WHO: Expedition 33 (Gustave, Maelle, Sciel, and Verso) WHEN: post-mingle, pre-mission WHERE: the apartments WHAT: the remaining members of Expedition 33 NOTES\WARNINGS: spoilers for Acts 1&2 of Clair Obscur: Expedition 33
Sciel pauses. She’d been joking, just a bit, by calling him stupid, and she regrets it the minute it’s repeated back to her. Irresponsible would be better, maybe, for putting those feelings on a child’s shoulders, but it’s difficult for him. She knows that.
“I don’t know if it’s on purpose, really, the way his family is. But it’s no excuse for passing the hurt onto you, is it?”
She’d seen the look on his face, as the door had closed on Alicia. How many things had kept them apart. She can’t even begin to understand the years of conflict wrapped around their family, but she does know it doesn’t make for a very stable guardian.
“But, Maelle… our meeting with Verso, his joining us… that will always be intertwined with losing Gustave, even if he could never take Gustave’s place in our hearts,” Sciel says. “It’s difficult to untangle those two things, for them as much as us.”
She remembers all too well when Verso joined them. She didn't want to hear his condolences or talk to him or look at him--until he offered a way to not only kill the Paintress, but Renoir. And then he showed his compassion, and pieces of himself that Maelle found interesting or silly, and she still remembers how it felt to hear him play a song that he would play for his sister and how she could hum along as if she'd heard it so many times before.
"We're always going to be haunted by that day, aren't we? The cliffs," she says. Even with Gustave back--Renoir, too, is here. And even if he weren't, Verso would still have to tell the terrible truth of who his father is, and that never seems to go well no matter how he does it.
“It never really goes away,” she says, with a little nod. “It’s just… different, in time.”
She slides her hands down the sides of Maelle’s arms.
“Do you remember around when my husband died?” She was, after all, only ten. “I couldn’t bear to be alone, for a while. Sophie slept on my couch. My neighbour knocked twice a day. And I must have stolen Gustave away from you about a hundred times, or at least it felt that often.”
She can picture Maelle so clearly, following Gustave around like a little shadow, annoyed at being unable to follow him everywhere. No wonder she put her foot down, insisted upon wringing out every last moment by his side.
“Even if he strolled back in as if nothing had happened, not a mark on his body, I still would have sat up until the small hours of the morning, panicking. For years, maybe. But in time…”
It’s a strange thing, to be optimistic about, but it’s still a future worth building.
She remembers Gustave explaining to her what happened to Sciel's husband. An accident, and how sad it was that the already short amount of time between them was robbed away. It had been an opportunity to spend more time with Emma, then, but Maelle always had a clear preference for Gustave. But now, older, she understands. Gustave's patience and understanding would be a balm to anyone's hurts.
"You adjust," Maelle says, eyes soft as she regards Sciel. They haven't been here very long at all. Apparently, they have time. She certainly hopes the memory fades, or at least stops intruding on her time with Gustave so consistently. For him, too.
"Gustave is really good at making people feel better," she continues after a moment. "We have to make sure to do that for him."
They have so much time. It seems to stretch on infinitely, well beyond Sciel’s own understanding. They could spend decades, even centuries going from world to world, helping people, until their own home could be saved. That’s a good way to spend time, isn’t it? With both old friends and new.
It’s a good time to grow. Get to know themselves. Let the hurts of the pass fall away with time, instead of festering, unaddressed.
“We adjust,” she agrees, “and we do everything in our power to make things normal for him. I think that’ll come naturally to us, don’t you? I know I never see Gustave smile bigger than when he’s paling around with you.”
That last remark gets a smile out of Maelle. If there's one thing she's never doubted, it's Gustave's affection for her. He'd be heartbroken if Maelle felt unloved, even for a moment.
"I guess it's a good time as any to ask if I've offended you, by calling you family," Maelle says lightly, teasing. As if another rejection wouldn't send her into a spiral. But it's Sciel, and Maelle thinks she knows her well enough to anticipate her response.
