. ]
[Isn't it nice how they've managed to get so comfortable? Except the room is anything but, the tension lingering heavy in the air as neither seems to know just how to break it. Rip has far less left in his bottle than Peggy, and he envies her that. Never mind that the reason is because he's drunken the lion's share already, slowly sipped over passing hours and turned pages.
Distraction comes as an easy craving--particularly when the alternative is to question what now, what next?
It's not often that Rip lacks an answer to those questions, thanks to his trade.
But he does agree: the kiss had been good. This would be easier if it hadn't been, if something deep and hungry hadn't felt a release when she pressed her lips to his. But opening the gates merely lets air in. Fires burn hotter when they're given fuel, and if their mouths were so occupied, then there'd be no futile need to search for words.
Until there was. They cannot succumb to distraction forever.
Yet he still doesn't know what to say when Peggy reaches over, picks up his book and so childishly shuffles through it's pages. As if she couldn't see the detective's name on the cover; as if she didn't know damn well before she picked it up and decided to inch her way under Rip's skin that much more.
And oh, but it no surprise that she speaks the words with that haughty air.]
You disapprove. [In that Rip finds himself unsurprised. Given her era and her personality alike, Rip expects Peggy might cut her teeth on Dorothy L Sayers or Agatha Christie. But he can summon barbs of his own, especially if they mean to travel down this route. He shifts in his seat, one leg crossed over the other, and does his utter best to look every bit as comfortable as he doesn't feel in this moment.]
Yet it seems you're out to prove yourself every bit as frustrating as Irene Adler herself.
[ they've been here -- exactly here -- time and time again. his room, his spirits, his furniture propping up them both. but they've never been here like this, contrarian and just a few wrong words away from getting at each others' throats.
no, this hour feels much more like their verbal spar by the firing range. he'd been far and away from his better self. and there's a bit of her, a fraction, which is made sad by the comparison. it's that narrow bit which understands how she still cares for him. it's the bit that doesn't want to see him hurt. their weekly sessions had been all about bringing out the best in each other, not the worst.
but it's not wednesday any longer; she's a day late and a dollar short for being the best at anything. except, perhaps, the best at being a massive pain for the pair of them. so peggy carter goes looking for bruises to press.
yes, yes, she disapproves. and in her private thoughts she aligns herself exactly as rip predicts: vane, marple, wimsey, poirot -- each to differing degrees, of course. in a gentler moment she might have forwarded these alternatives while she was bright-eyed and smiling and teasing. as she's behaved, with him, on a half-dozen prior instances. but peggy's armour is up, her hackles raised, and rip as good as scalds her with the comparison he subsequently lays at her feet.
adler! the way in which she snaps the book shut is all the suggestion needed that she understands the insinuation. ]
Does that mean you're casting yourself as our eponymous detective? [ one hand chokes the whiskey bottle's neck while the other uses his book like a prop. she points at him with one of its corners. ] You've got the arrogance for it. I'll give you that much, Mister Hunter.
[ mister hunter. as though taking a kiss from him leaves that particular habit unaltered. so maybe not everything's changed. ]
[Perhaps they can only be their best selves on a Wednesday.
Rip knows he's hit a mark when Peggy closes the book with force, her eyes hot with whatever insult she finds in the comparison. Worse is the fact that he doesn't bother to temper his grin; why should he on this night when they've apparently decides to tear the lid off Pandora's box, let secrets fly out free into the open.
It's all so ridiculous, he knows. They get nowhere with such jabs, certainly no place of significance. And yet in the moment, he can't deny that it's all so immensely satisfying--
Especially when her counter opens such a tempting door.]
Oh, I should think not, Miss Carter. [Though Rip does indeed carry that similar brand of arrogance, and often. Certain of his choices, determined his judgement would find the right path, for whatever definition of right is being quantified at the time. She cannot know it, but he's even engaged in illicit drug use, though without the benefit of his memories to teach him better.
And certainly it isn't humility at all that guides his next remark, one delayed only as he takes another drink of the rum.]
After all--Irene Adler managed to outfox Sherlock Holmes in the end.
[ storm clouds gather in her eye while the lines of her expression tighten. and peggy wrestles with the knowledge that she ordinarily finds a kind of appeal in his grin when it's so unabridged, unmediated. not only that, but she'd actively chased it on one or two occasions. this time, it cuts.
this time, she looks for satisfaction in knocking the damned thing off his face. even before he finishes the sentence, midway through outfox, she's throwing his own damned book at his head. it's not as gratifying as throwing a punch, perhaps, but it'll have to suffice for now.
so, so, so uncharitably: ] So you agree, then. This is the end.
[ you know, she doubts adler ever had to cope with holmes kicking out the legs from underneath her just-patched-up relationship with her not-quite-nephew. from the future. lucky her. ]
[For a moment, between that sense of victory and the booze still mucking about his head, Rip lets out a noise that might almost be a laugh as he ducks the book Peggy's lobbed at him. The whole mess is only funny in that it's damn close to despair, to a feeling of being utterly lost at sea with no oars or compass or even a sun that might help guide one back home.
But perhaps Peggy had been right in her earlier accusations. Just as Rip expects he's got an upper hand in the midst of all this madness, Peggy presents a sharp and sobering proposal.
It does wonders for wiping the grin off his face. Bravo, Peggy Carter.
