[ peggy hadn't been talking about the fleet. but, of course, steve wasn't privy to that distinction -- only she had been, deep in her mind and remembering the smell of the grass and the sound of the band. peggy sighs away her concession, pulls her fingers through her hair, and tells him what he wants to hear. ]
It's a lovely story. [ well. sort of what he wants to hear. ] And if they're both happy with that sort of exuberance? All the power to them.
For her sake, I hope it did. [ go well. but peggy's gut reaction is an indignant horror. then again, she's never been one for surprises. so rarely are they as sweet as intended. ] But I wouldn't blame her for getting her hackles up. As gestures go, it's rather indelicate.
Announcing a fledgling relationship is miles away from announcing just about any other milestone.
[ he nods, tries not to chuckle. indelicate is certainly an appropriate adjective. ]
But I guess it isn't different than the status change. These things seem to be more public lately. They don't really announce weddings and engagements on the newspapers anymore, I guess that's something, too.
I've come 'round to the notion than an ideally lived life should come with having one's name printed in the papers only twice: under birth announcements, and then under the obituaries. Everything else is information that other people never need.
[ she watches him -- loving, and familiar -- and decides that although he has no right or claim on her secrets, she still might owe him a better understanding of her stance. ] Those two things are certainties, at least. With everything else, you also run the risk of looking like a fool if it does stick. Engagements break all the time.
[ and safe; but then, love tosses those two things out the window at times. ]
I guess it's human nature though. You may know something can end, engagements or marriages but at the time, you still wanna celebrate since it means a lot, you forget the risk.
I don't think I can. Anymore. [ -- forget the risk.
peggy turns just so. a fresh angle allows her to curl her fingers around the curve of his wrist, drawing his hand down to the mattress and prying away the communicator. it's a distraction, really. ]
I was engaged, once. During the war. Things ended poorly. [ ... ] So there's a newspaper announcement and a party I wish I could take back.
[ he watches her for a moment and then settles down, takes her hand in his, the tip of his thumb following the lines on her palm. Perhaps it's because of their history, that his mind goes a very certain way when it concludes what happened, and his concern multiplies, at once. ]
Oh, Steve. [ she tilts her head with a sudden recognition of his sympathy -- and his goodwill along with it. it's sweet of him to worry, really. and she never expected anything less of his reaction. ] No. Nothing like that. Quite the opposite.
[ except, of course, for michael. and she knows his name will be brought up in time. but that's a tragedy steve's already been told; he doesn't need to learn it all over again. ]
He never went. [ ... ] He served with the Home Office. Never had to leave his desk, I suspect, outside of officers' luncheons.
[ but peggy went, he completes the sentence silently. peggy went overseas to do much more than office work and steve doesn't ask, doesn't pry into the details of an unhappy memory, simply assumes it wasn't received very well, that a clash was created between a man who favored desk-work and luncheons and a woman who wanted to do more. ]
No, never. I joined SOE, and then SSR. And then -- [ she met steve, and everything else had crumbled away aside from her work and her duty. peggy clears her throat and shakes her head and she knows she doesn't need to finish the sentence. he'll understand. ]
He and I wanted very different things. I'm certain he found himself a much better match.
It's just as well, really. I can't argue with the path it set me on -- and to think I turned down the first offer for field work. I'm damned lucky they gave me a second chance.
[ to take risks. to find adventure. to make good on michael's recommendation, considering her last conversation with him had been an argument. ]
I think about that second chance and then I think about your collection of 4Fs. Both of us very nearly never went to war.
I guess that's just it, isn't it? sometime seizing these chances, weird as they are is what people need to do. You did important things in the war, you made a difference in many people's lives. You made it count exactly because of the risk.
[ it's a relaxed sort of conversation. in the end, her previous engagement is accepted without a single blink. peggy has lived a life before him and will leave a damn exciting life after him and he knows how to be grateful for each detail she allows him to know. ]
Without you, I might have been nothing more than propaganda material. You've taken a risk that day, too. Never told you how much I appreciated it.
Without a doubt, it was the easiest risk I ever took. [ peggy had possessed such faith in his potential -- his ability, and his determination. she'd witnessed it at every turn before they'd even administered the serum. and so she'd known, deep in her heart, that he would come back from that mission.
didn't change how much relief she'd felt to see him again, of course. nor the validation. ]
I was so glad for the chance Erskine gave me, after he died - I felt lost for a while. I guess Captain America only ever started to mean something because of that day.
[ because of that risk, because of the faith that laid beneath it. ]
We all sometimes need someone willing to believe in us -- [ it's one of those rare and achingly optimistic phrases that sometime find their way through her well-guarded filters. but she's got michael on the mind, and it's not a far leap from steve talking about the chance erskine gave him to considering the chance michael had given her. ]
I admit, the little speech I gave you was little more than a rehashed version of what my brother told me. [ her smile shows sadness, certainly, but it's overshadowed by a quiet affection. ] At my engagement party.
