Isabella Marie Swan ✴ "Stella" (
self_composed) wrote2012-09-23 11:04 am
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i believe i can fly
Alice eventually goes home for the evening.
Bella goes up and sits in her room.
She has five hexes.
Five.
That's rather a lot of hexes.
She gets out her notebook, with the lists, and she makes some wishes.
And then she goes to bed, grinning.
In the morning it will be time to make plans.
Bella goes up and sits in her room.
She has five hexes.
Five.
That's rather a lot of hexes.
She gets out her notebook, with the lists, and she makes some wishes.
And then she goes to bed, grinning.
In the morning it will be time to make plans.
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Bella gets up and puts on oven mitts and pulls it out. [Charlie'll be home in about fifteen minutes, by which time the pie'll be cool enough to eat. And then after dinner we have a difficult conversation with him.]
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On the other hand, fuck it, he has an underground lair now.
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"Yep, pot pie," Bella not-quite-sings, filling the pitcher with water and plunking it on the table.
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Are they inappropriately cheerful for the subject they will later be raising? Well, not like he cares. Pie!
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Ohhhh, it is good.
Bella sighs as she noms it, blissful.
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"This is real good, Bells," Charlie remarks. "Laney help you?"
"He chopped up the carrots, and stuff," Bella says.
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Om nom nom, pie.
Bella puts out a bowl of grapes as a facsimile of dessert.
Om nom nom, grapes.
And then...
Bella wonders if Alice wants to start. He probably doesn't, but she checks. [You want me to take this?]
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Talking about his dad isn't exactly the problem; talking to Charlie about his dad is a much bigger one. He just doesn't know how. And he clearly demonstrated with Angela earlier that talking to normal people is not a skill of his.
It probably isn't something you can pentagon, either. Or at least, it's not something he'd want to.
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"Dad," Bella says, when the grapes are a bowl of stems and no more, "in abuse cases - like, domestic violence and stuff - how is the victim's safety handled in cases where the defendant gets off? Even if it's on a technicality or something?"
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And then looks to Charlie to observe his answer.
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"Hmm," Bella says, reading Alice for a reaction.
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"Yep," says Charlie. "Bells, is somebody after you? That's not why you moved here, is it? Renée would've told me if there was -"
"No, no," Bella says, shaking her head.
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Alice hesitates on the vague suspicion that he would say it... wrong in some way.
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Charlie's expression is one of slowly dawning comprehension. He looks at Alice.
"In November," he said.
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He recalls the felt/heard sound of his own ribs snapping and winces slightly.
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"Part of today," Bella said, "went to making a list of - well, everything." [Are you going to hex yourself eidetic memory? This'd be a good time. Copy my version.] "I know Mrs. Hammond can't be compelled to testify against her husband, but their driver knows enough to be suspicious if he were halfway decent as a human being, and even the fact that Alice went to the hospital in November and didn't explain why ought to be suspicious - I figured it out that way. Alice has a safe place to go, whichever way a trial goes, but is worried about his dad buying someone off or there not being enough evidence to convict, and then he could get harassed at school."
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