She laughs softly; at least he's willing to give her what's probably the
full truth, even though she already told him she only expects relevant
information or outright omissions.
She's never doubted her own course, either, only to find that not only is
she not anywhere near the infirmary on this boat, she also doesn't
want to be, not on a regular basis. She's something different now.
Something new. She started listening to the part of her that wanted a
different kind of excitement, and wanted to try new things, but at the end
of the day, she's still a doctor -- still a healer.
"I think ... there are some parts of ourselves that are always going to be
with us," she says slowly, carefully, like she's picking out each word on
purpose. "No matter what we do, or how we split ourselves up. I was always
asking questions. For you, it'll be something else. But you're going to
have to figure out what it is that both parts of you have in common."
It's the only thing she'll say about what she learned in the flood.
She hands over the stack of clothing that she's been collecting as they've
been talking: warm tones, with classic styles that seem like they're pulled
from a hodgepodge of different eras, but do at least seem to be limited to
Earth. "Try these," she suggests.
He shudders again and shakes his head, rubbing his eyebrow as he actually goes and takes a step back. She's hit his limit -- not by mentioning the dream, but by saying it'll be something else. That presupposes that there might really be a day he won't be a Mountie at all, and if he's just about ready to admit to that fear, he's far from ready to entertain the possibility of it coming true in any real sense.
"No-- no, you know what?" he says in a tight, anxious voice. "You were right. It doesn't matter whether or not I'm on duty, in the end. After all, as I mentioned, I often wore the uniform to events even when they were outside the strict confines of my jurisdiction."
Of course, that isn't what she means, but she has no way of knowing that
he's misunderstood.
She has no way of knowing what she said to provoke this kind of reaction at
all, really, and she frowns down at the selection in her arms. There's
nothing in the pile that's so offensive that it's worth rejecting the whole
premise -- not even the sequined blazer -- so there must have been some
kind of strange logical leap in his mind.
Frost wants to shake him until he tells her what that leap is, what
she said, how he got from 'try these' to 'abort mission,' and her hair
flares white with the adrenaline spike that comes with her brief surge of
anger -- but it lasts just a wordless moment, cut off by Caitlin's own
logic. Anger and blame don't solve anything. It's not being a good warden
or a good friend.
"It is still an option," she agrees slowly. "And like I said, it does look
good on you."
Like it was made for him, which is probably part of the problem.
He gives a quick, stiff little nod. "Thank you. I like the way it looks, too."
But he saw that flash of white, picks up on her frustration, even if he misunderstands the reason for it just as badly. "I'm sorry to make you go to all the trouble," he says, holding out a hand to take the clothes from her. "I can hang them back up."
He's rather loathe to look through them now -- now that all he can think of them is that they're what he'll wear when he's forced to give up the uniform -- but if wearing the serge to the wedding is the lesser of two evils, so is throwing Caitlin a bone now rather than pick apart the reason he doesn't want to. He rifles through them quickly, taking them in with as brief a glance as possible.
"The, um, the brushed wool in the dark gray is... nice. As is the mahogany three-piece." And then he'll hang them up, along with the rest, in rapid order. But when he gets to the sequins, he does pause, and manages to deadpan: "And this one, of course."
She takes note of both the statements, and the cursory way he looks over
the selections, like he's not really looking at them at all. There's some
reason behind the quick change in his demeanor, and she's determined to get
to the bottom of it -- if not now, then eventually. It would, of course, be
easier if everyone else had the same kind of easy visual indicator of their
emotional state that she does, but they don't, and Fraser's even more
inscrutable than most, as far as she can tell.
"Of course," she echoes, and hangs up the last of the pieces that she'd
held onto, before the sequins catch her eyes. "You know ... you could
always try it on. Just for fun."
Outlandish as it is, it's not at all a threat the way the others are, and the suggestion works perfectly to diffuse some of the tension in him. He holds it out at arm's length and looks it over, chuckling softly. More importantly, relaxing. "I suppose I could," he allows.
In fact, why not? He takes off the leather jacket he has on, hangs it up neatly on the nearest curtain rod, and slips the Liberace cast-off off its hanger and onto his shoulders. "Well? What do you think?" he asks with a grin, holding his arms out to his sides.
It's even worse than she thought, and that's what makes it fantastic. She's
trying to hold her laughter in, but her smile's too wide, too easily split
with the amusement that comes from seeing him in something that seems so
patently ridiculous. "It's terrible," she assures him, still grinning wide.
