[she nods when he asks - yeah, he did do that. and it was too far, keeping her conveniently out of the way - but it's done. she doesn't say 'thanks' outright, but she offers him a small, tight-lipped smile followed by a sigh.]
Tch. Yeah. It's easy to say, but hard to know if someone means it.
[you know, benefit of the doubt and all that. she'd much rather give it, but that's ...hard in some cases. like when you know the asshole in question, and there's a 50/50 they're full of absolute shit. palamedes gets it.]
Oh, well that's easy enough to understand. [the numbering part, anyway. fifth does indeed come before sixth, and that would mean there's a first through third, she guesses. but then he talks about planets lining up in order and she tries to process what he means. it hurts her head a little - but she arrives at:] Is each house a planet?
Right. And— right again, sort of. Physically, yes, the Houses are each on separate solar bodies, but I wouldn't exactly call the Sixth itself 'a planet' in and of itself. Other than technically.
[A shrug.]
We're the only ones squatting on our miserable little rock, [fondly, he means this,] but we're hardly populous enough to cover the whole planet. We have a station in the polar caps, and... that's us. Some of the other Houses are millions strong, though; it depends.
[so ...each house inhabits a planet, so to speak but some of them are crammed full of people like cellar door or willful machine or zaun or even piltover and others were more like ...if all of trench were only inhabited by the handful of people she knows? that's the idea in her head anyway. which ...has ceased hurting for the most part.]
I dunno about millions. Keeping it small means less chance of assholes, right? And if you've got 'em, at least you've got less.
Woah. I feel ...a little better. [still exhausted, still sad, still angry, but with less aching. what transient queasiness she'd been feeling is also gone.]
no subject
Tch. Yeah. It's easy to say, but hard to know if someone means it.
[you know, benefit of the doubt and all that. she'd much rather give it, but that's ...hard in some cases. like when you know the asshole in question, and there's a 50/50 they're full of absolute shit. palamedes gets it.]
Oh, well that's easy enough to understand. [the numbering part, anyway. fifth does indeed come before sixth, and that would mean there's a first through third, she guesses. but then he talks about planets lining up in order and she tries to process what he means. it hurts her head a little - but she arrives at:] Is each house a planet?
[that's pretty cool if it works that way.]
no subject
[A shrug.]
We're the only ones squatting on our miserable little rock, [fondly, he means this,] but we're hardly populous enough to cover the whole planet. We have a station in the polar caps, and... that's us. Some of the other Houses are millions strong, though; it depends.
no subject
I dunno about millions. Keeping it small means less chance of assholes, right? And if you've got 'em, at least you've got less.
Woah. I feel ...a little better. [still exhausted, still sad, still angry, but with less aching. what transient queasiness she'd been feeling is also gone.]