It’s strange to think of where he was a year ago, exactly. Waking up in Alex’s bed, hung over from the shame of the night before and the lingering effects of whatever Manuscript had given him, preparing for his first full day in a city outside of the world he knew and realizing in the process that he’d lost nearly two months in the space of a breath. There were more shocks to come, more alterations in what he thought to be true, but very little had managed to surpass the disorientation of that initial beginning to his tenure in Darrow.
Back then, Darlington had wondered what they might have done at home, if Alex would’ve been on a plane to California at the start of break--or if he might have managed to convince her to stay, to spend Christmas at Black Elm with him. What they got instead was better, that makeshift celebration with hastily-bought gifts and the smell of a half-remembered recipe wafting from Alex’s kitchen; the start of something new, even if neither of them had known the depths of that newness at the time. And now, a year on, through hard work and some kind of miracle, he gets what he’d wondered about after all.
Christmas Day will be just for them, presents and breakfast and relaxing by the fire, but tonight is a chance to celebrate. They decorate the main floor of Black Elm, filling the rooms they’ve already managed to furnish with light and warmth, the tree they’d bought earlier in the month standing by one of the large picture windows in the great room. Alex cooks all of Estrea Stern’s recipes she can think of, adds a few of Bernadette’s that Darlington remembers from his childhood. There’s music low on the stereo, a fire lit in the vast fireplace, the new table and chairs they’d bought for the formal dining room arranged just so beneath the chandelier at the center of the room. Even Kirby gets into the spirit in a new, festive collar, bright red against his black fur.
Above all, they’ve invited the people that matter, the few who have come to mean something--to one or both of them--in the year that’s just passed. It’s the first real party Black Elm has seen in many years, not since Darlington’s grandfather was alive. It feels, once again, like starting something new.
[[tag in, tag around, enjoy the party!]]
Back then, Darlington had wondered what they might have done at home, if Alex would’ve been on a plane to California at the start of break--or if he might have managed to convince her to stay, to spend Christmas at Black Elm with him. What they got instead was better, that makeshift celebration with hastily-bought gifts and the smell of a half-remembered recipe wafting from Alex’s kitchen; the start of something new, even if neither of them had known the depths of that newness at the time. And now, a year on, through hard work and some kind of miracle, he gets what he’d wondered about after all.
Christmas Day will be just for them, presents and breakfast and relaxing by the fire, but tonight is a chance to celebrate. They decorate the main floor of Black Elm, filling the rooms they’ve already managed to furnish with light and warmth, the tree they’d bought earlier in the month standing by one of the large picture windows in the great room. Alex cooks all of Estrea Stern’s recipes she can think of, adds a few of Bernadette’s that Darlington remembers from his childhood. There’s music low on the stereo, a fire lit in the vast fireplace, the new table and chairs they’d bought for the formal dining room arranged just so beneath the chandelier at the center of the room. Even Kirby gets into the spirit in a new, festive collar, bright red against his black fur.
Above all, they’ve invited the people that matter, the few who have come to mean something--to one or both of them--in the year that’s just passed. It’s the first real party Black Elm has seen in many years, not since Darlington’s grandfather was alive. It feels, once again, like starting something new.
[[tag in, tag around, enjoy the party!]]
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Date: 2021-01-11 10:09 pm (UTC)Something crosses Darlington's face when she asks, and Blue would have winced if it wouldn't have made things worse. She's never really thought about the fact that he lived with his grandfather; or if she had, it was simply to assume his parents were dead, and while that sucks, it's somehow less shitty than them just not being there. Or being there and not there.
She nods, taking that in and not sure how to keep going from it. "I think one thing about this place," she says carefully after a sip of her drink, "Darrow, I mean, is that whether it's a big party like this or just -- you know, the two of you," she includes Alex in a little nod where she's paused to talk on her way back to the kitchen. "You might miss people, but you do get to hand-pick who you want around of the ones you have, and everyone's going to want company."
"Oh, speaking of ...well, plants, earlier, and friends, I guess. Wiśniewski actually gave me something for you." She nods over at the table where she'd left gifts. There are a couple, a bottle of wine and, wrapped but obviously circular, a little fabric wreath she'd made out of elm leaves cut from various black, white, and black-and-white patterned fabric for the house, but a small brown bag with handles sits apart from them.
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Date: 2021-01-12 03:02 am (UTC)The quick change in topic is still welcome, and he nods, his smile restored to its previous easy brightness. "No, that's true," he says. "We get to share all of this with the people important to us, and that's not nothing." Blue mentions gifts, then, and he quirks a brow in interest--then laughs. "Wiśniewski? Really? I wouldn't have picked him for having an abundance of holiday cheer."
