[It's odd; even amid her delight at the introduction of love at first sight into the story, the way he's describing the beast makes the image she's been holding in her mind's eye grow vaguer in the details, some of the clarity blurring as indecision starts to take hold. She can't seem to decide what the beast should look like, she realizes eventually; the woman and the castle are clear as day in her envisioning, but she can't settle on a depiction of a charming yet inhuman king to lurk in the shadows around them.
Well, perhaps it's not so important. It's all but impossible to be afraid of trolls and apartment noises when she's so focused on the image of a beast, after all.]
Did she love him back? I hope she did. And not just for the knowledge he had, either, but really for himself.
She did. You see, she saw the best in him as well. His knowledge, his intellect, and though he was reluctant to empathize with many people she saw it only as fear -- not because of his beastliness. He was tired of the world, but she wanted him to see the potential of others the way she did.
In a way, they balanced each other. His caution and her impulsive nature to see the best in everything. How much learning both delighted them. Two pieces made whole. A beautiful thing was made.
[Surely the two of them were married, then. That's how stories like this go. And all of a sudden it occurs to her, the thing that's been nagging at her all this time.]
...You said your mother was a doctor. And your father a scholar.
[There's a question she's not asking, hanging off the end of that, but it's not exactly hard to guess.]
[Ah, he knows that Rosella is too bright for her own good. So he does not begrudge her conclusion, knowing full well that she could have reached it on her own.]
[It may not seem so, she thinks to herself, but maybe it's for the best that she asked. If she hadn't, her next question would've been and did they live happily ever after.]
That does sound beautiful. Finding one's other half.
[She turns onto her side, facing him with the covers still pulled up close beneath her chin.]
[His story certainly leaves her a lot to think about, but that's the last thing she wants to do right now, now that she's finally sleepy and relaxed enough in her environment that she might actually stand a chance of drifting off.
So she closes her eyes, burrowed down into her pillow, and almost doesn't reply except that in the end, drowsy manners win out.]
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[It's odd; even amid her delight at the introduction of love at first sight into the story, the way he's describing the beast makes the image she's been holding in her mind's eye grow vaguer in the details, some of the clarity blurring as indecision starts to take hold. She can't seem to decide what the beast should look like, she realizes eventually; the woman and the castle are clear as day in her envisioning, but she can't settle on a depiction of a charming yet inhuman king to lurk in the shadows around them.
Well, perhaps it's not so important. It's all but impossible to be afraid of trolls and apartment noises when she's so focused on the image of a beast, after all.]
Did she love him back? I hope she did. And not just for the knowledge he had, either, but really for himself.
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In a way, they balanced each other. His caution and her impulsive nature to see the best in everything. How much learning both delighted them. Two pieces made whole. A beautiful thing was made.
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...You said your mother was a doctor. And your father a scholar.
[There's a question she's not asking, hanging off the end of that, but it's not exactly hard to guess.]
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I did indeed.
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That does sound beautiful. Finding one's other half.
[She turns onto her side, facing him with the covers still pulled up close beneath her chin.]
I'm glad they did. That they both did.
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[A rare thing, once in a lifetime. How rare it is that one finds their truest love.
Alucard stands up and gives a bow of his head.]
Get some sleep, Rosella. I will be here.
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[His story certainly leaves her a lot to think about, but that's the last thing she wants to do right now, now that she's finally sleepy and relaxed enough in her environment that she might actually stand a chance of drifting off.
So she closes her eyes, burrowed down into her pillow, and almost doesn't reply except that in the end, drowsy manners win out.]
Goodnight, your highness. And...thank you.