roseandheather wrote:JeffEngel wrote:The "it" there was Henke/Tourville, not Henke/Oversteegen. It's entirely possible she and Oversteegen have a history that already includes nekkid touching - they're certainly familiar.
Why rose wants to inflict Oversteegen on Abigail Hearns is beyond me. I don't know whatever vicious crime Abby's committed off-screen to merit that kind of punishment....
I would honestly not be at all surprised if Michelle's and Michael's relationship had at some point included sex. It was probably frustration-fuelled, belligerent-sexual-tension sex, but I would be utterly un-shocked if they'd had it. In fact, if she weren't in his chain of command, I wouldn't be surprised if they were
still having it.
Yes, how dare I inflict upon Abi Hearns someone who already deeply and profoundly respects Grayson culture, comes from the same sort of aristocratic upbringing she does with the same sense of aristocratic responsibility and
noblesse oblige, and whose conservative and somewhat traditional personality would fit perfectly with a young woman who is in almost all ways still very much a classic Grayson, with the accompanying faith and determination to retain her femininity.
I don't think their backgrounds are that closely comparable.
Michael Oversteegen comes from a wealthy, politically advantaged hereditary class. Personally, he's of the belief that that obliges him to merit the advantages birth has delivered to him, which is certainly a whole lot more pro-social than the attitude taken by many, many people coming out of precisely the same background, such as Pavel Young or Michael Janvier. Moreover, he's well aware that the rest of the universe does not revolve around Manticore or its customs and will take people on their own terms - at least those who, by birth, merit, or position, get up to a comparable peer status. And he's a fine officer and a man of wit and personal integrity.
He's not, however, a near-absolute ruler with the power of life and death over his subjects, like Steadholder Owens. The traditions of deference to a Steadholder are certainly not his, and as much as he may be inclined to let Graysons be Graysons out of respect, etiquette and not being a natural radical, he's unlikely to fit in there. "Conservative" isn't a natural kind - it's relative to a given place and time. On Grayson, if they're both going to express themselves freely and honestly, Michael Oversteegen and, say, Cathy Montaigne aren't going to look enough different politically to impress Grayson's conservatives. (Oversteegen can probably content himself with comments that they don't quite get, like he did with Admiral Draskovic - Cathy, well, they'll understand and then their heads will explode.)
That set won't be one that Abigail's going to care to be in either - but then, they already regard her and her father as class traitors. Still, she can understand them well enough, and they represent part of her social milieu short of some lunatic fringe. She's accustomed to that deference, as much as the full-bore version of it aboard ship clashes with shipboard life and mixed crews, and as much as she and her father may look forward to a
somewhat more egalitarian Grayson. At any rate, I figure they suppose that Grayson changing in a way that dials back the power of Steadholders and opens up opportunities to women isn't necessarily a bad thing. But note that the kind of changes they figure are probably good and shouldn't be ruled out are leading to the sorts of circumstances that are
perfectly obvious to anyone from Manticore, be he however "conservative" by Manticore's standards.
Michael Oversteegen likes the society he lives in, and being of the part of it he is - much as he may not care for some of the company that puts him in. He can be a perfectly urbane visitor elsewhere, but he's not going to slip right in. Too much of his identity is bound up in being a Manticoran aristocrat, with the duties of one as he identifies them and the privileges. I don't see him leaving that. Likewise, the service of her planet is too much a part of Abigail Hearns for her to leave it - or to let it pass up the changes it needs to survive.