savante: (pic#18126072)

prose bc i tire of coding on mobile

[personal profile] savante 2025-10-30 11:27 pm (UTC)(link)
Alright.

And Lune doesn't go out of her way to give him any tips or clues to her exact whereabouts. Verso's used to navigating and finding his way, after all.

She's wandered out a little ways from the main camp: still within the perimeter, well within shouting or screaming distance in case she winds up in trouble, the distance exactly-calculated. But enough to gain a little space, some distance from the unsettling silent stare of the Curator, a small clearing where her restless pacing won't risk waking the others. Unknowingly, unconsciously, she's wound up near where the horizon falls away, the sort of view Gustave always favoured when he went to write in his journal.

And still never one to waste time or sit idle, Lune sets down their phonograph — she'd hauled it over — and starts paging through their small stack of records.

She hadn't wanted the Victrola on the Expedition; had been adamant that it was too bulky and clunky and cumbersome, that they needed the space for more food or climbing gear or even a microscope.

But Tristan, knowing her fondness for music, had packed it in his own personal allotment. Had cited some past psychological study about the therapeutic effects of music in high-stress environments.

(She's grateful for it, now.)
savante: (pic#18150035)

[personal profile] savante 2025-11-09 11:51 pm (UTC)(link)
“Some. You’ve been hoarding these like a raccoon, haven’t you?”

The collection had grown since Lune last looked at it. The records are increasingly rare commodities: the group only came across them every so often, in the occasional still-standing house, or in some enterprising gestral’s wares, or that mysterious manor they tripped into sometimes. So of course they’d pick up any that weren’t weather-warped beyond recognition, even when their labels were peeling and impossible to read.

And though she isn’t always scavenging, she’s glad to have it: her heart still twinges on hearing this old music humming its way across the years and generations. Once, before her time, there had been full bands and symphonic orchestras. Nowadays, it’s harder and harder to get all the people with all the right instruments and expertise together; solo acts were easier.

Her fingers rest on a particular sleeve, hesitating, before finally making up her mind and plucking it out of the stack. She rises to her feet and holds it out to Verso with a challenging look, a stubborn tilt to her chin. Don’t read too much into the title, it was one of the few waltzes available to them —

“Will this do?”
savante: (pic#18157023)

[personal profile] savante 2025-11-17 12:50 am (UTC)(link)
This admission, when it comes, has some uncustomary fidgeting self-consciousness to it: Lune practically stands at attention with her hands folded behind her back, fingers twining anxiously into each other. Not levitating for once, her bare feet rest on the grass and it brings her a little lower into Verso’s field of vision than he’s used to seeing. She has to tilt her chin up a little to meet his gaze tonight.

“Not much,” Lune says, a little stiffly. She’s simply not used to admitting to being bad at anything. “Our parents— they didn’t approve of dance lessons. Stella became very good at it, but I never had the chance to learn.”

And of course Lune, the dutiful youngest, obeyed when they thought something was simply too frivolous, too useless a skill to bother picking up. At least a guitar was something she could pick away at in her spare time, multi-tasking in those minutes when she was waiting for an experiment to finish running; she could muddle through sheet music and learn on her own. But dancing, for the most part, required music and accompaniment. She’d had a lab partner, but not a dance partner.

“So I’ll need the fundamentals.”
savante: (pic#18150115)

[personal profile] savante 2025-12-09 09:23 pm (UTC)(link)
There’s the brief fleeting thought of have I made a huge mistake?, because there’s something so uniquely aggravating about handing control over to Verso in particular —

But he’s being polite, at least, and not rubbing it in too much (yet), and not maneuvering her like a human doll. Being somewhat demure, as much as a man like him can be. So Lune takes a breath and leans up on slight tiptoe and obligingly takes his shoulder, and his hand. Her palm is cool in his. Although her body language is stiff around him in a way that she very much isn’t around Sciel; there’s evidently another version of Lune which doesn’t mind casual unthinking affectionate touch, hands in hands, head tilted against a shoulder, and so it must be possible to find one’s way to that eventually.

Maybe it just takes time. And a bit less lying.

“Where did you rank as a waltzer before the Continent?” she asks. It’s an innocent enough question, prying into his pre-Fracture history without, she hopes, sinking her teeth too deep into the bone. Their time together on the Expedition has been such a delicate balancing act, seeing what details she can manage to subtly wring out of him.