
Honestly this is something Thomas contemplates every fucking day to some degree or measure.

Honestly this is something Thomas contemplates every fucking day to some degree or measure.
{ Tragic Honesty }

“Exercising patience,” Thomas knew his faults well – and among them was his lamentably short wick of a temper. He had an absolute fascination in Miranda’s control over her storms – the expert way she could manage, maintain and manipulate her fury – her frustration – even her fatigue! There seemed to be very little she could not bear through regardless of how much she condescended matters internally, and it was a skill he had always admired but never been able to truly emulate.
{ Tragic Honesty }
Have you ever been abandoned? Why do you think you were left behind? – Thomas from @harriedwritings

Fingers drum against the smooth surface of the desk before him, a steady cadence in an otherwise unsteady environment. The clock that turns against the wall is the only counter to the beat, even the breathing of the two people occupying the room seeming to be frozen between the soft disturbances against an intense sort of silence.
A long intake of breath seems to echo in surroundings not built for such cavernous acoustics, and the answer, when it comes, feels almost inconsistent with the tension built by the ceaseless drumming. “I believe we have all experienced abandonment in our lives, through one form or another.” A tone as unreadable as the note was neutral, the drumming came to a notable stop. In the lingering silence the clock seemed to thunder, the minute hand locking into place just above the three –
“For me, I would say my experiences were born of convenience.” A pause as the time turns itself back, thoughts lingering in the distant past. The minute hand dips another notch. “Some things are easier buried than they are borne – this is a fact of our society, cobbled together as it is by the laws of convention.” Spoken with conviction, yes, but lacking something fundamental for words offered with such collected dismissal. There’s another dip, the slightest of clicks as hands fold to obscure lips, but do nothing to dim the storm behind blue eyes.
“Some things – are easier to fight for when they are ideas as opposed to realities that come with consequences. Yes,” At last, a hint of emotion, hissed through clenched teeth unseen behind the clasping fingers, “I have been abandoned – and I submit to the fact that it was convenience that made it so. All who stood for me – they did so in ways that served their needs best – and for that, I cannot fault them.”
The three was cut cleanly in half as the final portion fell into place. Understanding did not, by extension, encourage forgiveness. It was, simply, an awareness of the situation and an acceptance of bitter truths – but it was not, in and of itself, a slate wiped clean through acknowledgement of impossible circumstances.
The hands fell, the clock ticked, the final truth revealed in it’s coldest simplicity. “I made of myself a target – and in so doing I made my own existence untenable in the eyes of friend and foe alike. I made it impossible for my convictions to be ignored – and that recklessness in turn secured the end for me. All men are disposable – and I made it easy to bury my voice, in the end. My abandonment, then, is crafted by no surer hands than my own.”
{ In Depth Prompts }

Letter writing was a very important element of daily life and was an essential skill for many of the upper class, particularly those who moved in political spheres. Thomas considered letters to be an artform, an act of prolonged discourse he took especial delight in.
Crafting the perfect rejoiners, formulating iron clad arguments and seeing them form in the cutting contrast of ink on paper was an absolute delight to him and one of his favorite elements of maintaining relationships. He also took a particular thrill in the crafting of codes, and the cleverness necessary to deliver compliments that were in truth criticisms.
This was something he deeply enjoyed and it took a great deal of thinking – though there were also times when he certainly abused the system, or proved himself ridiculous through it.
Imagine, paying a man to carry a letter by horseback, sealed solemnly by the Hamilton crest, and knowing that the sight of it will stir forth all the emotions of a prior argument, the anticipation of a night spent turning over the words and crafting the best disassembly.
Knowing that the recipient will have expectations, that they will be prepared for something of substance and will be stirred by their emotions on their previous dealings – and having all this forethought to send forth nothing more than a single, solitary word, accompanied by his full signature and titles taking up the majority of the page – and you will have, my dear, the HEIGHT of Thomas Hamilton’s humor and pettiness as a lord.

