http://headfollowheart.livejournal.com/ ([identity profile] headfollowheart.livejournal.com) wrote in [community profile] houseofcards_rp2012-10-01 11:06 am

[OTA] Beware of Greeks bearing gifts

Zoe's twenty-first birthday had started well enough, with murmured birthday wishes from Victor and a promise of dinner tonight before he left to start his day either in his office here or the one over at Club Castle. And it had, for a few hours at least continued well. She dropped in on the accounting office to check on Penelope - she might be taking the day off, but her assistant was still new enough that she liked to check in before disappearing for the day. Then she'd dropped into the Head of Finance's office to hand over the expenditure reports for September and smile at Edison's side-eye. He was a Six, after all, and had some idea that Zoe had plans to challenge him at some point, but there was little he could do about that.

And he wouldn't be wrong, anyway.

The day only went south when she headed down the hall and found a pair of Heart Twos with a box. The library was quiet this time of day, and she hated to let people into Victor's rooms, so she nodded in that direction, letting them put it on a table deep in the stacks and dismissing them before she opened the note. She recognized the handwriting, after all.

Darling, Happy Birthday and a belated congratulations on your impressive achievement of Five. Of course, if you'd stayed put, you could be a Nine with your dear, dear brother by now, but I'm sure you're intelligent enough to not realize that.

I'd hate to leave this day unacknowledged. These are some things I thought you'd enjoy, dear.

Charlotte Huntly Kattalakis


Well, Zoe thought as she picked up the yellowed letters and unfolded the first. They ran the gamut: letters from Charlotte, letters from Aunt Maggie, letters from someone named Maria. Correspondence of a more...professional sort - off-Deck jobs, compensation for them.

It was all supposed to upset her, Zoe thought. And it...didn't, really. She'd known even if she'd pretended not to, what kind of man her father had been. She'd seen things, she thought, and then she blinked when she saw a black velvet box tossed carelessly in the corner of the box, reaching over to pick it up. Inside were earrings, and a note old enough that the paper had started to yellow.

Για Ζωή, για εικοστό πρώτο έτος της ηλικίας της.

"Papa," she murmured, and leaned back in the chair as she looked down at the jewelry. Would he be upset with her for what she'd done with her life? Did it matter? It shouldn't, certainly, especially not after this summer, but...

Well.

Maybe it did, a little.

[Translation: For Zoe, on her twenty-first birthday.]

[identity profile] chippedcitrine.livejournal.com 2012-10-03 09:35 am (UTC)(link)
That would surprise Aoife, more so if she had not seen Victor carrying a bottle of whiskey into the church of all places. She never did find out what that was about. She wasn't judging, thinking on it just made her smile.

"I figured he'd been on-Deck before, when he said the pub had belonged to his grandfather. I just hadn't seen him around until recently."

[identity profile] chippedcitrine.livejournal.com 2012-10-03 03:59 pm (UTC)(link)
Aoife no longer attended Mass very often so she could hardly point fingers at Victor. She was seeking an experience that was more spiritual than religious. Perhaps a quiet rebellion was taking place after all.

"I was just, ehm, just wonderin'. The Deck's bigger than most villages, it's hard t' remember everyone's stories."

[identity profile] chippedcitrine.livejournal.com 2012-10-04 05:47 pm (UTC)(link)
"It's not very big but I like it here," Aoife confessed. "The Deck's like some sort'o cultural melting pot."

[identity profile] chippedcitrine.livejournal.com 2012-10-07 06:42 am (UTC)(link)
The Deck was packed with activity, considering its size. Aoife had not quite decided whether she wanted to stay there indefinitely.

"Galway, though we left when I was quite young," she answered Zoe. The area fell under the Republic of Ireland. Aoife had been fortunate enough to grow up without religious or political conflicts directly affecting her. "We moved to Derbyshire but tha' didn't really change my accent," she continued. The strength of her Irish brogue fluctuated with her emotions.