Barbara Gordon (
bodilesswarrior) wrote2013-04-11 09:07 am
TLV 9 - Video
[There's something undeniably wistful about Barbara's smile.]
I was a knight for Halloween, once. Never thought I'd end up as the real thing.
[She shakes her head, casting it all aside. She won't dwell on how it felt to run again.]
Is everyone accounted for?
[Private to the Admiral]
I'd like a key to the engine room.
I was a knight for Halloween, once. Never thought I'd end up as the real thing.
[She shakes her head, casting it all aside. She won't dwell on how it felt to run again.]
Is everyone accounted for?
[Private to the Admiral]
I'd like a key to the engine room.

[ Private ]
[Her smile is a little sad, though, as she turns the pictures round again.]
...A lot has, since then.
[private]
Finally, she says something that isn't - at least, not entirely - about that, because she's not going to be the one to bring it up.]
Change is the price of bein' alive. I know that's a platitude; it's one very close to me 'earts, though. 'Ave you been finding the price too 'igh?
[private]
Depends on which change we're talking about.
[She's still for a long moment. Then she flips the page back, and holds the book up again, revealing a new picture.]
That's my dad. My first dad. [She's smiling, again, soft and sad.] I'd fallen - I was always running, as a kid. I was so fast - long legs, you know, I was tall for my age.
He always told me to get back up again.
[private]
[She gives the photograph her intent attention for several long moments.]
I'm amazed anyone ever needed to tell you that.
[private]
[A soft laugh.] I learned a lot from him. How to be who I am now.
My mom - [She flips back a few pages more, to show a woman with soft red curls and the brightest blue eyes.] She never got a chance to teach me that much. But he always said I laughed like her.
The problem... [A deep breath.] The problem was - when she died, a part of him did, too.
Re: [private]
[She eyes the new picture, flicking her gaze between it and Barbara's own face, and her own breath catches briefly in sympathy.]
...Aye, that 'appens. I'm sorry, love.