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inara serra (the ambassador) ([personal profile] strumpet) wrote2025-03-10 02:58 pm
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ornithologist: (107)

[personal profile] ornithologist 2025-05-15 01:28 am (UTC)(link)
[ Harold is nervous. Extremely nervous. It's completely foreign for him to reach out at all, for support or alliance or even to make enemies, frankly. He's a frightfully reserved person who hasn't used his real name since he was seventeen. He's lost-- is everything an exaggeration? It doesn't feel like it.

He can't see Grace again, Nathan is dead, and he can't bear to communicate with the Machine. It had pushed him not to go through with his awful revenge plan on Alicia Corwin, who truly didn't deserve it, was the messenger and not the author... and still Harold couldn't face what he'd made. Not really. He got the output, the irrelevant numbers, and he stared at them stymied from his wheelchair as he tried to muster up the courage to do something, anything, about them.

It's some months later from that point, and he has found some courage. He's done things; he's tried. But he's still so frightfully alone. He's worried that he'll fall back into that same dark place he'd been in when he'd decided to suffocate Alicia Corwin in her own vehicle. Harold hadn't ever thought he had that in himself, and confronting that made him also confront that he was responsible for preventing it from happening again. How close was he to repeating that with some offender he runs across while working the irrelevant numbers? How close was he really? He needs a safe outlet to be sure.

A registered Companion seemed the lesser of all possible evils for spilling his guts. They were famously and notoriously discreet, and the idea of therapy made him feel ill. Harold supports psychotherapy as a practice, of course. He'd encourage anyone else to go. But he knows that counseling will want to have the end goal of him moving on, and...

He doesn't want to.

So he finds himself meeting Inara Serra, someone he'd meticulously researched before choosing, on a mid-tier planet on a ramshackle ship. He's not about to chance anyone too connected to the establishment, so this choice is deliberate. He's dressed immaculately as Harold Crane, higher brow than usual, and he has a cane that he doesn't use for support despite his limp as he makes his way on board. He has a remote expression, distant, the best coping mechanism he knows.

Despite his air of aloofness, he's impeccably courteous as he greets Inara at her door, inclining his head respectfully. ]


Ms. Serra, thank you for agreeing to this engagement. I'm sure your time is precious.
ornithologist: (041)

[personal profile] ornithologist 2025-05-24 07:17 pm (UTC)(link)
[ He's here for comfort and support, he's paying her for it, but Harold still feels unmoored to be offered it so readily. Their first words exchanged and she's already expressing more care for him than he's heard from another human being since Nathan died. He'd done that to himself -- he'd isolated himself, purposefully; he can't risk Grace -- and anyone who becomes newly important to him will equally have a target on their back, same as Grace, so it's best if he doesn't allow it --

It's only the professionalism here that makes him brave enough to try. He's done everything he can to bury this encounter in a well-protected identity, the kind of thing no one would blink twice at Harold Crane engaging in. It's as safe as he could ever make it, hypothetically safer than he's been in ages. His background check on Inara and her shipmates was thorough.

Safety is such a foreign idea he doesn't know how to trust it, tries to cover his blip of awkwardness as he takes a seat and follows her invitation to examine the tea selection. He sets his cane to the side and unbuttons his jacket first -- proper etiquette while sitting -- and is in fact put more at ease by the familiar, comforting task of considering which tea to make, if in a much more elaborate setting than usual. ]


I'm partial to Japanese greens, [ he admits. ] This is an impressive arrangement. I confess I've never attended a traditional tea ceremony.

[ And he's obviously curious, interested in art and culture and fine food as always. It's nicely pulling him out of his morose thoughts and back to the present already. ]
ornithologist: (045)

[personal profile] ornithologist 2025-06-13 08:55 pm (UTC)(link)
[ That hiring Inara was something of an ordeal was something Harold found perversely reassuring. It made him believe she really wanted to be here, was choosing to be a Companion out of multiple avenues open to her. He doesn't have any intent of engaging in sex but he knows it's a common part of the job and that she would be evaluating any potential clients on that possible basis. Anyone with a less rigorous screening process would cause him to be concerned.

As it is, there's absolutely nothing about Inara to make Harold think she isn't enjoying herself or that he's burdening her somehow. Maybe there's a part of him that's still shocked he's doing this at all, can't believe he's gone through with it and now is looking for an excuse to run scared.

But he can't keep doing what he's been doing. He's just been so alone. ]


Sencha is my favorite, [ he admits, almost reluctantly. Harold is trying to maintain the decorum characteristic of the Crane persona but this personal admission comes off shy instead. He's been pushed to his limit lately and his acting skills, never phenomenal, aren't up to the task.

