every_blossom_blooming: (Default)
Nina Zenik ([personal profile] every_blossom_blooming) wrote2018-06-24 06:00 pm
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[Sometime in July] For Greta

Nina didn't know what to do. Inej was busy, and Nina couldn't bring herself to go to the Crow Club and say anything in front of Kaz. And, maybe, some part of her was almost afraid of how her best friend might react. Inej hadn't exactly had a good opinion of Geralt less than a year ago, and though by the fall things had seemed better between them, she just--

She just needed to talk to someone. Maybe someone that was not so tangled up in her personal relationships. She found herself on her way to Greta's house before she was thinking too hard about anything at all.

When she got to the door, she stood there for a long moment before she could finally bring herself to knock.
andhiswife: (neutral - curious)

[personal profile] andhiswife 2018-06-30 11:20 pm (UTC)(link)
Well, if that isn't painfully familiar. Sometimes Greta feels absurdly lucky, just for having good, kind parents who didn't die well before their time. Nearly everyone else she can't think of hasn't been so fortunate. Either their parents were lost, or they were terrible -- or both, in some cases.

"Did they raise you well?" she asks, because that, she thinks, matters more than who was doing the raising. "I mean--you've obviously turned out well enough," she adds with a dismissive flap of her hand.

andhiswife: (welp)

[personal profile] andhiswife 2018-07-03 03:08 am (UTC)(link)
"Forget her, then," Greta says, looking thoroughly unimpressed. Then, her expression softening, she adds, "You don't have to lead by their example. You could be the sort of parent a child ought to have."

It's not the sort of advice she'd offer anyone, simply because it's open to rather broad interpretation. But Nina seems a sensible young woman, however she was brought up.
andhiswife: (listening - mild)

[personal profile] andhiswife 2018-07-03 04:51 pm (UTC)(link)
Privately, Greta can't help but think Nina's underestimating the banality of the impossible. The word never meant much back home; few things were impossible when there were Giants in the sky and magic growing in your neighbor's garden.

Darrow is different, true, but not by much. The city routinely throws ostensible impossibilities at them. This is just another one to add to the pile.

Though it is rather more personal than most impossibilities.

"There's an awful lot of impossible here," she points out, gently. "Enough that it doesn't have to be a disaster or a miracle." She reaches over to give Nina's shoulder an encouraging rub. "However he takes it, you know you're always welcome here."