Rip doesn't answer until after he's sat back up, nor does he quite manage to look at her again. He's not so wasted, even now, to childishly suggest that they simply attempt to go back to Wednesdays at they were, when Wednesdays and whiskey and dances at weddings all led them to this moment.
When he knows that he cannot say with any truth that he wouldn't kiss her again.]
I suppose it's as you said. [The rum gets moved from one hand to the other, Rip's eyes focused on the bottle itself. He leans forward then; stretches just enough to set it back down at it's place on the table.]
It doesn't make a lick of difference what I think. You've gone and made the choice for both of us.
[ yes, peggy made a choice. but at its heart, that choice was more collaborative than he knows. after all, wasn't it rip hunter who encouraged her to take a firm and honest look at her darker side and -- ultimately -- acknowledge it? during their little drama in the bathhouse hallway, she had been confronted with the depth of his regard for her. his trust, his belief. humbling and terrifying both.
perhaps she'd made the choice for the both of them, but as far as she's concerned he was the one who empowered her to make it. peggy can still remember the hitch in her heart moments after she'd pulled her trigger, not yet certain whether her shot had missed him or not. she's chosen not to feel that hitch a second, third, forth time. how many would it take before she got him hurt in earnest?
the whiskey's hit her blood and warmed her body but she's still not so drunk that she doesn't recognize the complete folly in telling him the truth. it's for your own good is never an argument any competent individual wants to hear -- so she'll forgo making it, even if she believes in it utterly. ]
I have. And I did. And I would have expected you to make the same one. [ choice. ] I merely made it first.
[ there's no mistaking her tone. peggy is suggesting she would have found herself disappointed if he'd done anything but. ]
[Now this, this leads them down a curious path. She seems confident of herself, her decision, and that's all well and good. Yet Peggy doesn't stop there; she assumes that in the end Rip would have opted for the same, to end whatever nebulous thing that has somehow taken root between them before it has a chance to see the light of day. And perhaps he would. Perhaps, if he were to think it through, he would realize all the ways that such a pursuit might be a terrible idea. The nature of Wonderland, constantly in flux, the constant threat of either of them being sent home.
Steve returning, untethered to anyone. Miranda, showing up alive and well and eager to see her husband.
But he has not been forced to think it through, nor to decide for himself just what he might do with the knowledge that she's developed feelings for him--and likewise, he must admit, he for her. Instead Rip is given an odd position on the high ground when Peggy so cavalierly spells out her expectations. And suddenly it doesn't matter so much if she's right.
Not when Rip is feeling far more contrary than charitable.
Besides, with the decision made, what harm is there in hypotheticals?]
And why exactly would you expect me to reject you? [Oh, but this sparks a memory for him. A voice sounding out from a broken porcelain face, marred with lipstick too deep a shade of red. They use her, they die--
Or they reject her.]
Bloody hell! [Rip rises to his feet, hand lifted in the air as this revelation crashes in his mind. Perhaps it's not the brightest move, but placing his other palm on the couch ensures his balance is kept.] This is about the bloody shadow, isn't it?
[ until now, it had been relatively simple. aggravating, certainly, but simple all the same. peggy had felt in command of the moment even when she was being quote-unquote outfoxed. letting wedges fall into place, teaching herself to care little and less about his opinion of her, indulging in her temper because maybe (maybe) hurting him might make it easier on her.
but there are no good footings found in the conversation once he's sniffed out the cause-and-effect, the first domino, the catalyst. peggy's annoyance swims alongside her pride, and she can't figure out which to curse first -- his wits or her sentiment. the latter has always been rarer than the former.
she could lie, peggy thinks. and if she lied she also thinks she could fool him -- should she put her best shoulder to the stone and treat him more and more like the opposition instead of the ally he'd started out as. but instead of lie, she tilts back the whiskey bottle. another shot's worth, maybe a shot and a half, before the leans farther forward and places the alcohol just out of reach when she's once more sitting comfortably.
two fingers touch just above her brow in a mock salute. blasphemous, almost. ]
Well deduced, Sherlock.
[ but peggy reassures herself that her choice isn't any less rational simply because he's traced it back to its source. her chin lifts, letting her look at him as he stands. ]
[She drinks and he waits, right up to the moment where she offers him a two-fingered salute that sees him rolling his head back even as he scoffs. Now it almost doesn't matter that her choice is a rational one. The reasons may have fallen in line, but the core of it all, the spark, is something entirely beneath her as far as Rip is concerned.]
So to be sure I understand this clearly. [After all, they've both imbibed a decent amount of alcohol; Peggy's left a fair gap in the bottle she'd claimed for herself during their discussion, and Rip started off drunk, so they really should take the time to be sure they understand each other--especially as Rip is about to be right.] We started this little Wednesday tradition of ours because you refused to let Wonderland dictate our--relationship.
[He nearly spits out the word; even now, it feels too personal, too close to the heart. But if it does for him, then certainly, Rip thinks, it will for her too.
He points a finger in the air now, moving it about as he continues on.] And now, after another event, you've decide to call the whole thing off, and why? Because you think I'm going to turn my nose up at you.
[He shakes his head then, and oh, if she's expected his disappointment, then job well done Peggy Carter. She's earned it.]
You're a hell of a lot better than that, Miss Carter.