Being watched so attentively makes him shyer still, stiff and precisely held on the comfortable seat. He isn't able to meet her eyes, uses the convenient excuse of watching her slender hands delicately perform the tea ceremony to avoid eye contact, which he is at least truly interested in. Small mercies that it isn't espresso, or more aptly Turkish coffee in this type of setting. He hasn't been able to drink any type of coffee without thinking of Grace.

He needs to say something else and not just sit here like a dud fuse, he realizes. ]


I haven't made time for something like this in quite a while.

[ He used to, regularly. Before. He used to visit museums and attend orchestras and arrange for private dinners. Now there's nothing but a dark, desolate library that he finds himself wandering back to again and again, like he'll find some new trace of Nathan there. ]
ornithologist: (083)

[personal profile] ornithologist 2025-06-23 09:21 pm (UTC)(link)
[ Harold has an almost palpable air of personal space, an unconscious poise in which he holds himself apart from those around him. He cares so greatly and so desperately, he has to protect himself somehow. His vulnerabilities become all too obvious to anyone looking closely, and turning his natural shy reserve into something aloof has become his best defense.

But this setting and context is designed to have him let down his guard, and he'd willingly engaged in it, recognized that he needs to do something different and this is indeed different. There's an awkward tentative nature to how Harold cautiously lowers his walls a few inches at first.

Then the grief washes through like the tide taking a paltry sandcastle out to sea and he's helpless in the face of it. ]


I lost someone very dear to me recently.

[ It spills out of his mouth like water escaping from an unwatched pot boiling over. His hands find the tea cup and take it gently, automatically, but he's paralyzed by his own admission. ]

... I'm sorry. I sought you out because I'm afraid I'm not dealing with it well, [ what a laughable understatement, ] and I'm afraid of the repercussions. I'm not likely to make for good company, and if you wish to see other clientele instead I will fully understand.

[ He'd say he'd pay her fee regardless, but since he's already paid it in advance, that's moot. Harold can't stand the idea that someone is stuck listening to his sad sack pathetic excuses because they're waiting for their paycheck. He's so intensely private, he's mortified already at what he's said, fingers curling around the tea cup. ]
ornithologist: (194)

[personal profile] ornithologist 2025-07-20 08:32 pm (UTC)(link)
[ Harold has lost the only people in his life he could speak honestly to, who knew him as a person and not just a shadowy figure, and Inara's frankness hits his usual feigned distance like the cold shock of the winter ocean. It's crisp and bracing, and very much needed to jar him out of his rote habits.

He's not sure he's ready for physical contact, but he might as well try. He hasn't touched anyone in comfort since...

Since he left Grace.

He settles his own hand tentatively, gingerly on hers. ]
Point taken, [ he concedes, feeling a lump forming in his throat from suppressed emotion. ] He was my oldest and best friend, and my business partner.

I really... [ Harold breathes out around the intensity of feeling he's containing. ] I don't know what to do without him.

[ It was his fault he'd died, entirely his fault, and Harold is stuck there and can't move past it. ]
ornithologist: (059)

[personal profile] ornithologist 2025-08-11 02:28 am (UTC)(link)
[ How could he be cured? Harold had tried a counselor just once before deciding he couldn't bear it. She'd tried to coach him through survivor's guilt, but been stymied when he asked her how he was meant to move on when it was, in fact, his fault that Nathan had died. Or maybe that was unfair; maybe he was reading his own issue into it, unable to comprehend or see how she could respond in a way that felt legitimate. He hadn't given her a chance, after all.

He hadn't given her a chance and then he'd tried to kill Alicia Corwin in the most shameful way imaginable, and the Machine kept ringing phones, kept reminding him in the only way he'd left available to it to reach out to him that he wasn't totally alone --

In the face of that, Harold can take someone's hand if that's what will prevent it from happening again. His palm veritably prickles at the sensation. He doesn't entertain physical contact much at all and never with someone on first meeting. It's disconcerting, strange. But as she pulls away he's also struck by how warm and soft her skin was against his, how that physical sensation is a bright lodestone against the murky swimming seas of his mind, so easy to get lost in and the contact a landmark against it. ]


Since college. For decades.

[ Even that much is not something Harold tells people, has never told them. Grace didn't know Nathan existed; Nathan learned Grace existed when he proposed, for God's sake. Harold doesn't know how to not protect himself. ]

I'm a very private person, [ he confesses in a soft tone, ] and he knew me in every way that mattered. I depended on him to feel connected to the world. [ Wryly, trying to recover some humor, uncomfortable with his own vulnerability: ] Perceptive of you to call me lost and confused without him.