Sciel laughs, quiet, like Verso might hear her from down the hall.
“I know what kind of exclusive club you keep, mademoiselle, so I consider it an honour,” she says. “Even if you didn’t say it, I knew I must be something to you when you stopped rolling your eyes when I’d go in for a hug!”
"I did not roll my eyes," Maelle says, rolling her eyes, and it's her that goes in for the hug. They may have forever here, but she doesn't want to regret. Regret not giving the hug, regret not saying the words. Even if they're rejected and fill her with shame, at least she's said them.
She's careful not to drop her water glass, but she does fully sink into the embrace, letting out a pleased little hum. Strong hugs are the best hugs. Sciel's are second best to Gustave's.
"What? You haven't seen him roll his eyes?" She asks with a little laugh. Guess where she picked up the habit? "Emma hated it."
“Oh, have I,” she repeats. “You would not believe the eye rolls I extracted from that man during our time at Aquafarm Three. In fact… we can do it right now.”
An eye roll, a laugh, a deadpan look –– any would be a good temperature check, at the very least.
"What? Right now?" Maelle pulls back, putting her glass down on the counter, ready to pay full attention to whatever Sciel is scheming. She tips her head to the side.
“Right now, if you can find him, or whenever he gets home,” she says. “Talk to him like you always do, but you’re going to call him something else. Straight face, without hesitation. The name is…”
Just in case Gustave is outside the door or has developed superhuman hearing, she leans in to whisper it in Maelle’s ear.
She nods. A plan worthy of following without question.
"Got it. He'll laugh. I know it." Because Maelle will sound crazy, or he'll realize Sciel is getting creative with her mischief. A laugh is a laugh, and Gustave could use one after today.
“He’d better,” Sciel says. “If he doesn’t, we’ll have to take drastic measures.”
She’s joking, and has no idea what those measures are or will be, but she’s sure it’ll involve wrapping Gustave in cotton wool until he finally cracks.
She reaches to Maelle again, checking her face.
“Now. Are you feeling better? Even just a little bit?”
The time immediately after Gustave's death is a hazy blur of crying herself to sleep and being unable to find rest, but she does remember Sciel sitting beside her quite clearly. A comforting touch when she needed it, or simply space and company when Maelle's emotions were tangled and twisted.
She had felt so terribly alone, but she wasn't.
"I know. I hope we can experience more than just... bad or sad things together, here."
“We’ll have more good memories,” she says. “Just like seeing the Gestrals, and the Grandis, and the carousel… as much of it as we can make for ourselves.”
The possibilities seem so infinite that it’s hard to imagine what they could even be. The sights of the Continent had been unexpectedly and incomprehensibly beautiful, but she had seen the greater picture of Lumière in it all, their seedling on the wind having strayed from a greater blossom. It was there in the ruins and in the debris and in the great sprawls of nature, so much so that she never felt too far from home.
Here, it’s an eternity of difference. What could she possibly expect to come their way?
“Yes,” she says, with a funny little scrunch to her face. “As long as it’s not more ‘water parks.’”
no subject
“I don’t know if it’s on purpose, really, the way his family is. But it’s no excuse for passing the hurt onto you, is it?”
She’d seen the look on his face, as the door had closed on Alicia. How many things had kept them apart. She can’t even begin to understand the years of conflict wrapped around their family, but she does know it doesn’t make for a very stable guardian.
“But, Maelle… our meeting with Verso, his joining us… that will always be intertwined with losing Gustave, even if he could never take Gustave’s place in our hearts,” Sciel says. “It’s difficult to untangle those two things, for them as much as us.”
no subject
"We're always going to be haunted by that day, aren't we? The cliffs," she says. Even with Gustave back--Renoir, too, is here. And even if he weren't, Verso would still have to tell the terrible truth of who his father is, and that never seems to go well no matter how he does it.
no subject
She slides her hands down the sides of Maelle’s arms.