[ relationship. she doesn't flinch, not exactly, she's prompted to sit straighter. the word should be multivalent -- but after a kiss like that one? oh, it leaves only one solitary interpretation.
and worse yet, this whole altercation underlines for peggy just how unusual it is for her to reach an incipient moment like this in any (any) of her would-be relationships since she'd been the one to break her engagement at nineteen. by this point, in any other relationship, the other someone would be gone already. dead, fled across whole bloody country, or turned intangible. or shacking up with his best friend. but she's got no comfortable way to tell him so.
the same can be said for their unsteady status as colleagues, as they'd taken to calling each other only recently. because look how poorly that's turned out back at the ssr! the destruction comes full circle, it seems, when her mere presence torpedoes another engagement.
(christ, daniel is the last person she wants to think about just now.)
she's poison, and not only with the men for whom she might carry a torch. but platonic, romantic, fledgling -- she mucks it all up. what few exceptions there are only prove the rule, and perhaps it's howard stark's place on that short short list that makes her so cripplingly afraid to lose tony's esteem in turn. peggy had steeled herself to never come back to this room, on a wednesday or otherwise, but one squabble with tony and her plan lost its legs. ]
I'm not, actually. [ better than that. ] But evidently I have done a bang up job of convincing you otherwise.
[ her fingers bite into the chair-arm, anchoring her as she resists the urge to stand up only so she can exist on the same plane as him. if finds her feet, if she removes so much as one of the hurdles between them by doing so? then peggy can't make herself any promises on staying put. the jury's still out as to whether she'd close the distance to hit him or hold him. ]
And even if it that wasn't the case? Good God, man, this truly isn't the place for it.
[ for relationships. no matter how fondly she still remembers the rousing wedding speech he'd given standing before ray and sarah both. ]
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but it's a night of burst expectations, it seems, because there's something rather off-kilter about him when he answers his door. enough so to take some of the wind out of her sails, but only a gust or three. the rest stays present and hot. volcanic, really. his plight should engender at least a splash of pity, but mostly it makes her madder.
peggy pushes past him with a brief and chary touch. back of her hand, flat against his arm, nudging him aside. it's not about visiting so much as it is about getting inside and finding a measure of privacy so that what follows isn't broadcast to the rest of the second floor hallway. ]
And you're drunk.
[ she doesn't look at him. how can she, when his words hang like the ghost of someone else's flirtation in the back of her mind. you're late, you're late, you're late. a person is always late, she realizes, right up until the point where late morphs into gone.
she waits for him to shut his door, drinking in the scene. the book, the notes, the rum. that bottle was on the shelf, last week. she recalls it having been full. oh, hell. ]
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[She pushes back and Rip lets her--hell, he likely would've stepped aside but visit or not, there's some satisfaction to be found in knowing she wants to walk into his room, if not for any of the right reasons. Yet he closes the door all the same, because as he'd reminded Tony Stark earlier, Peggy is a private person. She won't just let anyone hear her business, oh no.
If she wants to shut a person out, she'll set about to do it completely.]
In case you've forgotten, we're meant to be drunk on Wednesdays. [Not on rum, but alcohol is alcohol, and really, he's much closer to being in the right in this situation than she is. Rip even goes back to his place on the sofa, drops back down and pointedly looks between Peggy and the chair.
She knows how this goes. How it's supposed to go, and Rip expects she'll stubbornly refuse to sit and more: she's take the bait and snap at him, tell him off in someway that might hint at just what the truth is behind her absence before, and her presence now.
He think he rather deserves that truth, point of fact.]
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there's her chair, it occurs to her, and he wants her to sit in it. does he want her to recreate what he's missed? one of those comments sitting chambered behind her teeth is a caustic reminder that wednesdays were never about getting drunk. maybe at first, yes, but over time the liquor was only a bonus to everything else.
-- which is exactly why she dismisses that option out of hand. it doesn't serve her purpose one bit. nor does chiding him for his taste in mystery authors. nor, indeed, anything said about his drink of choice. so she stands her ground somewhere between the chair and the door, arms akimbo. ]
Yes, well, I've just spent the better part of my Wednesday evening patching things up with Tony Stark. And for the second bloody time this month. [ --and both thanks to you, she almost spits out, but stops herself just shy of that line. ] Which, by the way, I've been asked to pass on a warning that ringing him up again in future might actually result in an armoured fist colliding with your face.
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Though some may wish to argue that notion, and he barks out an annoyed huff when she brings up the name Tony Stark.]
At this point I'd expect him to punch me for breathing in his general direction. [So far as Rip is concerned, he's done utterly nothing to warrant such a reaction from the man--thus he looks up at Peggy with apology in his eyes after he takes another swallow, puts his now empty glass on the table.] I don't suppose he bothered to explain to you just what he's got against me? I am quite aware that most people find me generally unlikable, but honestly, that man has been irate with me from the start.
[Certainly during their conversation at the bar, and before. Rip doubts he's made a single statement that Tony hasn't taken some form of issue with.]
Oh, and for the record? [As there is a point yet to be addressed, and far be it from Rip to let Peggy have the last word tonight.] I wouldn't have rung him at all if you had answered my calls, or informed me of your room number, or shown up here in the first place.