"I love it. It's ..." She looks him over again, shaking her head. "You have
to keep it."
"To what end?" he asks with a soft, incredulous laugh. It's not like he's ever, ever, ever going to put it on again, and:
"What if someone wants it and comes looking for it?" He's seen the way some people here dress. There's definitely someone on board, or who was on board, or who will be on board, that this jacket was made for. "It would just be sitting in the back of my closet, neglected."
"It doesn't actually belong to anyone to begin with," she points out, but
even saying that, she can concede the point. People might well come looking
for things they'd previously come across.
She lets out a small sigh. "So this probably wasn't that much help. I'm
sorry about that."
"No, it was," he promises as he takes the jacket off and hangs it back up, puts his own back on.
"After all, I asked you for advice on what to wear to the wedding, and now I know what I'll be wearing to the wedding. So, in fact, it was a very effective trip." One in which he tried on one (1) item of clothing, confessed one (1) deep-seated fear, and made no (0) substantive decisions of note. But at least he's coming around to the idea that he can wear his uniform without actively feeling like he doesn't deserve to.
"If you say so," she says, and there's nothing skeptical or condescending
about it; if anything, she trusts that he's making the decision that he's
most comfortable with. It still feels to her like they're back at square
one, but this also isn't about her, so maybe she isn't the one who needs to
feel like there's progress being made.
And he will look dashing, after all. Of that she has no doubt.
"So ... besides the search for a job, how else have you been doing?" She's
kept some distance since that first meeting on the deck, and in the chapel,
and let him contact her first when he has questions or needs, but it might
be time for her to start actually, well, doing her job. "Settling in,
keeping busy?"
"Well, I'm trying to. Hence the job search." When his grief had been fresh, he'd relished having no demands on his time and nothing to do but wallow. As it had started to abate, it had still been enough to fill the hours with reading and time in the Enclosure. Now that a couple of months have gone by, though, the confines of the Barge are really starting to chafe.
"I do think I'll be going to the veterinary clinic with Mr. Scamander, by the way." Because it is, at least, more interesting than the kitchen or maintenance crews.
A small smile touches her lips, and her eyes brighten as she nods. "I think
that'll suit you," she says. "Whether you've done a lot of work with
animals in the past or not -- you'll learn. And I think he'll probably like
the chance to share what he knows with someone who's genuinely interested."
She hasn't had too many conversations with Newt, but he's seemed a bit
lonely and socially awkward. Fraser's kind enough that he'll likely put him
at ease.
She eyes the sparkling jacket where it's hung up again, and after only a
moment's hesitation, pulls it off the rack and puts it on herself. It's
clearly too big, too broad in the shoulders, but she can probably work with
that. For now she just rolls the sleeves up. "Also, I've been meaning to
ask: is there anything you'd like me to request on your behalf?"
no subject
She laughs softly; at least he's willing to give her what's probably the full truth, even though she already told him she only expects relevant information or outright omissions.
She's never doubted her own course, either, only to find that not only is she not anywhere near the infirmary on this boat, she also doesn't want to be, not on a regular basis. She's something different now. Something new. She started listening to the part of her that wanted a different kind of excitement, and wanted to try new things, but at the end of the day, she's still a doctor -- still a healer.
"I think ... there are some parts of ourselves that are always going to be with us," she says slowly, carefully, like she's picking out each word on purpose. "No matter what we do, or how we split ourselves up. I was always asking questions. For you, it'll be something else. But you're going to have to figure out what it is that both parts of you have in common."
It's the only thing she'll say about what she learned in the flood.
She hands over the stack of clothing that she's been collecting as they've been talking: warm tones, with classic styles that seem like they're pulled from a hodgepodge of different eras, but do at least seem to be limited to Earth. "Try these," she suggests.
no subject
"No-- no, you know what?" he says in a tight, anxious voice. "You were right. It doesn't matter whether or not I'm on duty, in the end. After all, as I mentioned, I often wore the uniform to events even when they were outside the strict confines of my jurisdiction."
no subject
Of course, that isn't what she means, but she has no way of knowing that he's misunderstood.
She has no way of knowing what she said to provoke this kind of reaction at all, really, and she frowns down at the selection in her arms. There's nothing in the pile that's so offensive that it's worth rejecting the whole premise -- not even the sequined blazer -- so there must have been some kind of strange logical leap in his mind.
