It's been a damn long time since I've been around anything quite like family.
[ which is to say if she somehow hurt him with her neglect, that night -- well...she regrets it now. she'd been trying to follow his lead on that front: we're family. but hers has been a clumsy, odd attempt.
he worries about disappointing her. for once, in her life, she's worried about disappointing someone else. ]
[ everyone he's ever thought of as family is dead. She's outlived them all, even if, sometimes, in her later years she had mistaken him for his father. ]
I don't sleep. It just doesn't happen anymore. It's why I snapped.
[ she almost wants to say i know, i heard, agent romanoff told me about my death -- but she doesn't. she holds that like a little tragedy in the corner pocket. nothing he needs to think about, right now. ]
One reason why, perhaps. [ but an important one. ] I should warn you. I'm not terribly good at this sort of thing.
[ as if that much isn't already painfully obvious. ]
[ she isn't, of course. just fine. but that's yet another point to abandon unsaid. ]
There is not a man or woman, no matter how fit he or she may be, who is capable of carrying the entire world on their shoulders. A wonderfully wise man told me so, once, and I suspect he would say the same thing applies to one's issues.
[ whether peggy could ever heed jarvis's advice, on the other hand... ]
[ but it sounds like a good story, tony knows one when it comes knocking. A little moment from the life of a man he loved, when he was much younger, long before Tony was even born. ]
[ it takes a long while for a reply to come, but when it does come, it starts as a rattle near the window. While he can pull an armani even today, Tony is currently wearing his work clothes, an old t shirt and a tired looking pair of dark jeans. At least he doesn't smell like tequila anymore.
Well mostly.
He does look terrible but at least he warned her about that in advance. ]
Well.
[ he takes a seat near the table, he wants his story now, thank you. ]
[ by contrast, peggy remains polished. well -- mostly. her sleeves are rolled up to her elbows and she's slipped out of her heels while she sits (in a chair) with her stocking'd feet tucked behind a chair-leg. she's leaning over her desk, the one he brought her, and she's watching her device with care.
except he's here now. and so her care switches firmly onto him. ]
Hello. Tony. What do you know of Nitramene?
[ she pushes her chair back and launches into it. why shouldn't she? ]
My old man developed it. I never worked with it, too unstable. I know it has a giant blast radius that becomes a vacuum that has to be filled. Never actually seen it at work.
[ he places both arms on the table and uses them for a pillow. ]
But in this instance, it was about a milk truck's worth of the stuff. The blast took a whole Roxxon facility with it. As well as the back bumper of the car Mister Jarvis was most expertly driving in order to get me out of said facility.
I climbed the fence, of course. [ but that's interesting -- roxxon persists come the future. peggy isn't much surprised. sleazebags like hugh jones don't just disappear. not half as often as they should. ]
As for why and how they had his Nitramene -- well, that's a considerably longer story.
[ peggy rises from her chair and crosses over to the (yes) little electric kettle she'd taken to using after he'd suggested so. ]
I can pour us both a cuppa if you want to stay and hear it.
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It's been a damn long time since I've been around anything quite like family.
[ which is to say if she somehow hurt him with her neglect, that night -- well...she regrets it now. she'd been trying to follow his lead on that front: we're family. but hers has been a clumsy, odd attempt.
he worries about disappointing her. for once, in her life, she's worried about disappointing someone else. ]
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[ everyone he's ever thought of as family is dead. She's outlived them all, even if, sometimes, in her later years she had mistaken him for his father. ]
I don't sleep. It just doesn't happen anymore. It's why I snapped.
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One reason why, perhaps. [ but an important one. ] I should warn you. I'm not terribly good at this sort of thing.
[ as if that much isn't already painfully obvious. ]
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Seriously, I mean it. This was on me. I dropped a mountain of issues on you lately.
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There is not a man or woman, no matter how fit he or she may be, who is capable of carrying the entire world on their shoulders. A wonderfully wise man told me so, once, and I suspect he would say the same thing applies to one's issues.
[ whether peggy could ever heed jarvis's advice, on the other hand... ]
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But I spent so much of my life creating of legacy of death. They called me Merchant of Death.
I wanted to change that. That's how iron man started.
He would have told me that. I know.
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It follows that you would have endured a lecture or two at the hands of one Edwin Jarvis.
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I pretended to when I was a kid but. I never really minded. I think he knew all along.
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[ maybe one of the few people who can properly cow and humble peggy carter without spoiling all their goodwill. ]
...It's rather nice to learn there's someone here who knows what I mean when I say so.
[ it makes her feel a little less lonely. she prays it does the same for him.
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I named my best program after him.Just A Rather Very Intelligent System.
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I'm damned happy you had him. At least.
[ she means it. ]
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me too.
I'll try and come over soon. to take back my phone. Say hi.
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And I'll tell you about the time Mister Jarvis damn near out-drove an explosion. Unless, of course, he's already told it to you himself.
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[ but it sounds like a good story, tony knows one when it comes knocking. A little moment from the life of a man he loved, when he was much younger, long before Tony was even born. ]
how did it happen?
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Really??
It might take days. I have a giant electromagnetic headache.
1/2
2/2
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Well mostly.
He does look terrible but at least he warned her about that in advance. ]
Well.
[ he takes a seat near the table, he wants his story now, thank you. ]
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except he's here now. and so her care switches firmly onto him. ]
Hello. Tony. What do you know of Nitramene?
[ she pushes her chair back and launches into it. why shouldn't she? ]
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[ he places both arms on the table and uses them for a pillow. ]
--- you have.
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[ unfortunately. ]
But in this instance, it was about a milk truck's worth of the stuff. The blast took a whole Roxxon facility with it. As well as the back bumper of the car Mister Jarvis was most expertly driving in order to get me out of said facility.
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[ he looks at her. ]
how the hell did you get yourself into Roxxon? and how the hell did they get their hands on one of my dad's worst inventions?
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As for why and how they had his Nitramene -- well, that's a considerably longer story.
[ peggy rises from her chair and crosses over to the (yes) little electric kettle she'd taken to using after he'd suggested so. ]
I can pour us both a cuppa if you want to stay and hear it.
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[ god help him, he almost looks hopeful. it's been three hours since his last cup of coffee. ]
I haven't slept in thirty hours. tell me you've got something there that has active caffeine in it.
[ fat chance but still, he tries. ]
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