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but as vindicated as he feels, she feels it equally as much. maybe a touch more when he goes so far as to accuse her of negligence. it's just as well, really, because chasing the topic of tony stark's dislike would only uproot the kinds of confessions she doesn't much care to make. not now, perhaps not ever. ]
Oh, pardon me, [ she hisses, sarcastic, ] I didn't realize I was somehow obligated to be at your bloody beck and call come the middle of the week. Are you somehow owed my company? I think not. What right have you to go combing through my contacts trying to track me down when I should think it's rather obvious I'd prefer to be left alone?
[ it's a bold offensive to take. almost too bold, really, given the fact that she doesn't for a second believe this is about rip suddenly transforming into the prototypical chauvinist laying claim to a woman's time, attention, energy...
but nor does that stop her from bringing out those aforementioned guns: ] Captain Lance was right, it seems. Certain behaviours never change -- not over decades, not over centuries.
[ men, am i right? ]
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It has him rising to his feet, suddenly, smoothly--smoothly outside of a single wobble, at least, one quickly recovered from as he snaps right back at her, leaning forward as the heat of the moment carries him onward.]
Rather obvious, was it? Because my first thought was perhaps that something else had happened to you during the event, or that maybe bloody Wonderland had sent you back to 1947.
[He'd been worried. Worried that some shadow had offed her, worried that this damn unpredictable world had sent her off--
Worried for her.
Worried that someone else he's come to care for would just be gone from his life.
And perhaps it might still be so. She wants to be left alone, suddenly sees fit to see Rip as less a person and more a generic man, complete with idiotic chauvinism guiding his thoughts. It's a sting to be sure, a sign once again of this distance she's suddenly decided to put between them.
But why? It's the one thing he can't figure out.]
Certain behaviors don't change, but yours suddenly have. [He motions towards her with one hand, the other coming to rest on his hip. They don't mirror each other, but damn if it isn't close, with anger and frustration showing in both their eyes.] You were the one who showed up at my door, Miss Carter. I never asked you here, not once, but there you were, every Wednesday without fail, until tonight.
[He's come to count on it, and perhaps that's more his fault than hers. It hardly makes it any less true, however. Hardly makes the sting of it all any less.]
So no, I'm not obligated to your time or your company, but I bloody well think I deserve an explanation as to why you've suddenly decided I don't warrant either!
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(god above, is tony right? peggy's eyes dart off rip, only briefly, while she considers whether all this running around isn't somehow juvenile. beneath them both. but then she remembers her 'dark side' and how deeply every claim cut...)
look at his disappointment, she tells herself. she invited it upon him when she underestimated his friendship. she saw it as something not serious enough to rate a check-in, nothing so much as a simple not tonight, mister hunter, when he'd rung her up. all because she turns coward when it comes to pursuing the authentic, the real, the whole. the good. ever since steve...
god! and it's not even about romance. not really, although the first spark of fear found itself lit somewhere near that tender, still-stinging place left behind in her heart. she'd started back-peddling before the event. after they'd danced. what her shadow said only encouraged her.
and maybe he realized it then, but he's only taking her to task for it now. drunk and angry and sitting in the rubble of his routine to which she'd laid waste. ]
You're right. [ too easy, too generous, wait for the other shoe to drop. ] You never did ask me here, not once, not ever. That's on me. I'm the one who showed up at your door. Exactly.
[ she breathes in, offering a small shake of her head while she echoes his words back at him. ]
Let's add it to my very long list of poor choices and bad calls, shall we? [ ah, there it is. there's a sort of look in her eye, as though she's daring him to be anything but livid. anything but hopping mad. challenging him to do anything but throw her out and tell her she may as well never come back. she'd rather see him angry than worried.
less concerned; more cross. it would do wonders for her guilty conscience. ]
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Perhaps it's that memory that holds his tongue, or some pause provided by the drink, or even a spark of a better thought. But knows Peggy's admission won't be so simple as that easily offered you're right. She concedes in one step, tries to twirl in another, and Rip rolls his head back with a bitter grin even before that shall we? makes it past her lips.
He's angry still, but not stupid. Sometimes the wiser move is to lose the battle--and Peggy's clever enough to know that too.]
Bollocks. [His answer comes immediately, no hesitation or thought behind it. He lowers his head, shakes it (perhaps a bad move, with how it makes the room spin a bit), and now both his hands fall to his waist. He knows better than to fall into this ploy, this trap. Rip has had plenty of time tonight to go over their encounters, to pick through the words they've exchanged not only on Wednesdays, but the times outside of them.
And there's only one that Wonderland has made him forget.]
You said it yourself. You've enjoyed them, as much as I have. [Indeed, the first time she'd shown up at his door might have been when he'd needed it most. Certainly the same could be said of when she ventured into his hall, took a seat next to Rip as he watched over the door separating his memories from this world. Even if Peggy had somehow changed her mind about them, Rip refuses to see those times when she came to find him as poor or bad.
He will not do her that disservice, nor the one of following along with her dance.]
And if you mean to convince me otherwise, then you'll have to answer my question. [A different rhythm is set instead; another dare, and Rip eye's shift away, past her, towards the bottles of whiskey still neatly arranged on the table waiting to be shared.] What's changed to suddenly make this a bad idea?
