Oh, tempting though it is -- [ she holds onto tony's hand ] -- I may have actually had my fill of drink these past few days.
[ martinis (of all things!) with jane. scotch alone. and then there was rip, once she'd come across him, pickling in his own conclusions. oh yes. peggy's looking a little worn around her edges.
You know, before that one, I was off dairy? I promised Pepper - no dairy, no red meat.
[ he gets up, wanders to the minifridge and takes out an ice cream tube ]
Stark Raving Hazelnuts. It's brilliant, half of those came with an Iron Man action figure. This one doesn't but I have a feeling I can search long enough to add it into your collection.
[ she waves him in the direction of the tea cart -- suggesting, then, that it might be the only place to find spoons in her modest studio apartment. it's not as if she keeps a cutlery drawer. but there are few teaspoons sitting upright in a cup beside the kettle. next to a sugar dish, actually, despite the fact that peggy doesn't take hers sweet. ]
I wouldn't call it a collection. [ a beat. ] It's something more like one man's lost and found.
[ he argues and tosses a spoon at her general direction ]
It shows your great pride. I can't whip up a picture of me from when I was five, I know what will happen. You'll show it to people and tell them, 'oh yeah that's my nephew, look how cute he was, I have no idea what happened'.
[ a snort of laughter. he's incorrigible, yes, but he has a way of brightening her bleak mood. they might both of them find themselves in an emotional pickle now that rogers is here, but his arrival doesn't spin this relationship of its axis. they find their beat and rhythm like they have for a while now -- almost since the day tony arrived. ]
What makes you so certain I don't already tell people a variation on the same?
[ He takes a spoon for himself and claims his seat once more. It cheers him up, getting to hear her laugh. It feels like a small victory against Wonderland. Honestly, it's a roller coaster - his whole stay here has been but it does feel just a bit better now. ]
Do you?
[ it seems like the thought is encouraging in its own right. ]
I mean, not that I can't imagine the shocked, 'not that douche?' but then you can always tell them I can do a double Windsor in my sleep so you obviously taught me something.
Try not to take it too personally, [ she counters, ] but tend not to go out of my way to defend your honour. As it were.
[ which has less to do with tony's bad behaviour and much much more to do with the fact that peggy isn't the sort to play verbal white knight for anyone -- unless it's a moment that really truly matters. she saves her emphasis for actions.
like right now when she, vulnerable, lets her enjoyment show after she samples a bit of ice cream. ]
[ she watches him -- eyes shrewd, and inside wondering what are the odds that she'd be saying this exact same thing to tony, now, that she once said to steve. ]
Oh, piffle. [ yes. piffle. ] It's only barely different. Either way, it's about leveraging everyone else's expectations against them. Taking what's unfavourable and making it work for you.
[ a beat. ]
And not letting anyone else's opinions define you. [ ... ] Not where it matters.
There's no paying the debt I owe to people. To my world. I've tried to for years before realizing it's not going to happen, maybe it's not what Iron Man should be about. Not about me.
[ now that's not accurate. she cares a lot about the state of the world, about what's going to happen to it, about the road taken to get it there. but that's not what tony needs right now -- never mind that he'd come to her door with ice cream as means of settling her concerns and sore feelings.
she leans in; she takes another scoop. ]
You can say all the shite you want about yourself, Tony, it doesn't change how real those words were: your debt and your definition needn't be the same thing.
[ a rather delicious one. but there's something sour sitting just behind her expression -- as if she notices his deflection, takes umbrage with it, and won't let it slide by without some sort of fight. give it time. ]
Alright so until now in the months that I've been here, there was that time I drank too much and I yelled at you, and then the time when I was young and I hit on you and there was the time where Pepper left, yeah? and now Rogers is here and you're here and I think you're badass, aunt Peggy but.
[ but! ]
You're my go-person and I want to know if you have one. Not in a patronizing way, call it familial concern. I'm not asking who they are because, judging by the fact you were friends with my old man and you seem to like me and you liked Rogers - your taste in people in questionable - I'm just asking if there is one.
[ she purses her lips. he was right; it wasn't at all the sort of question she wanted to answer. he cautions her that it's not patronizing and, remarkably, she believes him. but it still cuts to the quick. why should she share the answer?
...it would have been easier if he'd asked her just about anything else. ]
I have my resources.
[ she answers a little stiffly. ]
One or two, at least.
[ a pregnant pause -- as though she's trying to gauge whether that answer is good enough or whether he'll take her to task on its vagueness. ]
[ well, this has gone a bit better than he thought it would. he nods, seems to be okay with what he has and then - ]
Two is good enough. I just.
[ he looks like he could kick himself and this is so stupid but still, he goes on. ]
Pepper said that while I don't have 99 personality flaws, I have about 36 which is fair, I suppose and she said I could lose sight of people if I focus too much on something else and I just wanted to make sure.
[ this part is easy. talking about jane is easy. because peggy is just giddy enough over having a real and true friend, something akin to what angie could have been, that she almost seems eager to tell him about it.
she doesn't get to gush much about her friendships. it's a new strange feeling. so, almost as if to deflect away from her affection for the woman, she adds: ]
And I can't imagine you much want to hear about the other one.
