brireid:
“God, you are so right.” Brianna laughed, shaking her head, “I can always think of about a million things I’d rather do than get ahead on work when I’m caught up. Watching paint dry is definitely in my top five.” She was still laughing as she watching him move toward the printer to retrieve the article he had been after, reading carefully for whatever it was that he was so earnestly interested in. “Oh that’d definitely why there was no leniency. “ Bri laughed again, leaning back in her chair. “Well, I’m sure the urgency will become more apparent to the masses once your brilliant research has been published.”
For Theodore, being right was more of a default state, really, but he appreciated anyone else noticing it. “I wish I could say I wasn’t the same way but--well, you see how I am when I get even a whiff of inspiration for my dissertation, and while I wouldn’t say I’m behind on it, I’m not...not behind either.” There wasn’t really a timeline, and his advisor seemed to lack any real drive for him to finish quickly, which Theodore hoped was a sign that he wanted the best possible paper. “It’s that, or to teach me a lesson, right?” He cracked a smile. The guards were hardly punitive--in his experience--but he wouldn’t exactly put it passed some of them either. “I’m not sure if it’s better to write a work that’s world-altering, or just quietly helpful to the people who need to read it the most, but I’m not sure I want the fame...” he admitted, a tad shy.