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Date: 2021-01-15 12:49 am (UTC)She glances back. "Are you guys waiting on doing this all at once, or do you want to see? I uh, there's one from us too. I mean, not just the wine." Now that she's been inside the decorated grandeur that is Black Elm, she's a little afraid her wreath will look maybe too DIY, despite how proud she'd been of it earlier, but it's a little allpurpose: they can always stick it in a pantry or a ...whatever large houses have. Mudroom.
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Date: 2021-01-16 05:36 am (UTC)It doesn't bear thinking about now, and he shakes his head when Blue asks about his and Alex's plans. "No, we're doing ours tomorrow morning, but everything else is fair game."
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Date: 2021-01-22 02:39 am (UTC)"I'll show you, then," she says, smiling and gesturing with her head toward the little table. It's probably a bad idea, really, to follow Wisniewski, but she picks up the little brown bag first; inside Darlington will discover there's a long vial with a decent cluster of big, aromatic Tahitian vanilla beans, identical to one Blue'd received as well. Apparently, Wisniewski has been carefully cultivating the orchids and, though he doesn't process it into extract ("Do I look like a plantation?" he'd shrugged at her exclamation that he could make solid money that way. "Boil them in milk, that's the way to do it.")-- he'd had a prodigious harvest this year. Beside it, there's a dried vanilla flower on a card, with the latin name of the plant written out in Wisniewski's old-fashioned cursive.
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Date: 2021-01-23 03:53 am (UTC)"God, they're beautiful," he says, holding the vial up, the beans inside rattling slightly against the glass as he turns it. "Not what I was expecting from him at all."
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Date: 2021-01-24 05:42 am (UTC)"I don't know if you know much about flavoring things with vanilla," she says, "but he says you scrape the seeds out, first, to use, and then you can boil the pods in milk to infuse things too, if you want." She can remember, rarely, Calla making vanilla ice cream with the real, less rare versions of these. Blue adds, "You can plant the seeds themselves, but they take 3 years to flower, so. It's kind of a wait. A promise," she adds with a small smile.
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Date: 2021-01-24 05:53 pm (UTC)Darlington nods along as Blue explains how to make use of the pods, all of it things he'd learned or at least read before. "I might save one to plant," he says. "Use the rest, and...see what happens."
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Date: 2021-02-08 06:07 am (UTC)"I like it," she says with a smile. There's never any promise to Darrow, no guarantee that anyone's going to be here for one year, much less three, but she has, at least. You can either live like there's no future here or pretend there's going to be one, and she likes that Darlington's not counting the days until he and Alex get back to New Haven. Even if vanilla might be a hell of a way to mark it. "A little ambitious to jump into vanilla cultivation, mind you," she deadpans, grinning, "but I mean." She gestures at Darlington with a little what should we expect exactly flourish.
"If this place has a sunroom, you know, a -- conservatory or something, you could start your Darrow collection." She hadn't really thought about whether or not the house might have a conservatory until the very moment she says it, when it seems obvious that a mansion of this size and, specifically, age, would. Blue finds herself feeling a little, absurdly, jealous of the totally hypothetical space to let a jungle of warm-weather plants flourish.
"Um. Do you want to see what I brought?" Blue ruffles her hair. "It's not much to follow this up with, but to be fair, I didn't know what he was planning until I picked it up," she adds with a grin.
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Date: 2021-02-08 08:49 pm (UTC)To her question, he nods. "Please."
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Date: 2021-02-08 08:59 pm (UTC)"Both, probably," she answers, frankly, and laughs at his of course. Well, it's not like she wasn't thinking it; he just said the quiet part out loud. "I will have to do that."
She lifts the big fabric wreath, wrapped in a silver-on-silver not-especially-denominational winter wrapping paper with a bevy of little angles taped down because it's a circle and circles don't wrap. "We're a little late for housewarming, but it's...something for the house. Or maybe inspired by the house. A little bit of both." She shuts up, letting him have at.
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Date: 2021-02-09 10:30 pm (UTC)Darlington reaches out to help her as she hefts the gift up, curious at both the size and shape of it, the careful way it's wrapped. "Never too late for a housewarming gift," he says, carefully starting to tear the wrapping paper to reveal the gift within. It's utterly charming, the fabric leaves instantly recognizable, and he looks back up at Blue with another bright, unguarded smile. "This is wonderful. Thank you."