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it's not often that she finds herself caught speechless. dooley, in fact, once voiced his very surprise that she ever learned how to keep her mouth shut. but for a little longer she holds her tongue while she watches him look aside, betraying (or is it revealing?) a yearning for his routine to be returned to him. whiskey bottles, criminally undrunk.
no one piece of truth alone would do it, she thinks, and she's unwilling to give up all of them. yes, she'd said it. yes, she'd enjoyed them. yes, it was damned difficult not to return earlier. no, she's not indifferent. no, she doesn't think he's like 'all the rest.' no, her opinions haven't changed. not at heart. she's only made a clumsy attempt to mask them.
clumsy because they'd both been very plain and honest with one another as they'd danced. if not in words, then at least in spirit. it's not simply these little visits -- she's enjoyed him. ]
That's just it, [ she finally opens her mouth -- and there's something nearly apologetic in how her red lips twist in their corners, ] it doesn't matter whether or not I convince you. It won't make a lick of difference.
[ measures must still be taken.
and she won't jump through that hoop simply because he's placed it before her. if he thinks less of her for that obstruction, then so be it. the same can be said for the way she shakes the stiffness out of her arms and turns back towards the door. she'd resolved to reject him before he ever got the chance, before getting tangled together only brought on a pain worse than this. ]
Goodbye, Mister Hunter. And good night.
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He can list them all by name. Leonard Snart, Mick Rory, Kara Zor-El, Sara Lance, Nate Heywood.
Carter Hall. Charles, and by his own hand.
Calvert.
Miranda Coburn.
Jonas Hunter.
And tonight, he'd worried that Peggy Carter would be added to that number. Her death would have been tragic, but at least also undone in the span of a day. Her vanishing, however, he can neither predict nor prevent. One moment she will be there; the next gone, as all who are brought to Wonderland will one day be.
His chest had grown tight at the thought. It does so again now, as she informs him with that unhappy grin that there's nothing to be done.
Nothing he can do to keep her from walking away.
Nothing.
But as time may indeed wish to happen, as this universe might well have some hidden agenda and flow, Rip will not merely let it occur. Not when there is something so final in the way she tells him goodbye, when she swears it won't make any difference at all.
He's the man who would stop at almost nothing to try and save his family. Over and over again.
Peggy isn't dead. She isn't gone--not yet. Rip can still reach out and touch her, so he does. Takes hurried steps when she turns towards his door, dizzied but determined, thrusts his hand forward to grip her arm and force Peggy back to face him. He's no more capable of defining it than she, this thing that's shifting, morphing between them. What has changed that she means to run away from, that perhaps he would as well if he weren't dizzy with anger and alcohol, and the unshakable thought that whatever it is, it's worth fighting for.
He doesn't bother to speak. She may hit him; lord knows he won't be able to much block it in the shape he's in. But he's not about to simply let her go.]
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or, instead, she fears that it makes her something lesser. that little bit less capable of standing on her own. how on earth, she wonders, had steve ever managed it? stitching a whole nation's belief into his body. peggy can barely stomach one person's support without turning on them. it happened before, it happened again and again, and it happens now -- even when that support is couched in aggressive, invasive terms.
because unlike her, unlike what she's done, rip hasn't gone as far as reducing her to accusations and flak merely for flak's sake. that had been her chief weapon in this conversation, whereas everything he's said only casts a harder light on how much goodwill and grace they've found within their acquaintanceship--
--friendship, she so stubbornly labels it. and how much he dreads losing any of it.
and peggy steels herself. as lovely as it's all been, what have most of these wednesday nights been but a distraction? from work here, from work at home, from the reminder that these things always seem to end badly for her. friendships and all. with that in mind, she's nearly to the door when he comes stumbling after. his hand on her arm; it's more urgent than she'd first anticipated.
he doesn't need to turn her back around. she makes that maneuver willingly. and with a sigh and a twinge of regret, peggy strikes him hard in the middle of his chest with her open palm. as blows go, it's hardly the worst she could have done. just enough to shock him backward so she can watch him reel a little, wobble on his feet, and watch her with no surprise in his eyes.
rip doesn't let go. instead, they teeter together -- him like a sinker attached to a fishing hook -- and peggy has to haul back on his weight just to keep them both from crashing. momentum brings him nearer to her than when he'd started, and peggy grabs onto the front of his shirt just to steady them both.
for a heartbeat, it's as if they're dancing again. more sluggish, more messy, more ornery. but dancing all the same. and peggy knows how to put an end to it. what he wants, what he's set as the price of her flight, is to know what's made her so determined to regret him. and ordinarily she might accuse him of playing dumb, of already suspecting what's at stake, but the smell of rum on him and the inelegance of the evening make her believe otherwise. does he not realize the sentiment he'd voiced in front of her shadow had been devastatingly mutual? he, too, is important to her.
with another frown, she considers how that blindspot makes him just about as hopeless as steve rogers in that one regard and -- christ, the comparison does neither of them any favours. or maybe it does them too many. peggy can't rightly say while she's staring back at him, following the shifting focus in his drunk gaze. her attention sits stalwart for a moment, then slips down the bridge of his nose, hangs there -- precarious -- on the curve of his mouth.
she's got no words aside from a soft curse beneath her breath. this is exactly why she didn't want to come back here after everything that had transpired: this moment was always waiting in the wings, anxious to play out. building speed ever since they'd danced. and peggy has always preferred actions to words. alright, then, if he wants so sorely to know what's changed...
she kisses him. it's hard and just about as unforgiving as her earlier palm-strike, and about a dozen times more angrily done than the sweet and fleeting affection they'd been forced to share when an event turned him into a stagehand and her into a personal assistant. that, all of that, had been a lie. but this, right here, the way she twists her fingers in his collar and pulls him nearer -- it's honesty she had already decided would have been better left unsaid.
it doesn't last long. peggy decided when it begins; she equally decides when it ends. with a loud pull of breath and the lingering taste of rum, she breaks the kiss. she lets him go with another rough shove. and then she stares at him a moment -- bewildered by her own choices -- before stalking past him and slumping, defeated, into the chair that's long-since been considered hers.
her fingers tap on the chair's arm, electric and agitated. she won't meet his eye but instead busies herself by pouring a drink of (you guessed it) whiskey. friendship, she'd been trying to tell herself. not-bloody-likely. ]
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Not yet.