In the lieutenant’s defense, Thomas had been quite adamant on familiarity and the abject abolishment of propriety in the household. He had not necessarily declared any topic taboo – and indeed, encouraged controversial discussion for the sake of engaging in more scintillating discourse. Although, none of those topics were quite so personal in nature.
What did he remember? Astonishing, how swiftly the world could bury people when powerful men set their mind to erasing the idea that they ever existed at all. When it became prudent to pretend they had never been vital to one’s image or favored above the others for the very same ambitions which ultimately destroyed them.
He remembered how small David had seemed in his impeccable uniform, how proudly he had polished every button and how certain he had been that he could make a name for himself that would stand apart from the Hamilton family politics. He recalled, too readily, the letters which had detailed in a script too cramped and quick to be speaking truths an air of optimism, confidence and quiet resolve.
Worse still, he remembered the bruises and the cuts, the pains his brother worked so desperately to conceal behind a dutiful smile and the repeated assurance that it was all part of the training. How dearly he had wished to rise to his brother’s defense then – but of course, their father was so proud, and could no more see the damage being born than he could the possibility that David was not the most ideal of his children.
He remembered hating David for that.
“My brother – was a singularly focused person,” The statement is delicate as it is vague – neither praising nor condemning him in any particular fashion. Diplomacy at it’s finest, to say as much as one could without saying anything at all. “I cannot recall a time in which he wasn’t driven to some sort of action. Parliament did not suit him.” There was a thin, self-deprecating smile at this – for as the eldest, such affairs were his to inherit, and thus the greater scrutiny of their father was his to bear.
David had a perfectionist nature – even as a boy, he was disciplined beyond Thomas’ comprehension, and had a means of gleaning their father’s praise as if it were easy. When he decided to join the navy Thomas had been relieved, certain that with his brother out of sight, their father would grow to appreciate more the efforts Thomas put forth. That it was not to be should not have surprised him.
That their father could turn so dramatically in his opinion – without evidence or trial, with greater concern and alarm for appearances than the threat of David’s demise, Thomas had learned a valuable lesson. Alfred Hamilton’s approval would always be conditional upon one’s capacity to be useful to his image – the moment one became a taint upon that carefully constructed persona, their value diminished rapidly and, as in the case of David, could render them so low that destroying them utterly and making all the whispers disappear took precedence over understanding what really happened.
“Though I suppose it goes without saying that the Navy did not suit him either.” A flat and unfeeling conclusion to what was in fact a wound that festered and rotted within him, sticky sweet in some company and foul with bitterness in others. “I cannot say I remember anything particularly significant about him that is not already public knowledge.” The dismissal of the topic came in the form of an apologetic, urbane smile that was better suited to a courtroom than in the comfort of his own sitting room, but what could be done?
As to the other sibling.
“Anna was – the stuff that poems are born from, the inspiration behind legends and fairytales alike.” Here, the careful grip on his composure slipped, and a hint of mournful wistfulness touched upon his features as surely as it colored his voice. “I never knew a kinder person – to this day, in fact, I would say hers remains the brightest and most forgiving of spirits.” And so it was no wonder, that this world had fucking destroyed her.
Rising to his feet, Thomas turned toward the window, containing the heated fury that rose whenever he thought about the sheer pointlessness of her demise. The ease in which it could have been avoided if only their father had not been so obsessed with ascertaining the family name was above reproach for their association to David. As if he wasn’t theirs, was something that could just be swept aside and forgotten –
“She loved to sing.” A sudden, quiet offering of something personal, something the world didn’t already know. “She had a nightingale, whom she shared her songs with most often. I had thought she would entrust the bird to someone – it had always been so dear to her – but as it turned out, she set it free before she died. The flock on my father’s estate are descended of that particular bird. They return there every year.”
Thomas liked to believe it was to remind the man of his crimes, though he doubted Alfred Hamilton would heed the scoldings of the nightingales any better than he would the grief of his wife or the bitterness of his last remaining child.
Turning back once he regained himself, he raised his brows slightly, “Why do you ask?”
{ Smash or Pass }

On one hand, Theodore is quite aware that at any point in his career – even after Beckett falls to ruin – the man is by far among the most dangerous of opportunities he may find himself facing. Which naturally makes him the most interesting, on the other hand. There’s really no hope for it at all. “Smash.”