Frost wants to shake him until he tells her what that leap is, what she said, how he got from 'try these' to 'abort mission,' and her hair flares white with the adrenaline spike that comes with her brief surge of anger -- but it lasts just a wordless moment, cut off by Caitlin's own logic. Anger and blame don't solve anything. It's not being a good warden or a good friend.
"It is still an option," she agrees slowly. "And like I said, it does look good on you."
Like it was made for him, which is probably part of the problem.
no subject
But he saw that flash of white, picks up on her frustration, even if he misunderstands the reason for it just as badly. "I'm sorry to make you go to all the trouble," he says, holding out a hand to take the clothes from her. "I can hang them back up."
no subject
She should make him do it, because she's his warden and she's frustrated at him.
But she also shouldn't, because that's what he wants her to do.
Hell, he's probably just as frustrated at himself.
"It's okay," she says, and hands over about half the stack. "But just for future reference ... do you like any of these?"
no subject
"The, um, the brushed wool in the dark gray is... nice. As is the mahogany three-piece." And then he'll hang them up, along with the rest, in rapid order. But when he gets to the sequins, he does pause, and manages to deadpan: "And this one, of course."
no subject
She takes note of both the statements, and the cursory way he looks over the selections, like he's not really looking at them at all. There's some reason behind the quick change in his demeanor, and she's determined to get to the bottom of it -- if not now, then eventually. It would, of course, be easier if everyone else had the same kind of easy visual indicator of their emotional state that she does, but they don't, and Fraser's even more inscrutable than most, as far as she can tell.
"Of course," she echoes, and hangs up the last of the pieces that she'd held onto, before the sequins catch her eyes. "You know ... you could always try it on. Just for fun."
no subject
In fact, why not? He takes off the leather jacket he has on, hangs it up neatly on the nearest curtain rod, and slips the Liberace cast-off off its hanger and onto his shoulders. "Well? What do you think?" he asks with a grin, holding his arms out to his sides.
no subject
It's even worse than she thought, and that's what makes it fantastic. She's trying to hold her laughter in, but her smile's too wide, too easily split with the amusement that comes from seeing him in something that seems so patently ridiculous. "It's terrible," she assures him, still grinning wide. "I love it. It's ..." She looks him over again, shaking her head. "You have to keep it."
no subject
"What if someone wants it and comes looking for it?" He's seen the way some people here dress. There's definitely someone on board, or who was on board, or who will be on board, that this jacket was made for. "It would just be sitting in the back of my closet, neglected."
no subject
"It doesn't actually belong to anyone to begin with," she points out, but even saying that, she can concede the point. People might well come looking for things they'd previously come across.
She lets out a small sigh. "So this probably wasn't that much help. I'm sorry about that."
no subject
"After all, I asked you for advice on what to wear to the wedding, and now I know what I'll be wearing to the wedding. So, in fact, it was a very effective trip." One in which he tried on one (1) item of clothing, confessed one (1) deep-seated fear, and made no (0) substantive decisions of note. But at least he's coming around to the idea that he can wear his uniform without actively feeling like he doesn't deserve to.
no subject
"If you say so," she says, and there's nothing skeptical or condescending about it; if anything, she trusts that he's making the decision that he's most comfortable with. It still feels to her like they're back at square one, but this also isn't about her, so maybe she isn't the one who needs to feel like there's progress being made.
And he will look dashing, after all. Of that she has no doubt.
"So ... besides the search for a job, how else have you been doing?" She's kept some distance since that first meeting on the deck, and in the chapel, and let him contact her first when he has questions or needs, but it might be time for her to start actually, well, doing her job. "Settling in, keeping busy?"
no subject
"I do think I'll be going to the veterinary clinic with Mr. Scamander, by the way." Because it is, at least, more interesting than the kitchen or maintenance crews.
no subject
A small smile touches her lips, and her eyes brighten as she nods. "I think that'll suit you," she says. "Whether you've done a lot of work with animals in the past or not -- you'll learn. And I think he'll probably like the chance to share what he knows with someone who's genuinely interested." She hasn't had too many conversations with Newt, but he's seemed a bit lonely and socially awkward. Fraser's kind enough that he'll likely put him at ease.
She eyes the sparkling jacket where it's hung up again, and after only a moment's hesitation, pulls it off the rack and puts it on herself. It's clearly too big, too broad in the shoulders, but she can probably work with that. For now she just rolls the sleeves up. "Also, I've been meaning to ask: is there anything you'd like me to request on your behalf?"