Duplicity Inbox
Oct. 4th, 2001 02:32 pm![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
Jᴀᴄᴏʙ Fʀʏᴇ "I'm no criminal. I just do as I please." |
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Date: 2022-11-06 05:28 am (UTC)His attention goes back to the papers, and he reads through them before he finds a pen to sign with, before handing that page to her so she can also sign.
"I hope so. I want... this to be beneficial to both of us. Not only keeping you out of jail I mean. I enjoy your company."
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Date: 2022-11-06 06:51 am (UTC)"Well, I am delightful," she allows, blowing on the ink before setting all of it aside. "I almost feel like there should be some of those bottle poppers or something. Some champagne. ¡Salud!, you know?" She glances towards the bags he brought, then back at him. "Don't suppose anything in there explodes?"
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Date: 2022-11-06 08:37 am (UTC)"You are, and I won't have anyone say otherwise." He agrees, and although she might not have meant it, he does. It's not so evident in his tone, unfortunately.
"No, but-" He says, and pauses, moving to pull a hip flask out of the inside pocket of his coat, "If you did want something, there's whiskey in here. The Scottish stuff." He adds, because the stuff that is made in America is... not the same. He'll be polite. "The only things that I know explode are explosives, and I don't think we should opt for that."
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Date: 2022-11-06 06:36 pm (UTC)"Meds," she says instead, since she's already explained it once. "But once I'm off 'em, watch your back. I have a tolerance to reclaim." She does get up to get herself a bottle of something sparkling and nonalcoholic she plucked off the shelf at the grocery store, and she does raise a glass of this to his flask.
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Date: 2022-11-06 07:37 pm (UTC)He will gently knock his flask against her bottle, taking a sensible swig, and then capping it. Drinking is only something he wants to do with people nowadays. But he will fetch the plates and the food, so they can eat, letting her do whatever she needs to do with the papers.
"Was Indian food something you had much before?" He asks, putting down rice on both plates and some of the bread too, moving them to the table and then putting the silver trays down too so they can pick at what they fancy.
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Date: 2022-11-07 07:02 am (UTC)Still, she lets him grab down the dishes, and only trails over after she's slipped the papers into an envelope to deliver tomorrow morning first thing. She follows her nose, peering curiously down at the food.
"Once," she admits. "It was a long time ago though, so let's go with no. What is it?"
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Date: 2022-11-07 07:22 am (UTC)"So rice- I think it's probably different from the rice you have, a different variety. Then we have chicken curry, which is like a Tari Wala, and fish curry, and I don't remember the name of that one. The dish with peas in is Mutter Paneer, the white cubes are cheese. It's the most amazing sort of cheese I've ever had. The fried, spicy potatoes are... something aloo. And bread. Naan, it's called."
He brings over the bottle of lassi too, "This is yoghurt, but made into a drink with mango. I thought it might be nice for dessert. Or if it gets too spicy for you." He teases, sitting down to eat with her.
"There's probably going to be left overs. But all of this is good the next day too."
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Date: 2022-11-07 08:19 am (UTC)"I'll do my best to keep up," she assures him, picking up her fork. "It smells amazing. Which one's your favorite?" She's assuming it's here, since she didn't have a preference.
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Date: 2022-11-07 09:11 am (UTC)"My favourite of what they make here is the paneer," He admits- and that's what he helps himself to first, the paneer is soft and smooth, the peas add a pop of freshness, the spice it's cooked in warms you from the inside out. It's simple and delicious. "After that? The fish. But in India? Its all a hundred times better."
He'll let her help herself to whatever she fancies, the fish is creamier than the chicken but the spice has sunk deep into the white flakes. It's almost too good to be true.
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Date: 2022-11-07 07:44 pm (UTC)She takes some of each and makes herself not shovel it in.
"I'm a scavenger and a scout back home," she offers as she picks up her fork. "Sometimes it means I get first pick of whatever I find, but usually it just means I miss out on whatever they're cooking inside the walls. It's a learning curve to oh my god."
She likes the fish, the way she cuts off and immediately takes another bite, and then a third attests.