Stand together. Fall together--and hell if Rip knows just which it is when Peggy frowns and stares, when her eyes search his face for some spark of understanding, the certainty of that truth he will not let himself see because for all Rip has confessed, for all he understands, one step remains too far for him. It cannot be, it cannot be--
Until she kisses him. Angry and warm, with lips sweetly soft. She kisses him, and Rip's heart thuds heavy in his chest only once before he kisses back. It's not the first time someone has kissed him to shut him up, after all; some part of him must remember what should be done in a situation like this.
Some part must want to.
Yet there's no chance to move his arms about her, to remember that he can touch as well as taste, or let the kiss linger. Peggy's rules, start and stop, and Rip gasps out his surprise when she pulls back almost as unexpectedly as before. This time when she shoves he does step back, once, twice. Steps back and stares, unable to question if he isn't just drunkenly dreaming this all because he can still smell her perfume, and taste her lipstick on his tongue.
He doesn't move when she storms past him to finally do what Rip expected hours before: takes her chair, breaks the silence with the clinking of glass as bottle is raised, whiskey poured.
Rip echoes Peggy's earlier curse as he touches his lips lightly with his fingertips. She need not struggle too hard not to meet his gaze; he has yet to turn around to look at her. Peggy's got plenty of time to down the first glass before he does, though Rip knows from habit she won't need it. He expects she'll take it so much like a shot, one heavy swallow after the next, the liquid burning hot as it goes down.
The first time someone had kissed him to shut him up, she walked away after. He'd had days to think it through. Now, his thudding pulse ticks away the seconds, one after the next.
Seconds, or days. Rip suspects he still wouldn't know just what to think--save one thing.]
I suppose that does answer my question.
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she does exactly as he suspects she'll do: she pours, she downs, she lets her head fall back against the chair -- eyes shut -- while warmth blooms on warmth in her chest. like pouring liquor on a fire. unhelpful, considering the effort she'd made to douse it. peggy's sigh is audible. soon after, she sits straight once more and pours herself a quick second. oh, hell, she is far far too sober for this. rip's got the right idea in keeping that leading edge dull.
before her next 'shot,' she presses the tips of her fingers against her lower lip -- drums them, briefly, as she considers her folly. peggy's no stranger to rash gestures of both temper and affection alike. this one had encompassed a bit of both. and she resents him, just a little, for having cornered her into it. it's a confession, albeit an unspoken one.
but she wasn't ever really cornered -- no matter how insistent he'd been that she should answer his question. she could have hit him again. she could have shaken him off and stormed away. she could have done and said nothing. she could have used words and simply told him how much she'd felt like kissing him.
but in the end he's right -- a realization that makes her laugh a hollow little laugh -- because his question has been answered. everything had changed. ]
Yes. [ her voice lifts strong and certain, only a little tarnished after a second measure of whiskey taken once again like a shot. she stares at his back, at a point between his shoulders, and can't decide whether she's willing him to turn around or crumple in place. ] Yes, I suppose it does. Satisfied?
[ she asks with bite, with vexation, with a scrape of annoyance. rip gets what he wants: an answer, and peggy sitting here where she's meant to sit. whiskey in her belly. ]
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The smudge that comes off onto his fingertips when he worries his mouth (not to rid himself of the lipstick, mind, but rather out of habit) is truly, genuinely her shade.
He's caught staring at it a moment longer before Peggy shoots her bitter question over his shoulder. She mad at him, again, and all for a choice she's made--except Rip knows it not so simple. Much the same way he's never asked her to come over on Wednesdays, but somehow expects it all the same.
His head lowers with a dull huff. She should recognize by now the sound of his unamused laughter.]
I'm truly not sure what I am just now--though satisfied is far from it. [At last he turns, even steps forward to reclaim both a place on the sofa, and the bottle of rum that's been his constant companion this evening. As he had at the start Rip forgoes a glass, merely lifts the bottle by it's neck and drinks straight from the source. Surely she'll understand why.
And if she doesn't--well. Rip is a bit past the point of caring.]