“Absolutely and unequivocally a pass.” Cutler Beckett has orbited his way through enough of his peers for Thomas to recognize him for the collector that he is, and there is not a chance on God’s green earth that he would allow himself to fall into that same trap of assured destruction. Now how that might change in the time of Cutler’s tent verse, would all depend on what end Thomas himself faces in that time.

It would certainly be trouble for her in some circumstances – but then again, that has never stopped her before. “Any man who can love my ship as much as I do is one worthy of at least a passing smash.” Depending on how things work out, she might even be inclined to a more lasting one.

“Smash.” She doesn’t need a convoluted reason – the man is pretty and he has as much appreciation for her in trousers as he does for her in a skirt. That alone makes him a win in her books.
I feel like you and @intolerablexsacrifice had a chit-chat cause I was yelling about this at him on Discord after posting that little trifecta of horrors on Thomas and the impact of realizing Flint = McGraw = The man who killed his parents fucking knew them.
And as outlined there it – is not a rational response. As time passes he absolutely reaches a point of acceptance and in regards to Alfred, he is admittedly fairly indifferent. He understands that, and there is just enough viciousness in him to feel vindicated in knowing his father died trapped and afraid, at the hands of a man who knew his crimes. In the heat of the moment though, there is only one thing that stands out – with James and Miranda both – and that is the fact they treated his mother like fucking collateral. If not a downright tool to torture Alfred by – and while we know that is not the case as viewers – Thomas has no reason to believe otherwise. No reason to believe they showed her mercy, because these are the same people he, up until the moment of revelation, had no reason to think capable of killing her to begin with so it is like an immediate 180 in his mind.
And for a minute. A hot, horrible minute – he sees them as the monsters England forged them into. For a hot minute the premeditation necessary to execute their operation and to commit their crime against his mother ( because his father doesn’t count – in the heat of his fury Thomas feels nothing for Alfred and that is telling. Because while there are days he grieves for the unsaid, the unspoken, the unresolved – ultimately he knows himself vindicated, avenged in his father’s death. He knows he does not regret that he is gone, only that the relationship they had was not the one he wanted ) marks them in his mind as unforgivable.
And depending on how he learns of her involvement – I honestly cannot say his response would not be violent. I know he struck James. I cannot honestly say he would not lash at her too and I hate that such violence is a genuine response, but it is. I can’t say he would be able to think past his anger and his grief to some kind of rational point. I do know that, regardless of how he learns this, he will walk out. Whether he lashes out or not, he will leave, because he will need time to consider precisely how he feels about it.
Finding a balance with Miranda and James again after that would not be easy. When it is just James, we know for a fact James wouldn’t hold Miranda accountable. We know he’d place that noose around his own neck, and that in many ways she would remain the martyr between them. He can forgive James, because James is all that is left, because if he doesn’t then what the fuck was Miranda’s sacrifice for?
But when she is right there, capable of putting her own voice to it, there’s no way she’d let herself stand as the martyr between them. And what is more – there is less incentive on Thomas’ end to be forgiving of either of them which – really makes me wonder if he would even make himself try.

Resisting temptation has never been one of Thomas’ virtues. When he has an impulse to do something – regardless of whether it happens to be “good” or “bad” chances are he will simply do it or find a means in which to do it that will not rouse suspicion or controversy as a result. Once he gets an idea in his head, he is like a dog with a bone and won’t stop gnawing at it until he gets what he wants from it – so while he may control himself in the moment of the impulse itself, chances are mighty that he will revisit the idea at a later time.