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Date: 2022-11-07 08:27 pm (UTC)But then she tries the fish and clearly its a good choice on his part as she takes fork
full after forkfull. He's pleased she likes it- he isn't sure she felt the same way when she cooked for him, but he thinks she did, he remembers her watching his reaction, but maybe that was just to see if he cried because of the spice. Then again, she can't be immune to it, the anticipation of seeing what the other person thinks of something you think highly of, or love, or made. It makes your heart beat a little faster.
"It's good, right? They're not far from the Arena, so I end up in there a lot. They're nice people." Which is more than some LIERs will say about the natives.
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Date: 2022-11-07 08:55 pm (UTC)Even the bread is delicious. Good lord. She uses it to wipe up the sauce from her first helping before going back for a second.
"We don't really have spices anymore. Just what we can grow or find, and that goes pretty quick when you're trying to feed a community through winter." She's been involved in those discussions; she is, often, on the side of practicality over luxury. "You said you grew up with this though?"
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Date: 2022-11-07 10:32 pm (UTC)"They're not very common for us either. Even with the Empire and trade as it is, most people can't buy cumin and turmeric and that sort of thing as easily. And things like cinnamon or saffron won't grow in Britain. But there's got to be herbs and things that grow where you are. Or could, under glass."
He gets a little more of the chicken and the paneer, letting her have more of the fish, "India is part of the Empire, so some of the food they have made it to us. And my father spent several years over there, so he would have the cook try and recreate it. And then once we met Jayadeep, he would make us more authentic things."
He gives a slight shrug, "Not all the time. But we did eat a lot of Indian food. As well as whatever else was easy to grab."
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Date: 2022-11-08 12:16 am (UTC)And Alexandria makes a lot of stew.
"You had a cook?" She glances up from finishing her second helping, from giving herself more of the chicken. She is, though, slowing down. "Who is Jayadeep?"
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Date: 2022-11-08 08:43 am (UTC)"My father was a widower, he had two small children, a day job and assassin work. I don't think, even if he'd known how to cook, he would have had time." He explains, but in truth they had been middle class anyway, having a cook and a maid wasn't unusual. "And Jayadeep was an assassin in London, he helped us when we first arrived there. And now he's my brother-in-law."
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Date: 2022-11-08 09:14 am (UTC)"Yeah, well, we didn't know that did we?" she chuckles. Maggie might have, honestly, but she'd had enough else on her plate at the time and now they're stuck with an entire hillside of mint.
There are worse things, especially with the smell.
"Oh," she says, sobering, when she's reminded that indeed, Jacob never got to know his mother at all. Everyone she knows has lost a lot of people, lost most everyone they know in turn, but there's still a bit of sorrow in her for that. "So Henry and Jayadeep are the same person?"
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Date: 2022-11-08 09:21 am (UTC)He picks at some more of the paneer, finishing that mouthful before he nods.
"It's a little... complicated. But my father had a hand in training Jayadeep too, before we were born. When he brought Jayadeep to England, he decided to call him Henry instead. Henry Green." Jacob's scowl says exactly what he thinks of that. "Then again, his enemies didn't associate an Indian man with that name, so it helped keep him safe for a long time."
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Date: 2022-11-08 09:32 am (UTC)"I'm from America," Rosita reminds him, smiling wryly back. "I'm familiar with the concept." Ellis Island did its fair share of changing names to something more anglicized.
She's sopping up sauce with her bread again, but it's not the ravenous push she'd started with - it's more, now that she's unwilling to be wasteful and she takes her time.
"My mother was an immigrant though. I'm glad you aren't adding to the problems we tend to have just existing somewhere we're trying to make a living."
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Date: 2022-11-08 10:26 am (UTC)The food is good, a wonderful way to bond. He wishes more people would be open to experiencing other cultures and accepting people, food seems to be a great way to do that to him.
"London is a big hub of people, from everywhere, at the moment. Freed people from America, the Irish, Indians, Germans, Arabs. It's better for having those people, I wish we were better at being more accepting."
He pauses again, because there is something new in her home that had caught his attention, and to be more accepting, he supposes he has to understand what things are. So he looks back to the coffee table, the flowers, the candle, the offering, and he decides to just ask the question.
"That looks like an altar?" He asks, although the skulls are a little strange for someone from a protestant background. "What is it for?"
