letitbetrue: (003)
Demelza Poldark ([personal profile] letitbetrue) wrote2015-07-23 04:36 pm
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It takes Demelza less than five minutes to discover and understand the electricity in their apartment.

By the time they've made their way to the train station to retrieve the packages left for them -- Demelza spends the better part of their walk showing Ross the various items in hers, trying to understand what they might mean -- and then to the room assigned to them, the sun has set behind the large buildings she has yet to suss out the purpose of. It's dark when they enter and she fumbles for a candle only to realize there are none.

For a moment she simply stands there, her package held in one trembling hand, then she reaches out for the wall so that she might feel her way around the room. Her fingers encounter the switch by accident and when she touches it, her curiosity increases to the point where she cannot resist.

Gently, with great caution, she jiggles the switch gently, then moves it up in the way it seems to encounter the least resistance.

And the room is flooded with light.

For a moment she's stunned to silence and then she turns to her husband, her eyes wide and her lips parted. "Oh, Ross," she says, as if the light itself were a gift from God. There are no candles in the room, nothing with which to light their way but for the instruments on the ceiling and she peers up at them, blinking as the light stings her eyes, trying to understand how it is they can chase away all the shadows in the room from just a single point.

She remembers Nampara, the dark corners even a great number of candles could not reach entirely.

"Do 'ee see? The light's been harnessed," she tells him, pointing up at it. Her fear and her trepidation have been all but forgotten in the face of such an invention. "I know not how they done it, but it's brighter than all the candles at Nampara." She grins then, bright and faintly mischievous. "Brighter than all the candles at Trenwith."

The rest of the room seems none too impressive and she frowns after a moment of exploring. "Tis terrible plain, isn't it?" she asks, letting her fingers wandering over the light wood of a table. It's too smooth, too bright to be natural and she finds herself missing the old, heavy table in the kitchen at Nampara. The homesickness comes upon her in a wave and she blinks a few times, trying desperately hard to clear the tears before Ross sees them.

She should consider herself lucky, she thinks. To be here with Ross and their daughter, who has remained quiet in his arms all this time. To have been separated and brought to such a strange place as this would be far worse a punishment than just to be sick for home.
herhumbleservant: (disgustingly adorable)

[personal profile] herhumbleservant 2015-08-17 01:02 am (UTC)(link)
"I noticed," Ross answers plainly, watching his wife from where he sits and smiling softly when Julia turns her head, reaches for him as she's only begun to do when she craves the attention of both her parents. There's no part of his heart willing to deny his daughter that so he stands then, reaching his two loves in a matter of a few strides until he's close enough to rest his hand on the small of Demelza's back and press a tender kiss atop Julia's head. The baby makes a pleased gurgling sound, and Ross gazes down at her with the same sort of awe he knows he could lose himself in for hours at a time each day.

This isn't Nampara, it isn't the home he's known for most of his life, but he supposes that being here with Demelza and Julia is what will make settling in Darrow an acceptable change, if there truly is no option to leave, as they've already been told. He still isn't certain that he can allow himself to wrap his mind around the inability to escape the confines of this place, and he already wishes to find himself a steed as trustworthy as his Seamus to explore the edges of the town so that he might prove to himself what he does not want to believe; but for now, he wants to take at least a few precious moments to appreciate that his wife and daughter have not been taken from him; or that he had not been taken from them.

"I noticed," he says again, "but I promise you, we will find our way. We'll learn their words and if you want to wear trousers, by god, I will find you trousers."

Ross arches his brow just slightly in amusement at the thought of his wife walking through the streets in breeches with Julia on her hip, but he finds that he can hardly imagine it; still, if it's what she wants, she will have it because Ross never wants his wife to want for anything.

"As long as we're together, all will be well. I will do everything I can to ensure that."
herhumbleservant: (with the bb)

[personal profile] herhumbleservant 2015-08-24 06:18 am (UTC)(link)
Ross gives his wife a pointed look at that statement, though the sternness dissolves into amusement. "There'll be no need for you to steal trousers from anyone here, Demelza, let us be clear about that from the start," he says, his tone well indicative of his intent to tease. Though certain aspects of her demeanor and spirit have very much remained the same in that they're vibrant as ever, Demelza has changed a great deal since that first day he'd mistaken her for a young boy in Truro. He'd regretted getting involved with her and her godforsaken Garrick once he'd realized his mistake, but it would be apparent to all who know him that he, too, has undergone a great deal of change.

He actually misses that dog, for one. Ross isn't sure how much more evidence of change one would even need based on that alone.

When Demelza wanders down the hall of their new home, Ross takes a moment to look out the window at the sights that are nothing like that of the vast fields of Nampara. He longs for the openness of their old home, the longing for adventure that it'd always inspired in him as a boy, and there's no helping the frown that tugs the corners of his mouth downward as he observes the folk meandering up and down the road in front of Dimera, many of them engrossed in what they've been told are called cell phones, though he hasn't bothered to examine the ones they'd been provided in their package quite yet.

Turning away from the window at the sound of Demelza's voice, he follows her into another room, arching a brow at what appears, indeed, to be a bed for their child, though he chuckles at Demelza's assessment of it. "Not a prisoner, my love," he says, already having determined what the bars are meant for, and he takes Julia back into his arms so he can walk toward the cot and set the baby down onto it. Julia looks around at her new surroundings, her expression perplexed, before her eyes find her father's again, and Ross bites back a laugh as he glances over his shoulder at his wife. "You see? This way, there's no risk of her falling."
herhumbleservant: (up to something)

[personal profile] herhumbleservant 2015-09-01 07:02 am (UTC)(link)
Demelza takes Julia from the barred cot as if saving her from a fire, and Ross can't help but arch a brow at her in his amusement. While neither of them have ever been especially opposed to change, already having grown used to the whirlwinds of life's gifts and misgivings, he finds it decidedly peculiar that his wife has taken an immediate disliking to what is meant to be Julia's new sleeping quarters. He suspects a great deal of that to have to do with the idea of having their child in an entirely different room, very much unlike the way they'd slept with Julia close to them at Nampara, and it's with that in mind that he softens a bit.

His wife may like to think that it's she who's learned him best, but Ross takes a certain pleasure in refraining from pointing out that he's been learning, too.

"I'm certain I can find a cot more suitable," he tells Demelza, gently soothing his hand up and down her back before cooing at their little daughter. Julia's expression brightens with the sort of sudden, infectious smile that Ross has only ever seen on a child, though he wouldn't hesitate to argue that their child's is the most joyous, and he can't help but laugh as Julia lets out an excitable gurgle before reaching out her fist toward him and shaking it. Ross takes the baby's hand in his, returning his focus to Demelza as he straightens his posture and gives her a reassuring smile. "Until we do, I'll move this one into the larger room with the bed meant for the two of us. That'll do for a little while, won't it, my love?"

The question of going back out doesn't surprise him in the slightest, and he's already guiding Demelza out of the room and out of sight of the apparently wretched excuse for Julia's cot so that his wife has something else to occupy her mind. "I wouldn't dare deny such a request," he says, walking toward the door they'd entered through and glancing over his shoulder just to make sure everything looks as if it's remained untouched. It's theirs, they've been told this, but there's still a bit of paranoia that plagues him, as if they might return to find the place never existed at all. If that means they'll be returned to Nampara, Ross wouldn't deign to stop it from happening; but if they're going to remain in this Darrow, he wants to know that there will be a permanent roof over his wife and daughter's heads.

"Come now," he says, ushering Demelza and Julia out the door, "there's surely much to see."