“Do you remember around when my husband died?” She was, after all, only ten. “I couldn’t bear to be alone, for a while. Sophie slept on my couch. My neighbour knocked twice a day. And I must have stolen Gustave away from you about a hundred times, or at least it felt that often.”
She can picture Maelle so clearly, following Gustave around like a little shadow, annoyed at being unable to follow him everywhere. No wonder she put her foot down, insisted upon wringing out every last moment by his side.
“Even if he strolled back in as if nothing had happened, not a mark on his body, I still would have sat up until the small hours of the morning, panicking. For years, maybe. But in time…”
It’s a strange thing, to be optimistic about, but it’s still a future worth building.
no subject
"You adjust," Maelle says, eyes soft as she regards Sciel. They haven't been here very long at all. Apparently, they have time. She certainly hopes the memory fades, or at least stops intruding on her time with Gustave so consistently. For him, too.
"Gustave is really good at making people feel better," she continues after a moment. "We have to make sure to do that for him."
no subject
It’s a good time to grow. Get to know themselves. Let the hurts of the pass fall away with time, instead of festering, unaddressed.
“We adjust,” she agrees, “and we do everything in our power to make things normal for him. I think that’ll come naturally to us, don’t you? I know I never see Gustave smile bigger than when he’s paling around with you.”
no subject
"I guess it's a good time as any to ask if I've offended you, by calling you family," Maelle says lightly, teasing. As if another rejection wouldn't send her into a spiral. But it's Sciel, and Maelle thinks she knows her well enough to anticipate her response.
no subject
“I know what kind of exclusive club you keep, mademoiselle, so I consider it an honour,” she says. “Even if you didn’t say it, I knew I must be something to you when you stopped rolling your eyes when I’d go in for a hug!”
no subject
no subject
“I must have imagined it,” she concedes. “You’d never. Not in Gustave’s household.”
no subject
"What? You haven't seen him roll his eyes?" She asks with a little laugh. Guess where she picked up the habit? "Emma hated it."
From them both.
no subject
An eye roll, a laugh, a deadpan look –– any would be a good temperature check, at the very least.
no subject
"How so?"
no subject
Just in case Gustave is outside the door or has developed superhuman hearing, she leans in to whisper it in Maelle’s ear.
no subject
"Seriously?" She looks at Sciel, doubtful. "Do I get to know the story behind that, or is it something he should have to explain?"
no subject
no subject
"Got it. He'll laugh. I know it." Because Maelle will sound crazy, or he'll realize Sciel is getting creative with her mischief. A laugh is a laugh, and Gustave could use one after today.
no subject
She’s joking, and has no idea what those measures are or will be, but she’s sure it’ll involve wrapping Gustave in cotton wool until he finally cracks.
She reaches to Maelle again, checking her face.
“Now. Are you feeling better? Even just a little bit?”
no subject
"A little more than just a little bit," she says. "You're really good at that."
no subject
“Good,” she says. “I’m glad. And you know I’m here when you need me, yeah? Even if it’s just someone to sit with in silence?”
no subject
She had felt so terribly alone, but she wasn't.
"I know. I hope we can experience more than just... bad or sad things together, here."
no subject
“We’ll have more good memories,” she says. “Just like seeing the Gestrals, and the Grandis, and the carousel… as much of it as we can make for ourselves.”
no subject
"With Gustave," she adds, because they all felt his absence. "... and Verso, once he's... less weird."
He may be old, but there must be so much here he's never seen the likes of before.
no subject
Could be a lot of time, but their best instincts will win out, she’s sure.
no subject
"Are you excited to see new things here, Sciel?" Things that hopefully aren't trying to kill them, in between these missions they'll be sent on.
no subject
Here, it’s an eternity of difference. What could she possibly expect to come their way?
“Yes,” she says, with a funny little scrunch to her face. “As long as it’s not more ‘water parks.’”
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)