Lisa Bortiforte
She/Her
31
August 30
Camphrier Town, Kalos
Bi/Heteroromantic
Bioterrorist
Underboss
Bury me in the roses and rot; I'll come back thorned.
TAG WITH @elisabeth
Elisabeth Fiorelli
[attr=class,elisafont] [googlefont=Meddon] La Vie en Rose [break][break] [break] 'Luck' had been an unintentional slip of the tongue, one that Elisabeth herself remained wholly unaware of.
Her own fascination with the crystablooms and what power they could provide Rocket made her see the flowers as more of a boon than a hindrance. Whatever ill portents they carried, she was willfully blind to them in her pursuit of power and ambition.
She owed these strange flowers, at least somewhat, for her significant rise within Rocket's hierarchy.
Elisabeth likewise remained oblivious to whatever shift in mood had occurred in him between her departure and return. She was entirely focused on his reaction to the sketches she placed before him, searching his expression for approval or interest.
He was fortunate to see her renderings of plant life; her own attempts at humanity were not so well-depicted. Faces, hands, feet... human beings were so very complicated, in so many ways, when compared to the straightforward anatomy of flowers.
"Coming to blows?" she echoed him, tilting her head curiously.
Something in the notion of Rocket and League forces dueling over crystal flowers entertained her, and her lips curved into a faint smile.
"That is an amusing mental image. Although when they first appeared, they were so abundant it would be silly to fight over them, wouldn't it? And they are simply so scarce now, they aren't worth squabbling over for whatever little they offer. The region is plagued by worse things, as of late, anyhow."
Her voice had begun to drift here somewhat, her gaze tilting up towards the ceiling as her emerald eyes clouded with distant thought. Not dwelling on the topic of infinity energy, but rather, the question he posed to her now: what was the best way to care for crystablooms?
"I can only offer my experiences, to be honest. I have tried a few different ways of maintaining the flowers after potting and replanting them."
Elisabeth closed the field journal and placed it on the coffee table, where a vase bearing a blooming purple blossom emitted a sweet-scented fragrance. Gesturing to the exotic flower, she turned to him and smiled.
"Have you ever tended to a lady's slipper orchid? It's much like that, I think."
There were a few more complicated processes she engaged in at the Rocket labs -- involving humidifiers, grow-lights, miniature fans, and water-soluble fertilizer -- and while those saw more success and ultimately greater longevity, this method was simpler and easier to replicate while still achieving positive results.
All flowers were ephemeral, after all, to some degree. Even crystablooms.
[break] [break] [break] ✿[newclass=".elisafont b"]color: #7bb661;[/newclass]
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