It's a very real temptation -- right up until the point where you realize the person you're so happy to see can just as easily be gone, again, the next day. Like I said: no discernible patterns.
[ if peggy truly is harbouring a desire to stay, she won't betray it easily. besides -- she knows she can't. she's got to go home and shape the next seventy years in espionage and intelligence-gathering. ]
Maybe that's something you've come to terms with. But the 'upgrades,' the reward system, the gifts? Getting to see lost loved ones? That'll kill motivation to struggle sure as fear will. It's a reliable tactic.
Neither. [ well, that's not strictly true. the serum helped. ] He went MIA during a mission and it turns out he got himself frozen in a giant block of ice. Preserved for decades.
no subject
[sorry to be a buzzkill. maybe if he actually had someone here like that he wouldn't be so flippant about it]
no subject
[ if peggy truly is harbouring a desire to stay, she won't betray it easily. besides -- she knows she can't. she's got to go home and shape the next seventy years in espionage and intelligence-gathering. ]
no subject
no subject
no subject
Anyway, glad you can see them again, regardless. [it sounds so insincere after that miniature tirade but he really is]
no subject
no subject
no subject
no subject
no subject
no subject
no subject
no subject
no subject
But all I felt was relief. He deserved to live -- even if only belatedly.
no subject
Guess it's in your best interests to make use of the time you have now, then.
no subject
no subject
Good luck, Captain.