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but it all drains away the moment she thinks on how he'd returned her kiss. and peggy has to ask herself whether or not she already regrets ending it. rather than answer this silent internal investigation, she takes her lead from him and forgoes the crystal tumbler (hers, much like the chair) for the whiskey bottle. formalities are eroding by the heartbeat.
oh, but it had been good while it had lasted. the kiss, that is. she'd like to argue that she'd done it to prove a point -- because a point it had most certainly proven. but the uncomfortable truth is that she'd wanted to be roughly so bold for a short while now. there had been a moment, adjusting his lapel at the end of a dance...
peggy swallows a mouthful of whiskey, as if in a bid to catch up. by now she has managed to wash away the rum taste, but just watching him take his own swig reminds her of that sickly-sweet flavour. yes, the kiss had been good while it had lasted -- would it have been better without the tinge of fermented sugarcane? ]
That makes two of us. [ at odds, yet nevertheless on even footing in their uncertainty. she'd stayed away because she was convinced this would all peter out far more smoothly without something like genuine affection mucking it all up.
mock-idle (although she's anything but), peggy leans forward and snags his arthur conan doyle off the table. there's a willful incivility to the way she cards through the pages, losing his spot. ]
Holmes. I'm not surprised. [ she's derisive, sliding her attention onto his choice of mystery -- as though it could ever, ever, ever buy her a deflection from the real topic at hand. as if it could ever distract either of them from the plain fact of what'd just happened between the two of them. what she'd done. ]
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Distraction comes as an easy craving--particularly when the alternative is to question what now, what next?
It's not often that Rip lacks an answer to those questions, thanks to his trade.
But he does agree: the kiss had been good. This would be easier if it hadn't been, if something deep and hungry hadn't felt a release when she pressed her lips to his. But opening the gates merely lets air in. Fires burn hotter when they're given fuel, and if their mouths were so occupied, then there'd be no futile need to search for words.
Until there was. They cannot succumb to distraction forever.
Yet he still doesn't know what to say when Peggy reaches over, picks up his book and so childishly shuffles through it's pages. As if she couldn't see the detective's name on the cover; as if she didn't know damn well before she picked it up and decided to inch her way under Rip's skin that much more.
And oh, but it no surprise that she speaks the words with that haughty air.]
You disapprove. [In that Rip finds himself unsurprised. Given her era and her personality alike, Rip expects Peggy might cut her teeth on Dorothy L Sayers or Agatha Christie. But he can summon barbs of his own, especially if they mean to travel down this route. He shifts in his seat, one leg crossed over the other, and does his utter best to look every bit as comfortable as he doesn't feel in this moment.]
Yet it seems you're out to prove yourself every bit as frustrating as Irene Adler herself.
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no, this hour feels much more like their verbal spar by the firing range. he'd been far and away from his better self. and there's a bit of her, a fraction, which is made sad by the comparison. it's that narrow bit which understands how she still cares for him. it's the bit that doesn't want to see him hurt. their weekly sessions had been all about bringing out the best in each other, not the worst.
but it's not wednesday any longer; she's a day late and a dollar short for being the best at anything. except, perhaps, the best at being a massive pain for the pair of them. so peggy carter goes looking for bruises to press.
yes, yes, she disapproves. and in her private thoughts she aligns herself exactly as rip predicts: vane, marple, wimsey, poirot -- each to differing degrees, of course. in a gentler moment she might have forwarded these alternatives while she was bright-eyed and smiling and teasing. as she's behaved, with him, on a half-dozen prior instances. but peggy's armour is up, her hackles raised, and rip as good as scalds her with the comparison he subsequently lays at her feet.
adler! the way in which she snaps the book shut is all the suggestion needed that she understands the insinuation. ]
Does that mean you're casting yourself as our eponymous detective? [ one hand chokes the whiskey bottle's neck while the other uses his book like a prop. she points at him with one of its corners. ] You've got the arrogance for it. I'll give you that much, Mister Hunter.
[ mister hunter. as though taking a kiss from him leaves that particular habit unaltered. so maybe not everything's changed. ]
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Rip knows he's hit a mark when Peggy closes the book with force, her eyes hot with whatever insult she finds in the comparison. Worse is the fact that he doesn't bother to temper his grin; why should he on this night when they've apparently decides to tear the lid off Pandora's box, let secrets fly out free into the open.
It's all so ridiculous, he knows. They get nowhere with such jabs, certainly no place of significance. And yet in the moment, he can't deny that it's all so immensely satisfying--
Especially when her counter opens such a tempting door.]
Oh, I should think not, Miss Carter. [Though Rip does indeed carry that similar brand of arrogance, and often. Certain of his choices, determined his judgement would find the right path, for whatever definition of right is being quantified at the time. She cannot know it, but he's even engaged in illicit drug use, though without the benefit of his memories to teach him better.
And certainly it isn't humility at all that guides his next remark, one delayed only as he takes another drink of the rum.]
After all--Irene Adler managed to outfox Sherlock Holmes in the end.
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this time, she looks for satisfaction in knocking the damned thing off his face. even before he finishes the sentence, midway through outfox, she's throwing his own damned book at his head. it's not as gratifying as throwing a punch, perhaps, but it'll have to suffice for now.
so, so, so uncharitably: ] So you agree, then. This is the end.
[ you know, she doubts adler ever had to cope with holmes kicking out the legs from underneath her just-patched-up relationship with her not-quite-nephew. from the future. lucky her. ]
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But perhaps Peggy had been right in her earlier accusations. Just as Rip expects he's got an upper hand in the midst of all this madness, Peggy presents a sharp and sobering proposal.
It does wonders for wiping the grin off his face. Bravo, Peggy Carter.
Rip doesn't answer until after he's sat back up, nor does he quite manage to look at her again. He's not so wasted, even now, to childishly suggest that they simply attempt to go back to Wednesdays at they were, when Wednesdays and whiskey and dances at weddings all led them to this moment.
