A ploy? [ He snorts. ] Trust me, Rose, you work in the FBI long enough and you won't trust the government, either.
[ Meanwhile, he's officially got a bedside table to go with his three-fourths of a bed. (It's a little tippy right now.) In the span of a second or two:
1. Mulder wonders if Rose is trying to trip him up the way he'd managed to earlier, 2. decides he is, and 3. figures the best response is probably to outdo the guy. ]
Mmm, fair enough. I lived north of the border back on Earth, so luckily the FBI wasn't a big concern for me.
[that's right folks he's ✨🍁canadian🍁✨
David makes an involuntary, choked-off sound in response that very questionable zinger.]
Wow. Good— great to know. [Is Mulder hitting on him? It kind of feels like he's hitting on him. David tends to assume by default that people are into him, so that's what he's going with. What the fuck is going on. He flusters for a second before marching back into the living room, yelling back at Mulder:]
[ See, that noise means Mulder won, on a level he can't dignify with any real acknowledgement. Should he be embarrassed of his behavior? Probably. Is he? Nah, Scully doesn't know he's playing the 'harass a man who bought me furniture' game.
Once he's got the last leg in its place, he settles the (admittedly great looking) bed right side up and wanders back into the living room. ]
[By the time Mulder makes it back out into the living room, David has reigned in his dignity and is all business, unwrapping a large, round parcel which is quickly revealing itself to be a brass metal coffee table with a glass top, bundled up heavily in polystyrene.
He has also, tellingly, cracked open one of those beers.]
I really outdid myself on this one. It's got storage underneath, and it's glass so you don't need to worry about coasters.
[ It's...nice, actually. He probably wouldn't have picked out metal, but the shiny gold colour looks pretty good in here. And it makes as good a place to stash his latest esoterica as anywhere else.
Since Rose has a beer open, he takes that as a sign to get one of his own. While he's doing that - ]
Mmm, whatever you want. [The idea of relocating to an alien planet and immediately beginning to stock up on coffee table books is hilarious, though. He tosses all the padding and plastic into the existing pile on the floor.]
Oh, my place? [David laughs.] Well, I've been here a year, so it's much more lived-in, for one. I've had a chance to really curate my space from scratch, which has been nice. I'd say I went for a more...eclectic vibe.
[ He's not helping with the table. Something about the idea of working together on a piece of furniture that doesn't need it feels like giving in - losing, somehow, the same way keeping the guy off his axis feels like winning. Instead, he's looking at the other stuff wrapped up in here, starts pulling the wrapping off what looks like a little dining table. ]
Oh, you know. A lot of texture. Mixed textiles, thrifted pieces, lots of art. Nothing too matchy-matchy, but still cohesive.
[He talks like someone who has read a lot of books and articles about interior design, because he has. He pauses in his mission to rid the coffee table of its foam and plastic prison to take a drink of his beer.]
Normally I'm not a beer guy, but this isn't bad, actually.
[ This isn't sarcastic, believe it or not. Setting his own beer on his new dining table - what was that about coasters? - he balls up some plastic and freethrows it neatly into the kitchen trash can. He shoots, he scores. ]
So this stuff. What would you call it? Design-wise.
[Tequila if he's in the mood to make bad decisions, but thankfully those days are largely behind him.]
Mmm, most of this I'd call 'mid-century modern', which is wild because we're on a completely different planet. Most of the design here seems stuck firmly in Art Deco, which, don't get me wrong. It has a place. But I'd never do someone's entire place in Art Deco.
[He shrugs, sips his beer.] Looks too matchy-matchy.
[ Mulder, meanwhile, is enough of a lightweight - despite his size - to mostly stick to beer. Gotta be sober or your UFO sighting doesn't count. ]
Interesting. See, when I picture the middle of the twentieth century - that's the one we're talking about, right? - I'm picturing a lot more lamps that look like vases and heavy chintz drapes.
[ Is he describing his childhood home, don't worry about it. ]
Oh, mmhmm, that's the one. [David leans against the still-wrapped sofa.] Hence the addition of modern. In 2016 it's all the range. Clean lines with all the, um, chintz.
[He pats the arm of the sofa.] Ready to move this baby into place?
[ Which is less a commentary on what he thinks of the place, and more the neatness of the numbers - he just showed up from 1996. Whether that's evident is hard to say, though; everything he says sounds deadpan at this point.
Anyway, the couch. He gets to the other side of it. ]
You're making me feel old, Rose. Next thing, you'll tell me you weren't born 'til after the Beatles broke up.
[ The very idea of a velvet couch is baffling to him. He can't bring himself to hate it, if only because it feels great under his hands, but who the hell owns a velvet couch? Outside of great-aunts living in houses too large for them, houses full of the kinds of antiques their relatives don't actually want to inherit. ]
[ He was at Quantico in 1987. He's pretty sure his partner'd already taken Einstein to task for his theory of relativity. Too bad he's from 1996, or he could call Scully a cougar. ]
And the trend you have in mind here is 'I inherited Great-Aunt Minerva's furniture.'
[He's so clever. So very clever. David's heard it all, and it doesn't really faze him anymore. He happens to like his strong brows, thanks very much!]
Well, you're from a time that was tragically lacking in a lot of places, aesthetically speaking, so I can hardly blame you. Would you rather I put in a nice orange plaid sofa? Throw a granny square afghan over the top?
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[Normal isn't quite the right word, really, but David shrugs and uses it anyway.]
Normal. Ish. One time I watched him break his neck, come back to life a few minutes later, and then stick a dagger in his skull.