[ in many ways, then, that poorly-received uso performance before what had been left of the 107th had a lot in common with her engagement party. ]
[ it's no accident that she should gently (or, perhaps, not-so-gently) reference their camping trip. but it's important to put those words in a broader context. ten months is a long time, although it feels brief. ]
My mind is made up. Darling, my mind was made up before you hit the water.
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[ with the network and the ships, it's amazing he hasn't met mon-el up until now. ]
Or champange. Still - I guess it's nice she has someone who's so excited about being with her, she deserves that.
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It's a lovely story. [ well. sort of what he wants to hear. ] And if they're both happy with that sort of exuberance? All the power to them.
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[ and he cringes a bit since it's obvious kara isn't the happiest with this turn of events. ]
They're from the same world, but I don't think they're exactly from the same background. He seems genuine. I'll ask her if it went well later on.
[ give her a bit of time to extinguish this particular fire. ]
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Announcing a fledgling relationship is miles away from announcing just about any other milestone.
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[ he nods, tries not to chuckle. indelicate is certainly an appropriate adjective. ]
But I guess it isn't different than the status change. These things seem to be more public lately. They don't really announce weddings and engagements on the newspapers anymore, I guess that's something, too.
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[ she watches him -- loving, and familiar -- and decides that although he has no right or claim on her secrets, she still might owe him a better understanding of her stance. ] Those two things are certainties, at least. With everything else, you also run the risk of looking like a fool if it does stick. Engagements break all the time.
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[ and safe; but then, love tosses those two things out the window at times. ]
I guess it's human nature though. You may know something can end, engagements or marriages but at the time, you still wanna celebrate since it means a lot, you forget the risk.
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peggy turns just so. a fresh angle allows her to curl her fingers around the curve of his wrist, drawing his hand down to the mattress and prying away the communicator. it's a distraction, really. ]
I was engaged, once. During the war. Things ended poorly. [ ... ] So there's a newspaper announcement and a party I wish I could take back.
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He never came back from the front-lines?
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[ except, of course, for michael. and she knows his name will be brought up in time. but that's a tragedy steve's already been told; he doesn't need to learn it all over again. ]
He never went. [ ... ] He served with the Home Office. Never had to leave his desk, I suspect, outside of officers' luncheons.
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Have you seen him? afterwards?
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He and I wanted very different things. I'm certain he found himself a much better match.
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[ but in the end, that hardly matters. he keeps his hold on her hand as he shifts, lying on his side, crossing over some distance. ]
It's a bad fallout. Can't say I know what that's like. I guess in a way, I've always knew what finding the right partner feels like.
[ finding and losing and finding once more and yet, his first love was Peggy and Peggy always felt right. ]
But you're still one of the biggest risk-takers I know and you're still the best girl I've ever met, bad fallouts or not.
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[ to take risks. to find adventure. to make good on michael's recommendation, considering her last conversation with him had been an argument. ]
I think about that second chance and then I think about your collection of 4Fs. Both of us very nearly never went to war.
[ the odds had been so slim. and yet! ]
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[ it's a relaxed sort of conversation. in the end, her previous engagement is accepted without a single blink. peggy has lived a life before him and will leave a damn exciting life after him and he knows how to be grateful for each detail she allows him to know. ]
Without you, I might have been nothing more than propaganda material. You've taken a risk that day, too. Never told you how much I appreciated it.
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didn't change how much relief she'd felt to see him again, of course. nor the validation. ]
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[ because of that risk, because of the faith that laid beneath it. ]
It made all the difference.
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I admit, the little speech I gave you was little more than a rehashed version of what my brother told me. [ her smile shows sadness, certainly, but it's overshadowed by a quiet affection. ] At my engagement party.
[ in many ways, then, that poorly-received uso performance before what had been left of the 107th had a lot in common with her engagement party. ]
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[ an engagement party, of all places, is not the ideal place to hear about wrong decisions and a better path. ]
I'm sorry.
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[ there is compassion in learning this sort of information beforehand and yet, it must have been such a painful matter. ]
Well.
[ his sigh is heavy, as if he's contemplating a rather tragic affair. ]
I guess that means cutting back the big anniversary announcement.
[ he's mostly joking. ]
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Steve Rogers. [ faux-stern. ] Are you implying I can't be trusted not to change my mind moments before you go and announce it? Oh, ye of little faith.
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[ the looks he gives her is not without a healthy dose of doubt. ]
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[ it's no accident that she should gently (or, perhaps, not-so-gently) reference their camping trip. but it's important to put those words in a broader context. ten months is a long time, although it feels brief. ]
My mind is made up. Darling, my mind was made up before you hit the water.
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[ he shifts towards her until their noses touch, lips curling into a wry little twist. ]
That was entirely romantic.
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