[ the other resource, the other name, the other go-to person. ]
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He already did. Well, there was no letter -- but he said sorry all the same. Sat right there, [ she gestures to tony's very seat, ] and ate crow.
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[ but after a moment, he lays the heavy sarcasm to rest and covers her hand with his. ]
You want me to get you my good scotch?
[ look, he tries not to drink anymore but one has to admit, this could be counted as an exception. ]
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[ martinis (of all things!) with jane. scotch alone. and then there was rip, once she'd come across him, pickling in his own conclusions. oh yes. peggy's looking a little worn around her edges.
but with a glimpse at the minifridge... ]
But I'm curious about that ice cream you brought.
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[ he gets up, wanders to the minifridge and takes out an ice cream tube ]
Stark Raving Hazelnuts. It's brilliant, half of those came with an Iron Man action figure. This one doesn't but I have a feeling I can search long enough to add it into your collection.
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I wouldn't call it a collection. [ a beat. ] It's something more like one man's lost and found.
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[ he argues and tosses a spoon at her general direction ]
It shows your great pride. I can't whip up a picture of me from when I was five, I know what will happen. You'll show it to people and tell them, 'oh yeah that's my nephew, look how cute he was, I have no idea what happened'.
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What makes you so certain I don't already tell people a variation on the same?
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Do you?
[ it seems like the thought is encouraging in its own right. ]
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I've mentioned, off-hand and a couple of times, that I've got a nephew in the mansion. Yes.
[ even in this, she plays coy. ]
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[ He asks, he tries his luck. ]
I mean, not that I can't imagine the shocked, 'not that douche?' but then you can always tell them I can do a double Windsor in my sleep so you obviously taught me something.
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[ which has less to do with tony's bad behaviour and much much more to do with the fact that peggy isn't the sort to play verbal white knight for anyone -- unless it's a moment that really truly matters. she saves her emphasis for actions.
like right now when she, vulnerable, lets her enjoyment show after she samples a bit of ice cream. ]
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[ he takes a spoonful of ice cream himself but not much else. Instead, he simply leans back and shrugs ]
It's pretty liberating when people learn to expect the worst of you.
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[ she watches him -- eyes shrewd, and inside wondering what are the odds that she'd be saying this exact same thing to tony, now, that she once said to steve. ]
I know a little of what that's like.
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[ he gives her a little look, not devoid of a smile ]
Besides, that's different and you know it.
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[ a beat. ]
And not letting anyone else's opinions define you. [ ... ] Not where it matters.
[ she taps her heart. ]
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[ define him, that is. ]
There's no paying the debt I owe to people. To my world. I've tried to for years before realizing it's not going to happen, maybe it's not what Iron Man should be about. Not about me.
[ he rolls his eyes ]
Shocking, I know.
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[ The weapons, first, the New York attack, later, Ultron, Vision, the Infinity stones, the whole lot. ]
I put us on a road and I'm not sure where it's going to end.
[ or perhaps he does, he had seen the vision, after all. ]
I promised not to waste my life, I made that promise. I still want to keep it I'm just not sure how.
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[ now that's not accurate. she cares a lot about the state of the world, about what's going to happen to it, about the road taken to get it there. but that's not what tony needs right now -- never mind that he'd come to her door with ice cream as means of settling her concerns and sore feelings.
she leans in; she takes another scoop. ]
You can say all the shite you want about yourself, Tony, it doesn't change how real those words were: your debt and your definition needn't be the same thing.
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Ok, I have to ask you something but you may not like it - but I did give you ice cream.
[ so that has to make up for it, surely. ]
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[ a rather delicious one. but there's something sour sitting just behind her expression -- as if she notices his deflection, takes umbrage with it, and won't let it slide by without some sort of fight. give it time. ]
Go on. Ask away.
[ she can't promise she'll answer. ]
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[ but! ]
You're my go-person and I want to know if you have one. Not in a patronizing way, call it familial concern. I'm not asking who they are because, judging by the fact you were friends with my old man and you seem to like me and you liked Rogers - your taste in people in questionable - I'm just asking if there is one.
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...it would have been easier if he'd asked her just about anything else. ]
I have my resources.
[ she answers a little stiffly. ]
One or two, at least.
[ a pregnant pause -- as though she's trying to gauge whether that answer is good enough or whether he'll take her to task on its vagueness. ]
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Two is good enough. I just.
[ he looks like he could kick himself and this is so stupid but still, he goes on. ]
Pepper said that while I don't have 99 personality flaws, I have about 36 which is fair, I suppose and she said I could lose sight of people if I focus too much on something else and I just wanted to make sure.
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[ this part is easy. talking about jane is easy. because peggy is just giddy enough over having a real and true friend, something akin to what angie could have been, that she almost seems eager to tell him about it.
she doesn't get to gush much about her friendships. it's a new strange feeling. so, almost as if to deflect away from her affection for the woman, she adds: ]
And I can't imagine you much want to hear about the other one.
[ the other resource, the other name, the other go-to person. ]
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