Rogue (
touchofrogue) wrote in
driftfleet2015-12-23 08:18 pm
Entry tags:
Deck the Halls (does not mean punch them)
Who: Rogue, Remy, those invited who decided to attend, and they’re probably not rude enough to turn down any passerbys who happen to come by and wish to attend
Broadcast: Nope
Action: In an out of the way room with a few smallish windows on the Iskaulit
When: December 23rd, 5ish-8ish
It was beginning to look a lot like Christmas, or it would have been if they were on an Earth calendar. For their celebration and memory-making, Rogue had selected a middle sized room on the edge with two small windows by which an occasional view of the ice planet below could be seen. There would be very few who would be tempted to steal such a familiar view, however, since Rogue had enlisted Loki’s aid in making Christmas decorations and he provided illusions with alacrity and skill.
Lights are strung about the room, housed in brightly colored glass balls. While at first they simply seem to be glowing ornaments, there is something odd about the flames. A close look will reveal they do not dance formlessly, but rather have the shape of tiny dragons. There are bright, evergreen wreaths with red bows, hung strategically about the place which are actually eternal knots, impossible to solve. In the corner immediately spotted upon entering is an illusion of a gorgeous Christmas tree, with decorations all in gold and sparkling lights at the end of each branch - even the smell of evergreen is mimicked flawlessly. Flanking the tree are two tables, one laden in all kinds of food that Rogue and Remy have cooked up, the other with the label ‘White Elephant presents here.’ Loki has also helped Rogue hook up her music to some sort of an audible projection, and she is initially going to be streaming traditional Christmas Carols done by such greats as Ella Fitzgerald, Norah Jones, and the Trans-Siberian Orchestra.
There are a few comfortable chairs set up along the opposite side of the room as the Christmas tree (just a few, as comfortable chairs are not that easy to find), by an illusion of falling silver leaves that provide a glow of soft light in the area.
The center of the room is free for dancing, or games, or standing about and talking. Remy and Rogue have done their best to make delicious finger foods, appetizers and heartier party fare. There’s delicacies that can be found sourced from the planet, various salted fruits, a small platter of apple slices with a caramel dip, and heartier fare in the way of stews and pastas, the sort of thing that could be put in a cup and eaten standing up. There are desserts as well, spice cookies and peppermint bark and a far too tiny chocolate cake. There is punch - ice strawberry - and Natasha’s gift of vodka, kept carefully separate from the punch, and there’s some leftover wine Loki had magically made more potent for the solstice that Rogue stole in case any of those with suped up metabolisms wanted the pleasure of getting buzzed.
Notably, there is no depiction of mistletoe.
Broadcast: Nope
Action: In an out of the way room with a few smallish windows on the Iskaulit
When: December 23rd, 5ish-8ish
It was beginning to look a lot like Christmas, or it would have been if they were on an Earth calendar. For their celebration and memory-making, Rogue had selected a middle sized room on the edge with two small windows by which an occasional view of the ice planet below could be seen. There would be very few who would be tempted to steal such a familiar view, however, since Rogue had enlisted Loki’s aid in making Christmas decorations and he provided illusions with alacrity and skill.
Lights are strung about the room, housed in brightly colored glass balls. While at first they simply seem to be glowing ornaments, there is something odd about the flames. A close look will reveal they do not dance formlessly, but rather have the shape of tiny dragons. There are bright, evergreen wreaths with red bows, hung strategically about the place which are actually eternal knots, impossible to solve. In the corner immediately spotted upon entering is an illusion of a gorgeous Christmas tree, with decorations all in gold and sparkling lights at the end of each branch - even the smell of evergreen is mimicked flawlessly. Flanking the tree are two tables, one laden in all kinds of food that Rogue and Remy have cooked up, the other with the label ‘White Elephant presents here.’ Loki has also helped Rogue hook up her music to some sort of an audible projection, and she is initially going to be streaming traditional Christmas Carols done by such greats as Ella Fitzgerald, Norah Jones, and the Trans-Siberian Orchestra.
There are a few comfortable chairs set up along the opposite side of the room as the Christmas tree (just a few, as comfortable chairs are not that easy to find), by an illusion of falling silver leaves that provide a glow of soft light in the area.
The center of the room is free for dancing, or games, or standing about and talking. Remy and Rogue have done their best to make delicious finger foods, appetizers and heartier party fare. There’s delicacies that can be found sourced from the planet, various salted fruits, a small platter of apple slices with a caramel dip, and heartier fare in the way of stews and pastas, the sort of thing that could be put in a cup and eaten standing up. There are desserts as well, spice cookies and peppermint bark and a far too tiny chocolate cake. There is punch - ice strawberry - and Natasha’s gift of vodka, kept carefully separate from the punch, and there’s some leftover wine Loki had magically made more potent for the solstice that Rogue stole in case any of those with suped up metabolisms wanted the pleasure of getting buzzed.
Notably, there is no depiction of mistletoe.

no subject
And he's often thought, would they've shipped him off to round out the war in Japan? Would he have been there to see the bombs fall? If he'd seen that, he thinks, he would have laid down his shield, ripped every damn medal he was ever given off his uniform and burn the lot.
The Cold War would've swallowed him whole. Even if he'd lost faith in the American institution, he doesn't think he could've sat idly by while his boys were off dying on foreign soil. Christ, he'd have gone on to Vietnam, still young.
(He's thirty, and looks no older than he was when he stepped into the Rebirth chamber. War ages people. It aged everyone he knew. Except him. He's done his level best not to think about it.)
He didn't see that victory. He didn't endure those wars. All he is, right now, is here. He wants to pick her up, and kiss her senseless, and more than anything he just wants time.
Some measure of it, he's sure, shows in his expression as he lets his fingers catch at her curls and push them back away from her face. His fingers fall to the curve of her collarbone, and in Morse he taps out, I love you against the elegant wing of the bone. He always has, she's always known, but it's something he never got a chance to affirm. Well-- he's affirming it now.]
no subject
but tonight these thoughts are especially distant. she forces them out and replaces them with raw gratitude. steve's touch against the base of her neck causes her skin to turn to gooseflesh: sensitive. the shiver she suppresses snakes its way, instead, into her breathe: a jaunty, shaking sigh. peggy shuts her eyes and reads his touch as easily as one reads a letter. i love you. ]
I -- [ the syllable catches on the back of her teeth. she cages it in. captain america calls upon her to be discreet, and his orders -- no, requests -- are some of the easiest to acknowledge. she thumbs the edge of his earlobe with a fingertip and stretches the rest of her hand against the back of his neck. like a drum tattoo, she beats out a simple reply:
and i you.
funny how there are butterflies in her stomach despite how those words were never a secret. she suspects they'd both known it on the day his plane went down but were both too polite and kind-hearted to put the other through the pain of exchanging affection only to lose it moments later. as it is, it had been hard enough to say goodbye above the east river. not so hard, it seems, to painstakingly excavate the feelings she'd put to soil on that same day. in one dance, peggy has gone and unmoved herself. undid all the good growing and goodbye-ing. once again, she feels her heart snagged firmly on the point of his star. ]