She knows the reference. It doesn’t conjure up memories of movie theaters and all the related accoutrements you’d find in one to enjoy what was playing on the screen. Before knowing the man the camera captured, she had research to do. There are enough reservations held to wonder if Emma did something similar with only motive differentiating them. She doesn’t accuse in her gaze, but suspects, the patient stare of one searching for evidence to indict.
“I don’t pretend to understand your position in every detail,” she allows room. Emma Reeves is known in public fact, uncolored by personal detail. Carlisle would have her depicted in a vivid spectrum; Siobhan’s copy of her is printed in monochromatic grays. She knows more than anyone that a woman is more than a wife, but a husband becomes a blot on an otherwise pristine silhouette. “The direction you take, however, is your choice.” Not Axel’s. Not Carlisle’s. Not her own, no matter what is warned, threatened, or advised. “If you truly agree with me, you won’t choose the path that will lead to his destruction.”
her lower lip trembles, just slightly, just enough. the one flicker past a steel exterior. she might have considered herself master of many universes, but this emotion was unknown, unquantifiable. it had the possibility to destroy. “i don’t want that.” spoken in clear concise terms, removed from the allegedlies and the denials. honesty glimpsed in a phrase, shielded once more from those who might use it against her. it might have been understood, if she was in the presence of the person she thought then it was. she is not a person of elaborations, the point, however dangerous, can only be made once before it is moved past. “but you’re right.”
she shifts, posture straightens, embodies something less than she is, something more akin to what she should be. “you don’t know me.” it’s a shame really, she cannot think of one person she might say that about in open friendship, but she cannot think of those choices now, they filter into the problems that are unsolvable. she wavers, hesitates. she knows that this conversation has gone poorly, given away too little to assure that she has no motives, worse given up nothing at all. finally, she says her one daring thing, she expects the worst in repercussion. “i would have wanted a friend to fight for my best interest too.”