While his family home most certainly did have a telephone, it certainly wasn't the entrenched technology that it had become by Nancy's time and even beyond that, Wiktor had usually done his communication through letters as he'd traveled. Letters or telegraph. As such, it's really no wonder that he seeks her out in person, doing his best not to find her in a moment when she seemed engrossed in some other activity.
She is, as it happens, up on deck, smoking a cigarette and watching the ever-shifting starscape fly by. She stiffens a little when he approaches, and glances at him sidelong, brow knitting in something between puzzlement and challenge.
"What did you call me?" There's suspicion there, an anticipation of insult.
It's actually so automatic he has to think for a moment.
"Pani?" A pause. "It is... 'Miss'. A polite form of address for one you don't know yet."
He turns one hand up from his crossed arms.
"Language is a strange thing here. But it is a Polish word." The problem of the multilingual. He'd grown up in Warsaw, then been shipped off to Paris, and spent some time under an English doctor for his treatment.
The set of her shoulders loosen very slightly, though there's still an air of defensive bristle about her. "Just Nancy. The only people who call me 'miss' are the nuns."
She takes a drag from her cigarette, studying him. It's several seconds before she asks, around a plume of exhaled smoke. "That where you're from? Poland?"
There's a moment's pause before he, too, relaxes a little. Then he nods.
"Yes. I'm from Poland. Warsaw, specifically." A pause as he looks at her a second time. "1905, if that makes anything clearer."
Honestly, the cigarette smoke is comforting. It reminds him of his sister, who could do with smoking a little less, not that he'd dare comment on it overmuch. He's not that brave.
"Sorry, man," she says, in a tone that suggests she very much isn't sorry, actually. "Hundred-year-old history European history isn't really my thing."
Which doesn't mean she won't try to track something down the next time she's in the library - just that she won't admit it.
That comment provides him information, so he appreciates it regardless. Honestly, he appreciates it in general. He's always dealt better with bluntness.
"It wasn't my topic of choice either." History had a lot of prickly points, especially for a Polish man. "Then you are from 2005?"
His shoulders hop in a little shrug. No skin off his back. Fair enough.
But he recalls what she'd said about 'nuns'.
"Nuns... You were raised in a convent, then?"
...that's some sympathy. No doubt. He might be Catholic, but that doesn't mean he's happy about it. The fact that he now shares a mind and memories with a Jewish woman, a Muslim Tatar, and a 'circumcised atheist' makes the whole thing even more awkward.
She blinks at him in surprise for a moment, then laughs, a short, sharp, almost-cackling sound.
"I was raised in a trailer park. I go to a Catholic school." A brief pause before she amends, "Went to a Catholic school. Probably don't count as a student now that I'm dead."
"I have never been dead, so I cannot provide my opinion on the matter. Should you question matters after being blown up or losing your mind, there I can help you."
A pause.
"I do not know what a 'trailer park' is but from your tone, it doesn't seem a place you are fond of."
"Not happily, he says with a small huff, but he nods. Eventually, when he's off the Barge and time goes back to functioning for him, he'll find that his eyesight starts to go a bit early because of the explosions. The player is skipping it because while he's adorable in spectacles, there's exactly three minutes of the game to get icons for it from so maybe after a canon update.
But for now, that's the long and short of it.
"One was not too close; I was out for a few minutes. The other took three days to recover from and I scared the shit out of my sister and my uncle, from all accounts." A pause before- "I cannot recommend it."
"The what now?" she asks, brow furrowing a little. It rings enough of a bell that she thinks it was probably part of the messy and fractured orientation she'd gotten, but it hadn't sounded immediately important enough to stick.
"The Enclosure," he repeats again easily enough. "Apparently an apparatus that transforms a place into another place, lifelike, like a vision but one that someone can share with others. I haven't tried it yet, but it seems like the sort of things that might be diverting."
in person!
"Pani Nancy Downs?"
Re: in person!
"What did you call me?" There's suspicion there, an anticipation of insult.
Re: in person!
"...your name?" A pause. "Unless you are not Nancy Downs."
He offers a dip of his head as one hand turns to tap his own chest.
"Wiktor Szulski. I am... very new here."
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The perils of dealing with the terminally monolingual.
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"Pani?" A pause. "It is... 'Miss'. A polite form of address for one you don't know yet."
He turns one hand up from his crossed arms.
"Language is a strange thing here. But it is a Polish word." The problem of the multilingual. He'd grown up in Warsaw, then been shipped off to Paris, and spent some time under an English doctor for his treatment.
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She takes a drag from her cigarette, studying him. It's several seconds before she asks, around a plume of exhaled smoke. "That where you're from? Poland?"
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There's a moment's pause before he, too, relaxes a little. Then he nods.
"Yes. I'm from Poland. Warsaw, specifically." A pause as he looks at her a second time. "1905, if that makes anything clearer."
Honestly, the cigarette smoke is comforting. It reminds him of his sister, who could do with smoking a little less, not that he'd dare comment on it overmuch. He's not that brave.
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Which doesn't mean she won't try to track something down the next time she's in the library - just that she won't admit it.
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"It wasn't my topic of choice either." History had a lot of prickly points, especially for a Polish man. "Then you are from 2005?"
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And 'hundred year old history' rolls off the tongue better than '91 year old history'.
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But he recalls what she'd said about 'nuns'.
"Nuns... You were raised in a convent, then?"
...that's some sympathy. No doubt. He might be Catholic, but that doesn't mean he's happy about it. The fact that he now shares a mind and memories with a Jewish woman, a Muslim Tatar, and a 'circumcised atheist' makes the whole thing even more awkward.
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"I was raised in a trailer park. I go to a Catholic school." A brief pause before she amends, "Went to a Catholic school. Probably don't count as a student now that I'm dead."
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A pause.
"I do not know what a 'trailer park' is but from your tone, it doesn't seem a place you are fond of."
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The player is skipping it because while he's adorable in spectacles, there's exactly three minutes of the game to get icons for it from so maybe after a canon update.But for now, that's the long and short of it.
"One was not too close; I was out for a few minutes. The other took three days to recover from and I scared the shit out of my sister and my uncle, from all accounts." A pause before- "I cannot recommend it."
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She flicks the butt of the cigarette away and watches it fall, faint embers snuffing out long before it gets anywhere near the net below.
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He considers it for a moment.
"Have you tried the Enclosure yet?"
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