numberthree: (☂ 00.102)
Allison Hargreeves | #00.03 ([personal profile] numberthree) wrote2021-04-12 10:49 am

Mask or Menace ☂ IC Phone Post

INBOX Voice | Text | Call | Video | Surprise Me A flat computer automated voice comes on and states in monotone: "This is the voicemail box for Allison Hargreeves. Leave a message at the beep."

obediences: (pic#13181660)

[personal profile] obediences 2020-12-14 03:13 am (UTC)(link)
"Yeah. It's interesting, seeing what sort of things are on people's minds. I don't really raise questions myself—" except for the once, which had been a combined miracle-slash-disaster, "but I like reading what's out there, and sometimes responding. There was this kid the other day, she's getting to know her grandparents in this universe for the first time, and that made me realise that I'd literally never even thought about it. I mean, we don't have fathers, and our birth mothers are out of the picture. And even Dad never mentioned where he came from, and Mom is... Mom. I dunno, it was a weird blind spot, realising that I'd never thought about it, never considered that we just don't have grandparents. Have you thought about it at all?"

Now it's just a thought experiment, a piece of idle curiosity. He imagines it might've come up with her more, since she'd had in-laws, while Luther still operated with no exposure to anything like a real family.

Still. The topic's sliding back to something safer, more innocuous, less private — this, in fact, is something they could discuss in the living room or kitchen just fine — but the door's still closed. The door's still closed. (It feels almost too selfish, in a way, and too greedy. That he still gets to have this, gets to savour her company for himself after so many years without. Of course he's loath to let it go, even now, after all this time here.)
obediences: (pic#13500672)

[personal profile] obediences 2020-12-23 01:01 am (UTC)(link)
"Yeah, makes sense."

Claire, Patrick, Vernetta, Ray. She's had so much more experience than any of the rest of them with the rituals and trappings of a normal life, and actual families. Which of course elicits that creeping, nagging thought: Who the hell is he to say that she can't have a normal life? How is that any of his business?

But.
They'd all seen how that had ended, and where it had gone.

Luther can't even really remember where he was going with this, finds himself lost for whatever he was about to say next. It mostly just happens with Allison, where the topic always meanders and roams like this, skidding unpredictably along like a boat bobbing along on a stream. He could ask her if she'd ever tried to find her birth mother like Diego had tried with his — but it all feels monumentally irrelevant now, even more than it did when they were in the right universe for it.

"At least the three of us can put together some kind of Thanksgiving thing. Later this month."