Bella Swan (
favorite_three) wrote2016-10-25 04:21 pm
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After that, there are two conversations Bella wants to have very possibly more than she has ever wanted a conversation in her life.
One of them is going to have to wait until Charlie gets home, and that will be hours yet. (It's also the one she wants to have the most, but there is very little she can or would do about that, so she is putting it very firmly aside for now. Just because she knows about vampires now doesn't mean Charlie is in any more danger than he has been every other night he's worked. There is no logical reason to try to drag him home now. She can and will wait.)
(She's always known his job was dangerous.)
Prior to Milliways showing up, Bella had just arrived home after dropping Sherlock off; giving him a ride from school when he wants one has become routine.
She jumps right back into her truck and very carefully does not speed on her way to the Stark residence.
The other conversation she wants, she can have right now.
One of them is going to have to wait until Charlie gets home, and that will be hours yet. (It's also the one she wants to have the most, but there is very little she can or would do about that, so she is putting it very firmly aside for now. Just because she knows about vampires now doesn't mean Charlie is in any more danger than he has been every other night he's worked. There is no logical reason to try to drag him home now. She can and will wait.)
(She's always known his job was dangerous.)
Prior to Milliways showing up, Bella had just arrived home after dropping Sherlock off; giving him a ride from school when he wants one has become routine.
She jumps right back into her truck and very carefully does not speed on her way to the Stark residence.
The other conversation she wants, she can have right now.
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How useful. Sherlock really is the best friend she could have made here.
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"I thanked your double for giving me the last piece I needed to figure out about vampires. Or, to realize what I already knew, anyway. He said the same thing."
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She shakes her head a little.
"Even without the vampire thing. Cal's double was pretty different from him." (Even without the gender thing.) "And yours seemed different enough at first that I almost wasn't sure for a few seconds. With different realities being different, it would make sense for the people to be more different too."
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What's the best phrasing?
"- inherited characteristics."
She'll get to the differences (another unintentional glance at his scar) in a minute.
"His mannerisms were the same too, adjusting for how much more graceful he is as a vampire. The accent was the same - no," she corrects herself, tilting her head slightly in thought. "Almost the same. Yours sounds just slightly more like Mr Mayer."
She'd had rather more important things to think about once he'd sat down, and the difference really was very subtle. Not something a person - or at least, not something she could pick up on from a sentence or two.
But she has time to think about it now, and that difference was definitely there.
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"He didn't know me," she says thoughtfully. "I didn't think to ask about Cal, I really should have - maybe he and his Tony never came to Sunnydale?"
There isn't just one difference between their realities, necessarily, but that could potentially be a very big one.
Never mind that it's entirely reasonable that it never occurred to her, she still wishes she'd asked.
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"No, I'm sorry, I'm assuming yours was the type to send a vampire gang after you without having known him."
Not two minutes after talking about the differences she'd expect between doubles, too. She supposes she can forgive herself for such sloppiness after the afternoon she's had, but she'll have to watch herself to avoid any relapse. For all she knows, this reality's Obadiah Stane was a perfect gentleman.
. . . unlikely, given Sherlock's lack of perturbation over his fate. But still. That by itself hardly tells her everything about the man. A person can be highly unpleasant without also being a potential murderer.
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"What particular?" she asks. "He didn't send a vampire gang after you? Or he sent something else after you?"
Sherlock is at least not denying that Obadiah was the type to send something lethal after someone.
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"It's okay, I misunderstood.
"Assassins." She thinks back on what she learned about Stane and his relation to the Stark family, both personal and professional, during her research into the Starks. She hadn't prioritized any of that, but it had stayed with her.
Bella isn't very good at forgetting things that are relevant to information she's been especially focused on these days.
"After Tony. You would have been collateral damage."
And, in his double's case, inexcusably ill-considered and stupid collateral damage. Had that Obadiah Stane wanted to die horribly?
She does not bother to try and keep that line of thought off her face.
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". . . I'm glad he's no longer a threat."
And that he doesn't seem to have been much more competent in regards to assassination than his double had been.
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"As am I. Ah... it would be kind of you to avoid bringing up Obadiah's darker nature around Tony. I was on the point of telling Tony about my accumulated suspicions when Obadiah got himself sucked into Hell and rendered the point moot. Since then it's seemed like telling him would only cause him a great deal of pain to no good purpose."
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But she also knows very well that not everyone is her, and not everyone wants to know the things she would want to know. Not to mention that Sherlock knows, probably better than anyone, what Tony can handle and what he can't, and if Sherlock of all people is advocating keeping something like this secret . . .
Bella nods.
"I won't say a word to him," she promises.
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And far too much time until Charlie gets home.
"That entity," she says suddenly, looking back at Sherlock. "Is there anything I'm - more equipped to know about it now than I was before?"
She doesn't think he held anything back, but even just hearing the same things again could be useful now that she has a better context for them.
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She is just going to have to find a way to ask him questions anyway. There's no reason for Sherlock to be her only resource if she has access to another.
"Yes," she says, "that doesn't seem as though it would have been very effective for any of you."
(It pretended to be my dad, was all Cal Chandler had been willing to say about his experience, more interested in fiddling with a lighter than meeting her eyes, and she had had to be content with that.)
"It could at least be partially filtered out. Headphones with the music turned up."
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"You could consider it practice," she suggests. "Beginning to teach your subconscious that an entity that cannot physically harm you doesn't suddenly become dangerous just because your full awareness isn't focused on it."
A first step toward getting rid of that fear of being watched sleeping that he has.
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