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#Learn from... festivals Sparkles of unity everywhere
adj-thoughts · 5 months
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queercapwriting · 5 years
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So potential prompt for the holiday series: just a cheesy hallmarky movie fic. Girl meets girl for some reason they're on opposite sides of a business they have to work together to make Christmas or Chanuka festivities a reality and they end up falling in love. But this time, ITS FINALLY GAY! but that's also a lot so also totally cool if it's disregarded...
“I don’t understand,” Maggie rolled her eyes -- for what felt like the four hundredth time -- at her supervisor Professor M’orzz. “They’re astrophysics. We’re xenobio. Why on Earth - no pun intended, I guess - would we work with them on a stupid holiday party?”
Professor M’orzz sighed, also for what felt like the four hundredth time. “Because, Maggie, the show of unity will be good for the overall science department. Funding and all that. And anyway, it’s as you said: astrophysics and xenobiology. You realize that both departments are dismissed by the entire rest of the department as speculative sciences, right? That should give us some kind of bond, you’d think, no?”
Maggie sighed, knowing when she was caught in a truth. “Yeah. I know. Just. They’re so into... math.”
Professor M’orzz smiled at that. “Well I’m sure you and their representative will have a lot to learn from each other while you plan the department’s holiday party then.”
“And why me, again?”
“You know why. The student doing the most prestigious work in our program, being the face of our holiday party slash fundraiser? We need the money to continue our research, donors love to give around the holidays, and you know it.”
Maggie sighed, heavy and deep and with a slight exaggeration that she knew would aggravate anyone else, but that Professor M’orzz would have affection for.
“Fine. Who am I collaborating with, then?”
She didn’t know that the person she was collaborating with was right down the hall in the astrophysics lab, having the same conversation with their professor. 
“Oh come on, J’onn,” they said, because Alex Danvers was far past formalities. “It’s a cheap ploy for money, and -”
“A cheap ploy for money that will keep this department running, Alex,” J’onn said. “It’ll help pay for that accelerator I know you and Mr. Allen were chatting about earlier this week.”
Alex glared, knowing when they were defeated. “Fine. I’ll meet up with this Sawyer woman then.”
“Good,” J’onn smiled, as Alex set off toward the xenobio program office.
They met each other in the hallway and knew each other instantly, by reputation and, somehow, by instinct.
“Danvers,” Maggie greeted with a slight glare and head tilt.
“Sawyer,” Alex clasped their hands behind their back as though to take shaking hands off the table completely.
“So we’ve got to work together on this stupid party,” Maggie said.
“At least we can agree it’s stupid,” Alex smirked.
“Might be stupid, but I’ve got some ideas.”
"Yeah, xenobio’s all about ideas with no observational data for follow-through,” Alex murmured, forgetting everything J’onn had tried to teach them about diplomacy.
“Well,” Maggie nearly stood on tiptoes to look Alex in the eye, but seemed to think better of it, “getting money for both of our departments with this damn holiday party is well within my no-observational-data’s jurisdiction,” Maggie said, and she had the audacity to smirk along with that infuriatingly sexy - wait, no, just infuriating, right? - little head tilt.
“Your jurisdiction ends where I say it does,” Alex returned, knowing even as they spoke the words that they were being way over the top. But Maggie seemed to like over the top, because her smirk only deepened.
“My lab. Seven pm. We’ll do some planning then, okay?”
Alex blinked, and Maggie seemed to take that as ascent as she turned on her heel. “See you around, Danvers.”
So Alex, flummoxed, had no choice but to head to the xenobio lab at seven that night.
If they were honest, they’d always been enamored of the subject. They were considering doing further graduate work in both astrophysics and xenobio -- the fields were so interlinked that the rivalry made absolutely no sense. But, alas, competition like that had a momentum of its own, and who was Alex to mess with an unstoppable force?
Except Maggie Sawyer seemed to be an immovable object of some kind.
Because by the time Alex showed up, Maggie had an entire whiteboard full of ideas for this stupid holiday party they were supposed to throw, complete with scribbles in the margins about the ways that tardigrades’ capacity for coming back to life after extreme desiccation could be used to help fuel crop growth in arid regions, and tiny, hastily-scrawled notes about how bacteria that survived thermal heat vents in deep oceans could be useful for understanding the origins of... well, of everything. 
It was like she’d been party planning, all Chanukah this and Christmas that, with a strong dose of fundraising everywhere, and then gotten so sidetracked by her own genius that she had to stop and scribble out her ideas before they leaked away, elusive and never to return...
Alex did that kind of thing, constantly, in their own notebooks, on their own whiteboards...
So they walked past Maggie, without so much as a greeting, to squint -- not at her holiday party notes -- but at her scientific ideas.