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[ Dryly - but it's possible, sort of, to see what he might be like in a setting where he actually feels like being professional. ]
If he ever wants to talk mutation, give him my name.
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[David's honestly not sure, and truthfully, he doesn't care. He likes his man fucked-up and insane.
He pulls a face at the offer.]
He doesn't strike me as a guy with, like, a ton of trust in government officials?
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[He stands up, smacks his hand flat on the end table.] And now you have somewhere to stick your glass of water and your condoms.
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[ Meanwhile, he's officially got a bedside table to go with his three-fourths of a bed. (It's a little tippy right now.) In the span of a second or two:
1. Mulder wonders if Rose is trying to trip him up the way he'd managed to earlier,
2. decides he is, and
3. figures the best response is probably to outdo the guy. ]
Oh, I go in bareback. But thanks.
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[that's right folks he's ✨🍁canadian🍁✨
David makes an involuntary, choked-off sound in response that very questionable zinger.]
Wow. Good— great to know. [Is Mulder hitting on him? It kind of feels like he's hitting on him. David tends to assume by default that people are into him, so that's what he's going with. What the fuck is going on. He flusters for a second before marching back into the living room, yelling back at Mulder:]
Coffee table!
no subject
[ See, that noise means Mulder won, on a level he can't dignify with any real acknowledgement. Should he be embarrassed of his behavior? Probably. Is he? Nah, Scully doesn't know he's playing the 'harass a man who bought me furniture' game.
Once he's got the last leg in its place, he settles the (admittedly great looking) bed right side up and wanders back into the living room. ]
All right, let's see it.
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He has also, tellingly, cracked open one of those beers.]
I really outdid myself on this one. It's got storage underneath, and it's glass so you don't need to worry about coasters.
no subject
[ It's...nice, actually. He probably wouldn't have picked out metal, but the shiny gold colour looks pretty good in here. And it makes as good a place to stash his latest esoterica as anywhere else.
Since Rose has a beer open, he takes that as a sign to get one of his own. While he's doing that - ]
So how's this compare to your place?
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Oh, my place? [David laughs.] Well, I've been here a year, so it's much more lived-in, for one. I've had a chance to really curate my space from scratch, which has been nice. I'd say I went for a more...eclectic vibe.
no subject
[ He's not helping with the table. Something about the idea of working together on a piece of furniture that doesn't need it feels like giving in - losing, somehow, the same way keeping the guy off his axis feels like winning. Instead, he's looking at the other stuff wrapped up in here, starts pulling the wrapping off what looks like a little dining table. ]
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[He talks like someone who has read a lot of books and articles about interior design, because he has. He pauses in his mission to rid the coffee table of its foam and plastic prison to take a drink of his beer.]
Normally I'm not a beer guy, but this isn't bad, actually.
no subject
[ This isn't sarcastic, believe it or not. Setting his own beer on his new dining table - what was that about coasters? - he balls up some plastic and freethrows it neatly into the kitchen trash can. He shoots, he scores. ]
So this stuff. What would you call it? Design-wise.
no subject
[Tequila if he's in the mood to make bad decisions, but thankfully those days are largely behind him.]
Mmm, most of this I'd call 'mid-century modern', which is wild because we're on a completely different planet. Most of the design here seems stuck firmly in Art Deco, which, don't get me wrong. It has a place. But I'd never do someone's entire place in Art Deco.
[He shrugs, sips his beer.] Looks too matchy-matchy.
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Interesting. See, when I picture the middle of the twentieth century - that's the one we're talking about, right? - I'm picturing a lot more lamps that look like vases and heavy chintz drapes.
[ Is he describing his childhood home, don't worry about it. ]
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[He pats the arm of the sofa.] Ready to move this baby into place?
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[ Which is less a commentary on what he thinks of the place, and more the neatness of the numbers - he just showed up from 1996. Whether that's evident is hard to say, though; everything he says sounds deadpan at this point.
Anyway, the couch. He gets to the other side of it. ]
Okay, which wall?
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[He nods his head toward the space under the window.]
Right over there. One, two, three—
[Thankfully the sofa is not as heavy as it could be. It is, however, upholstered in a very nice taupe-y velvet.]
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[ The very idea of a velvet couch is baffling to him. He can't bring himself to hate it, if only because it feels great under his hands, but who the hell owns a velvet couch? Outside of great-aunts living in houses too large for them, houses full of the kinds of antiques their relatives don't actually want to inherit. ]
These are really 'in' once you hit 2016?
[ He sounds dubious. ]
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[Just a casual namedrop while he relishes making Fox Mulder feel old. David hums thoughtfully.]
Mmm, sort of? But I prefer to dictate trends rather than follow them.
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[ He was at Quantico in 1987. He's pretty sure his partner'd already taken Einstein to task for his theory of relativity. Too bad he's from 1996, or he could call Scully a cougar. ]
And the trend you have in mind here is 'I inherited Great-Aunt Minerva's furniture.'
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[He scowls at the insult to his taste, wrinkling his nose.]
Um, I think you meant to say timeless investment pieces. Which is what they are, thank you.
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[ Lightly said, but all the same, his desire to be nice to Scully's friend (with benefits) is, uh. Waning. ]
Hey, Great-Aunt Minerva's furniture held up, I'm not denying that. I just don't see a lot of velvet, where I'm from.
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[He's so clever. So very clever. David's heard it all, and it doesn't really faze him anymore. He happens to like his strong brows, thanks very much!]
Well, you're from a time that was tragically lacking in a lot of places, aesthetically speaking, so I can hardly blame you. Would you rather I put in a nice orange plaid sofa? Throw a granny square afghan over the top?
[You know, really go full Roseanne on it.]