★ : this kid is funny, that’s for sure. marisa can’t tell if he’s just approximating what he’s seen adults do — because that’s what kids do, right? — but his over the top gestures are hilarious, and she can’t help but giggle just a bit at his gestures. maybe he really is just a strange kid, even if she does still get bits and pieces of that otherworldly vibe from moment to moment.
up and out, though… she’s still not sure where, exactly, he means, aside from the obvious. the sky? or what lay beyond that horizon, perhaps? certainly if he was just a child, that would be impossible, but if that sneaking little suspicion she had was correct, then —
‘yeah, the people that live on the moon. you know, lunarians.’ she waves a hand dismissively. ‘they’re not all that interestin’, though, so don’t worry about it. they don’t like people from outside the moon like, at all.’
something clicks, and then she throws all disbelief to the wind as she leans in.
‘wait, were you talkin’ about space?!’ she’s briefly floored by the possibility, but if he’s not human, then she could probably begin to comprehend it. ‘but… i thought there were loads of stars and planets out there. how’s it all empty, then?’
People live on the moon... in her home? That can’t be right. Not for his home, anyway. Maybe there. Maybe here. Voyager purses his lips together and really stops to think it over. No – there definitely hadn’t been, for him. It would’ve been nice if there had been, though, but humans weren’t capable of doing things like living on the moon like that, and they were all there had been. It’s why he’d been made! Because he could go where they couldn’t.
“You’re wrong,” Voyager says then, after a beat. It isn’t spoken with any sort of malice, though. His face remains as interested and vibrant as ever. “At least... for me? There was, nothing.”
“Waah?” Of course he’d been talking about space. It’s only when she mentions the stars and how it can’t all be empty that Voyager seems to clue in to how she’d misinterpreted his words. He waves his hands lightly, in a sort of haphazard dismissive way that doesn’t quite work as well as he’d hoped, because it’s more of a situational mimicry rather than something he understands. “Oh! No, no.”
His hands fall back down to his sides, and Voyager starts rocking idly back and forth on his heels.
“The planets, the stars. They’re there. They exist. But, it’s only Earth, with life. I was travelling, to find something else. But, there’s a lot of Nothing in between.” The vast expanse of space was beautiful, but it was very lonely.