@whaleships said: ♕ = bowing down before them. Like those polite bows. Not on your knees. Might be feeling a very small tad bit playful. who knows. // MEME.
“You’re exceedingly polite.” Quinn observes. It is overcast, the skies gone grey with rain. Grey is good. Grey means it isn’t a storm blowing in from the Glowing Sea. But grey and rain still means that they must sequester indoors, just in case. The people have become afraid of water, naturally.
Deacon tells her that it’s different in the Capital Wasteland. That the water is pure, clean of radiation. They export it all around. One day, he says, he’ll take her there. It’s where most of the synths are relocated to, after all.
( That day never happens. But that’s a story for another day. )
“Am I.” Less a question, and more a statement. Charles sits, straight-backed in his chair. Mugs of tea steam before them; hardly tasting like the brewed leaves she once knew before the war. He’s still akin to a stranger in her books, an odd figure not quite charted out, but she wishes he would have known what it was like. There were so few things that were good back then. Fewer still now – especially for him. He and this crew had come here hoping for a Plymouth Rock. Instead, they found only this.
“Oh, most certainly. You musn’t spare such pleasantries towards us Yankees.” The tone takes a playful lilt; a mimicry of his own accent. Her grin is hidden behind her tea as she drinks.
The rain patters against a broken pane, but in the distance does the familiar siren alarm; the Minutemen’s own. She turns abruptly in her seat. Charles is already standing at attention, before he remembers to get one last dig. Crossing the breadth of the table, his hands fold over the head of her chair as she stands, gently sliding it out of the way for her. When she steps out, he bows; at the hip, hands pressed against the sides of his thighs.
“Alas… I find myself unable to deny my excessive politeness, even around you… Yankees.” A hitched pause. The silence is filled with a short scoff from Quinn. She can just barely make out the carved shadows that form from a wry grin. He moves to open the door for her, knowing this is the part where duty calls.
“Then I reckon I’ll have to take a page from you. Next time – I’ll bring a welcoming gift.” A small pat on the arm, followed by a mock salute from the purported Minuteman General. How the founding fathers must be rolling in their graves. “And thanks for the tea, doc.”