Maggie didn’t move, but rather watched Alex quietly, as they stared at her ideas, looking for all the world like Alex was scrutinizing her naked body -- because really, they might as well have been.
“You know,” Alex said into the silence after several long, long moments, “if I’m understanding your horrible handwriting correctly --”
“Well this is starting off great --”
“Then if we exchanged some of our data, I think you could help me understand some of what might happen on rogue planets and I might be able to help you engineer some solves on your desiccation-scaling problem.”
Alex finally turned to look at their forced colleague, and Maggie was tilting her head, staring between the whiteboard and Alex. “We would do better sharing data than hating each other, wouldn’t we?”
“That’s what J’onn is always saying.”
“Professor M’orzz, too.”
Alex took a deep sigh, and Maggie gave that infuriating smirk again. “Well, maybe this holiday party’s a start. Planning now, the fun stuff later?” 
There was a sparkle in Maggie’s eye, Alex thought, when she referenced fun stuff, and for a moment -- just a moment -- Alex wondered whether she meant fun science or fun sex. 
Or both.
Or maybe it was all just in Alex’s head.
They really needed to get out of the lab more.
“Come on,” Maggie smirked again, and yep, Alex definitely needed to get out of the lab more, because they definitely should not be finding this xenobio woman attractive. Maggie reached under a desk to pull out to utterly ridiculous-looking hats. 
One was a tall green pointy thing with elf ears on the sides; the other was a floppy red Santa hat. “If we’re gonna plan this damn thing, we might as well get in the spirit. Come on.” Maggie held both hats out to Alex, bobbing her hands up and down to indicate that Alex should pick one.
“Absolutely not,” they crossed their arms over their chest.
“Oh come on. If we have to do this, we should do it right.”
“I’m Jewish,” Alex protested as a last resort, and Maggie tilted her head deeper for a moment before diving back under her desk. 
“A beanie, then. Simple, but wintery. And I’ll be an elf.”
She tugged the elf hat deep over her head, so the fake ears covered her own. Alex couldn’t help but snort and accept the blue beanie Maggie held out.
“Okay. So. Are we going to plan the biggest, most money-making and fun-having holiday party of all time, or what?” Maggie asked.
“If you’re gonna go, go hard,” Alex muttered, a smile creeping onto their face. Because Maggie was mocking the whole thing, even with her enthusiasm, and it was so Alex’s style that they couldn’t help but admire her.
Plus, all those scribbles in the margins...
They stayed in the lab well past midnight, sidetracking every hour or so to get into broader discussions about their fields, their passions, the things they most wanted to discover, the ways they both wanted to use their studies to change the world, the solar system, the galaxy.
Somewhere in between, they also divvied up who would be responsible for venue, food, invites, decorations, music, and the best ways to actually get a solid mix of grad students, professors, and rich alumni in the room.
By the time they agreed to call it a night and head home, neither of them quite thought the holiday party was such a stupid idea after all.
They met a handful more times in between. More logistics and more details. But -- not that either of them would admit it -- more often than not, their meetings became excuses to talk science, to talk to universe.
To talk about Maggie’s father and Alex’s mother, Maggie’s hometown and Alex’s surfing.
To talk about anything and everything under the sun, under the ocean, and above Earth’s sky.
Neither of them noticed, or would admit it.
Until the night of the holiday party neither of them wanted to plan.
Alex wore an elegantly green dress, backless and just this side of tight.
Maggie wore a red suit, white shirt, red tie, slim cut and just this side of swoon-worthy.
They stopped when they saw each other, because usually they were in sweats and glasses and yesterday’s makeup, pen stains on their hands and goggles on top of their heads.
They stopped when they saw each other, because suddenly, all their conversations, all those excuses for meetings... clicked.
“You look beautiful, Sawyer,” Alex breathed, running a hand through the buzzed side of their hair self-consciously.
“And you look handsome, Danvers,” Maggie smirked, but this time it was warm, not sarcastic, and Alex wondered when that transition had happened.
“This uh...” Alex gestured around the room, at the party still being set up around them. “We did good.”
“We did,” Maggie grinned, even as her eyes were glued to Alex’s body.
“Still my jurisdiction, though,” Alex murmured as the two stepped closer to each other. Something about gravitational forces between unstoppable forces and immovable objects.
“Not a chance,” Maggie shook her head as they entered each other’s space, no need for words when they’d both already said so much with their planning, their late nights, their bodies, with their dreams and their scribblings in the margins.
“Merry Christmas, Maggie.”
“Happy Chanukah, Alex.”
They didn’t need any mistletoe to tell them to kiss.
Professor M’orzz and J’onn fist-bumped behind them, because they’d definitely had holiday hopes for the two all along.
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