notverywise: (what's gonna happen to you?)
Jenny Winklevoss ([personal profile] notverywise) wrote2011-07-06 02:00 am
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There are days when Jenny doesn't know how she ever managed to like it here. She'd say as much, anyway, though the logic still makes sense. (Of course she would have liked it. The island is exotic, beautiful, about as far from Twickenham as it's possible to get, and it isn't as if she came from a particularly good time.) It's just that, while there are times it's easier to ignore the size and limitations of this place in favor of focusing on the atmosphere, there are likewise times when the exact opposite is true, when everything feels as stifling as it did back home, when she was still just a schoolgirl, before everything turned on its head. Here as well, there's nowhere to go and nothing to do, and no way of trying to put back together the pieces of the life she left behind. In that way, it's worse than home.

Were it not for the fact that half the things on the island are apparently bloody magic (and she'll never understand that, she thinks, not in a million years, not even if it fascinated her initially), it might not be an issue at all. As it is, though, this particular day, the jukebox and bookshelf seem to both be conspiring against her, the former singing you've got me wrapped around your little finger at her as the latter is at once filled with innumerable copies of Jane Eyre upon her approach. It's more than she cares to deal with, more than she has the patience for.

She heads out of the Compound after that, in the hopes that some fresh air will do her good. Anything, really, to get away from the notion that something here knows her, knows about the life she hasn't seen fit to describe in detail to anyone. It isn't supposed to matter here, and yet it follows her around anyway; the best she can do is try to put some distance between it and herself. Not caring enough to walk all the way out to the beach, she seats herself instead on the Compound steps, concrete warm under her palms and the backs of her legs, head tipped back slightly and eyes half-closed as she draws in a deep breath. It's far better than being inside, but it leaves her distracted, so much that she almost doesn't notice someone walking up. "Hello," she says absently, when she finally registers movement, probably a few moments later than should otherwise be the case. She lowers her chin slightly, then, just a touch more serious. "I'm not in your way, am I?"
makeafairfight: (let me climb under your skin.)

[personal profile] makeafairfight 2011-07-19 08:22 am (UTC)(link)
As it is, she's told him barely anything. Cam can't help being curious, of course, deeply so, why someone like Jenny would think herself so utterly without prospects, why she would keep such a burden on her own shoulders with no one to help her carry it. For a moment, he wants again to pull her to him and say it will be alright, as if he can somehow put right the unknown things she's left behind just by offering a little comfort when he can't even be sure it's wanted or warranted. He just can't help the impulse to be of use if he can, especially to the women in his life.

He offers her a small smile instead, slowing almost to a stop so he can look at her without leading her into a tree or anything like that. "I'm honored," he says, and means it wholly. That she thinks she can trust him on so brief an acquaintance is a gesture of faith in him which he himself lacks these days, more often than not. "And if there's anything I can do to help, you only need say the word."
makeafairfight: (then all my stars are leading me to you.)

[personal profile] makeafairfight 2011-07-29 12:24 am (UTC)(link)
That there, the way her expression shifts, the measured tone of her voice — more than the rest, it makes Cameron want to find whoever got her in this trouble she won't talk about, and hurt them, at the very least make sure they never hurt her again. No one should have to be so affected by so simple an offer, least of all a lovely, bright girl like Jenny.

"Of course," he says, soft but firm. "You don't need to thank me, I haven't done anything. Come on, it's right through here." Hand still light over hers where it rests on his arm, he leads her carefully off the path and through the trees, distantly grateful for the shade and the slight respite from the island heat. It's nothing like Connecticut or Massachusetts, and while England has its summer heat, he doubts Jenny's any more accustomed to it than he is. They could both use a break, he thinks, in more ways than one.
makeafairfight: (if everything we've said is true.)

[personal profile] makeafairfight 2011-07-29 10:33 am (UTC)(link)
"I've only been here a couple weeks," Cameron reminds her, "so no, I wouldn't say often, but... now and again. I like it. It's..." He trails off, searching for the word, and comes up short. "Peaceful." It doesn't quite cut it. He's yet to feel especially at peace since coming here, too distracted by his predicament and the ways in which he is entirely unable to change or fix it, although to say so would be to admit he's given her advice he doesn't know how to follow. He's not going to lie and say he's just fine, but he's more than capable of pretending to be.

"Pretty," he adds, latching onto this new description as they get closer. It isn't like the countryside in Connecticut, and it's not broad enough to row down, even if he managed to attain a boat in which to do so (the inability to keep in proper practice just makes everything that much more frustrating), but it's lovely nonetheless, even if the tropical blooms growing along the water's edge strike him as gaudy and overblown. It has its charms all the same.
makeafairfight: (get myself a home life.)

[personal profile] makeafairfight 2011-08-01 12:31 am (UTC)(link)
It comes as a surprise, the slight weight of her head on his shoulder, and Cameron is hard-pressed to ignore the instinctive temptation to rest his against hers in turn. On his part, the gesture might come across too much as a romantic one, although that would hardly be his intent and is, he's sure, not hers. His head is in too much of a spin these days for him to think of romance, especially in a place he's set on leaving as soon as possible, though she's undeniably beautiful.

He keeps her where she is, not shying away from her, not trying to move closer or take advantage of the moment. He ought to suggest they sit, but he doesn't want her to think he's trying to pull away. "I thought you could use a little of both," he says instead, head turning slightly toward hers so that all he can see is dark hair.
makeafairfight: (to whom it may concern.)

[personal profile] makeafairfight 2011-08-02 11:45 pm (UTC)(link)
"I haven't got anywhere else to go," Cameron offers, stepping slowly back, hand moving to her elbow. It's a strange feeling, if he's honest, knowing he has nowhere to be, nothing he's meant to be doing — no classes, no studies, no practice, no races, no home life, nothing whatsoever to tie him down to any given moment. It could be freeing. For him, it feels the opposite. There's something claustrophobic about all that open uncertainty, the lack of direction. "We could sit a while, stay. If you like."

She's the one who suggested it, in essence, but still, he doesn't like to presume, even as he heads over to find a clear spot in the grass below a tree. By the water is always the best place to be, he figures, and not even because of his natural bias, the fact he spends — or used to spend — most of his waking hours on the river. It's just cooler here, next to running water, beneath the shade, and they could both use the respite.
makeafairfight: (let me climb under your skin.)

[personal profile] makeafairfight 2011-08-06 09:08 am (UTC)(link)
The thing about the stream is, it's not near wide enough to row in. Cameron knows that makes him strange, that this is what he thinks of, but it's worth considering; he's been without practice for a while now, except in a very makeshift way, and it's dissatisfying. He misses it, unfathomable though that may be to some people, the sense of being a part of something joined to the tranquility of making his own way.

She says that, though, and when he smiles back at her, it's genuine. "Me, too," he says. She's virtually a stranger, but maybe that's part of the appeal — she's just a sweet, charming young girl with no real idea what any of it means, what he's dying to go back to or done wrong, what's waiting for him when he gets back. He's not the kind for denial, but there's something precious about being able to step away from it all for a little while, if only when it comes to conversation. "And glad I met you. It's not nearly as nice here without good company."