When he knows that he cannot say with any truth that he wouldn't kiss her again.]
I suppose it's as you said. [The rum gets moved from one hand to the other, Rip's eyes focused on the bottle itself. He leans forward then; stretches just enough to set it back down at it's place on the table.]
It doesn't make a lick of difference what I think. You've gone and made the choice for both of us.
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perhaps she'd made the choice for the both of them, but as far as she's concerned he was the one who empowered her to make it. peggy can still remember the hitch in her heart moments after she'd pulled her trigger, not yet certain whether her shot had missed him or not. she's chosen not to feel that hitch a second, third, forth time. how many would it take before she got him hurt in earnest?
the whiskey's hit her blood and warmed her body but she's still not so drunk that she doesn't recognize the complete folly in telling him the truth. it's for your own good is never an argument any competent individual wants to hear -- so she'll forgo making it, even if she believes in it utterly. ]
I have. And I did. And I would have expected you to make the same one. [ choice. ] I merely made it first.
[ there's no mistaking her tone. peggy is suggesting she would have found herself disappointed if he'd done anything but. ]
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Steve returning, untethered to anyone. Miranda, showing up alive and well and eager to see her husband.
But he has not been forced to think it through, nor to decide for himself just what he might do with the knowledge that she's developed feelings for him--and likewise, he must admit, he for her. Instead Rip is given an odd position on the high ground when Peggy so cavalierly spells out her expectations. And suddenly it doesn't matter so much if she's right.
Not when Rip is feeling far more contrary than charitable.
Besides, with the decision made, what harm is there in hypotheticals?]
And why exactly would you expect me to reject you? [Oh, but this sparks a memory for him. A voice sounding out from a broken porcelain face, marred with lipstick too deep a shade of red. They use her, they die--
Or they reject her.]
Bloody hell! [Rip rises to his feet, hand lifted in the air as this revelation crashes in his mind. Perhaps it's not the brightest move, but placing his other palm on the couch ensures his balance is kept.] This is about the bloody shadow, isn't it?
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but there are no good footings found in the conversation once he's sniffed out the cause-and-effect, the first domino, the catalyst. peggy's annoyance swims alongside her pride, and she can't figure out which to curse first -- his wits or her sentiment. the latter has always been rarer than the former.
she could lie, peggy thinks. and if she lied she also thinks she could fool him -- should she put her best shoulder to the stone and treat him more and more like the opposition instead of the ally he'd started out as. but instead of lie, she tilts back the whiskey bottle. another shot's worth, maybe a shot and a half, before the leans farther forward and places the alcohol just out of reach when she's once more sitting comfortably.
two fingers touch just above her brow in a mock salute. blasphemous, almost. ]
Well deduced, Sherlock.
[ but peggy reassures herself that her choice isn't any less rational simply because he's traced it back to its source. her chin lifts, letting her look at him as he stands. ]
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So to be sure I understand this clearly. [After all, they've both imbibed a decent amount of alcohol; Peggy's left a fair gap in the bottle she'd claimed for herself during their discussion, and Rip started off drunk, so they really should take the time to be sure they understand each other--especially as Rip is about to be right.] We started this little Wednesday tradition of ours because you refused to let Wonderland dictate our--relationship.
[He nearly spits out the word; even now, it feels too personal, too close to the heart. But if it does for him, then certainly, Rip thinks, it will for her too.
He points a finger in the air now, moving it about as he continues on.] And now, after another event, you've decide to call the whole thing off, and why? Because you think I'm going to turn my nose up at you.
[He shakes his head then, and oh, if she's expected his disappointment, then job well done Peggy Carter. She's earned it.]
You're a hell of a lot better than that, Miss Carter.
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and worse yet, this whole altercation underlines for peggy just how unusual it is for her to reach an incipient moment like this in any (any) of her would-be relationships since she'd been the one to break her engagement at nineteen. by this point, in any other relationship, the other someone would be gone already. dead, fled across whole bloody country, or turned intangible. or shacking up with his best friend. but she's got no comfortable way to tell him so.
the same can be said for their unsteady status as colleagues, as they'd taken to calling each other only recently. because look how poorly that's turned out back at the ssr! the destruction comes full circle, it seems, when her mere presence torpedoes another engagement.
(christ, daniel is the last person she wants to think about just now.)
she's poison, and not only with the men for whom she might carry a torch. but platonic, romantic, fledgling -- she mucks it all up. what few exceptions there are only prove the rule, and perhaps it's howard stark's place on that short short list that makes her so cripplingly afraid to lose tony's esteem in turn. peggy had steeled herself to never come back to this room, on a wednesday or otherwise, but one squabble with tony and her plan lost its legs. ]
I'm not, actually. [ better than that. ] But evidently I have done a bang up job of convincing you otherwise.
[ her fingers bite into the chair-arm, anchoring her as she resists the urge to stand up only so she can exist on the same plane as him. if finds her feet, if she removes so much as one of the hurdles between them by doing so? then peggy can't make herself any promises on staying put. the jury's still out as to whether she'd close the distance to hit him or hold him. ]
And even if it that wasn't the case? Good God, man, this truly isn't the place for it.
[ for relationships. no matter how fondly she still remembers the rousing wedding speech he'd given standing before ray and sarah both. ]
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