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Joan Watson ([personal profile] assistingconsultant) wrote2015-01-18 01:29 am
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in the sun

It had been a long time since Joan had gone to the beach. She had worn her swimsuit through the door and brought with her as many of the essentials she thought she would need. The first of these – a towel – she unfolded on the hot, gleaming sand. The second was an umbrella that she had rented; it had the logo of some beer brand flashing across it. Wherever they were – she didn't ask too many questions, uncertain of how deep she should dig through each door – it was someplace with a thriving tourist industry, and they spoke Spanish.

“Thanks for coming with me,” she said again, making sure the umbrella was embedded deep into the turf. “I haven't been to the beach in so, so long.” She cast a grateful look at Natasha. The other woman had agreed to come out with her, though there had been some concern over sunburn. Which Joan heartily understood.

“I brought the stuff from Australia,” she added, pulling out the bottle. “You know, the stuff that no matter what is the highest SPF possible due to sun safety regulations, regardless of what it's labelled to be. Australia's figured it out.”
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[personal profile] regimes_fall 2015-02-15 07:10 pm (UTC)(link)
Natasha listened as Joan spoke, attempting to weave some sort of picture of what her roommate and work partner must be like. Natasha could certainly understand brilliance and the various idiosyncrasies that went along with above genius-level intellect from her time spent with Tony Stark, but she thought there had to be something about Joan’s roommate beyond his obvious intelligence. Natasha had to think that it would take something special to hold a woman like Joan in orbit, even if only for a short time, and that Joan was planning on making this fellow part of her life for the foreseeable future certainly said something about them both.

“It sounds like he needs you very much,” Natasha said after a moment. “Which can be a complicated thing, I know that from experience, but I mean to say perhaps it’s more along the lines of the balance you provide. Two opposites with just enough in common to make life tolerable makes for the best sort of friendship. He’ll get over you moving out, I’m sure, as long as he feels like you aren’t leaving him entirely. Does he have anyone besides you? Other friends or a lady or boyfriend?”

Natasha was exactly the sort to run, though she could admit it wouldn’t be forever. She had Clint here with her, along with a few other friends and various other relationships that needed watching and that would keep it all for a while, but she knew herself well enough to know that all that she cared for so deeply would be enough to push her away, too. When she became too confused about how certain people at the Nexus made her feel, she would escape it. There was no avoiding that.

“I don’t know if I’m the sort to run away forever,” she said, “but I’m definitely the sort to get driven out by my own bullshit, at least for a while. I came here to avoid some trouble at home, but now things are getting complicated here, too. It’s the whole shitty taste in men thing, you know? I found someone here, an ex of sorts, that I thought was lost to me, and I also found someone else I thought I hated. Neither of those things are true anymore, but it’s complicated all the way around and I guess thinking about either of them is just a waste of time.” She leaned back on her palms and gave Joan a wry smile. “Which is, of course, why I think about them, I suppose. You know how it is.”
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[personal profile] regimes_fall 2015-04-11 12:40 am (UTC)(link)
“Ahhh,” Natasha said, nodding her understanding at Joan’s further description of her roommate. Natasha was guilty of acting like a five year old herself at times, though that tended to be more playfully petulant behavior with someone she knew would indulge her, like Clint. It was a side of herself she’d only recently tapped into, both the urge to be clingy with someone and the enjoyment of actually doing so, and she wondered how hard that habit would be to break when something inevitably lured herself and Clint back to the real world.

“Well,” she said, “on the romance front I think I can understand where your roommate is coming from. I think I kind of fall in that vacuum too, sometimes, with work. It becomes just easier to relate to those that are living the same things that you are, especially when you’re a person that has trouble relating emotionally anyway.” She smiled at Joan. “I guess I’m just saying, as a fellow emotional weirdo I can see why he’s so attached to you, but I’m also sure he’ll get over it because he loves and respects you so much. I mean, he doesn’t want to lose you entirely, right? And he’ll eventually realize that by being a clingy sort he’ll push you away, rather than draw you in closer. Hopefully, anyway.”

She listened as Joan described one of her exes, attempting to imagine a woman like Joan falling in love with an addict. It made little sense but was somehow easy to understand, she decided after a moment. Joan was a brilliant and loving woman, and it was obvious not only by her words then, but the sort of work she did overall that she had faith and optimism when it came to the human spirit. That was something Natasha had found lacking in herself on more than one occasion, and it was something that made Joan very attractive to her.

“One of them, the ex I spoke of, his issues aren’t anything he can help,” she said. “It’s complicated, but he’s been sort of a prisoner of war for a very long time. Lots of conditioning and brainwashing. He’s away from it all now and he’s finding himself, and I have to keep reminding myself that he doesn’t remember everything about what happened between us and that it isn’t fair to push feelings or needs or anything like that on him. It’s just a connection, you know? Whenever we’re around each other it’s like this draw, and it’s hard to not react to. The other one, well, he can help himself to a certain extent, and he has. He’s got a terrible history with me, but when I came here he’d come from a timeline before he’d done any of those awful things, and he’s changed himself. He’s just the sort of guy I usually fall for despite myself, and I’m stupidly attracted to him. It isn’t helpful.”