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Date: 2022-11-08 10:40 am (UTC)They're not the ominous kind of skulls that tend to be pervasive around this time of year for most people; the brightly colored paper isn't the only difference, but the patterns she drew on when she couldn't cut them out finely enough are pretty rather than gruesome, and their grinning mouths are smiling, welcoming rather than leering. She didn't make it for anyone but herself so it hadn't occurred to her to say anything, but she glances over when he mentions it - and she smiles.
"It is," she confirms. "We call it an ofrenda. It's for Día de Muertos - the day of the dead." Rosita doesn't have an accent as far as Americans are concerned, except when she says her name or drops into Spanish, and then she speaks quickly and fluidly before it vanishes again.
"I haven't done anything for it in years. I'm trying to give this place a bit more of a chance though, and it seemed like a good place to start."
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Date: 2022-11-08 12:34 pm (UTC)But he's happy to turn his attention to what she's saying, rather than things he can do nothing about while in Duplicity. Hell, he can only chip away at it at home, but that's something at least. Back to the here and now, however-
"An ofrenda for the Día de Muertos." He repeats, trying to make sure he gets the pronunciation right. He hasn't spoken any Spanish for years, and he's not as good at it as French or German, but perhaps she won't be offended if he tries to pick it up again with her. "I've not heard of the Day of the Dead. What's it about?"
He can guess, but frankly, he'd rather not and actually let her tell him about her traditions. They are hers, after all, and she doesn't seem like the sort that would appreciate him just making assumptions all over the place.
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Date: 2022-11-08 02:12 pm (UTC)"My mother taught me. She moved up to Texas from Mexico, where it's a much bigger holiday than Halloween. She said it was about family, and coming together," she explains, setting her fork down so she can get up from the table and cross the short distance to the display.
"It's the one night a year the world of the dead and the living are close enough to touch, and those you've lost can come be with you again. The four elements are here - salt from the earth, the skull banners flutter in the air, water in the glass, fire in the candle - flowers to honor those who have died. Normally there are pictures, too, but - I don't have any." She presses her lips together, reaching to straighten one of the marigolds in its place. "Different people put up different offerings to give the spirits strength for the journey. The candle guides them home and lights their way back again so they aren't trapped. The gifts can be tailored to your loved ones - a favorite sweet, or an instrument, or a piece of jewelry."
She's chosen a shot of the whiskey for hers. She figures if Abraham did go through the trouble of making the journey all the way here, he'd like that better than water.
"I don't know how much I believe in it, but it's... nice. And Mama believed."
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Date: 2022-11-08 02:28 pm (UTC)"We don't have Halloween." He says quietly, trying to think of what they do instead in Britian. They don't really have a special date, per se. "Or anything like this. Or maybe some areas do. We... my family aren't religious."
He does feel that maybe he should do something. He should try to do something for Jack. What Or how, he doesn't know. He's not sure he should try to disturb his spirit either, but...
"What happens if you don't have the candle, or something for them?"
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Date: 2022-11-08 04:04 pm (UTC)"I mean obviously it is for a lot of people, but it doesn't have to be. It isn't for me." She doesn't have the luxury of right or wrong, heaven or hell, sin or virtue. She just does the best she can and tries to stay alive. "It's just... nice, to think of them again, and think that maybe they're thinking of me too."
The little tea light is almost out, and Rosita has a new one sitting nearby ready to light. It makes the whiskey shine beside it.
"They can still come, if everyone wants it badly enough. They're still who they were in life: it's easier for some, harder for others. We ease the way because we love them. When we can't, they understand because they love us." It's a bit of a rationalization, but she says it anyway, and hopes it's true.
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Date: 2022-11-08 04:26 pm (UTC)He kneels with her, between the sofa and the coffee table, still watching as she changes over the candle.
"It is. Good to remember them, I mean. And hope they are happy." Healthier than they were. What sort of man would Jack be, if he hadn't been so ill? If the madness hadn't consumed him? Happy. Wild, a bit like Jacob had been, charming too. Probably in trouble every other minute.
He finds that there's gathering tears in his eye, and he doesn't trust himself to speak again before he wipes the moisture away.
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