Ariel (
inaclovenpine) wrote2016-12-30 07:01 pm
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[After this ill-fated conversation with Andrew Wells.]
The Caribbean inlet outside is having a storm.
Which is kind of weird, because the rest of the lake is just kind of cloudy and cold. The sky over the inlet is heavy with clouds and rain, though, and lightning flashes back and forth from cloud to cloud.
WHY ARE MORTALS LIKE THAT.
The Caribbean inlet outside is having a storm.
Which is kind of weird, because the rest of the lake is just kind of cloudy and cold. The sky over the inlet is heavy with clouds and rain, though, and lightning flashes back and forth from cloud to cloud.
WHY ARE MORTALS LIKE THAT.

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"I thought thee foolish, then."
She looks down at the sand.
"I did not know."
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He pauses.
"But--I mean, sorry, I could've clarified this earlier--I assume we're talking about this because of Andrew. Right?"
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"Yeah. Andrew mentioned that he started out not wanting to work for Lucifer, and it reminded me of me."
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"Maybe it isn't. But V was inclined to let me go; I'm not sure what would've happened if he hadn't been. I was still basically a kid, I hadn't ever--"
He shakes his head.
"I didn't know what real relationships even looked like. And V could read my mind, so I wasn't even letting myself think anything was wrong."
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She throws up her hands, and the rain intensifies for a moment.
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"Maybe we are different." He's quiet a moment longer. "But I still think--
I mean, some mortals do like authority. And some of us like to play with the idea of masters and servants without swearing real oaths. But something like Andrew has going, that started with violence and fear--I have a really hard time thinking anything that comes out of that is real."
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"Even his wants, now?" she asks, uncertain.
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"Yeah. Those tend to get away from us at the best of times."
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"Yes."
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She breaks off, searching for words.
"I frightened him," she says finally, annoyed. "I think -- no, I know not, I do not know if it was right or wrong."
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"What happened?" he asks. "What led up to you scaring him?"
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"He had heard tell of Prospero, and me. He told me of his master and his bonds; he asked about my master and our--"
She breaks off.
"I think -- he thought us 'like."
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"Yeah, uh--I can see how that could've been unsettling."
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She looks at Matt, flickering and full of rain.
"My master is not -- my Prospero is not like that."
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She wraps the image of her arms around herself.
"If in other worlds, some other Prospero is so, I'd -- no. But now I speak of things I do not know, have only heard, have never seen, nor will."
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The words that spring to mind, effortless as if they've always been there, are, If he's so great, why don't you sound convinced?
"I have to admit ... I think it's cruel to keep slaves at all."
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But when she speaks, it's only to say quietly, "I wot that I have railed against it, too."
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"But you ... that's what I was trying to say. How he is isn't a reflection on you. And it doesn't make you like Andrew."
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The storm is starting to break apart, the clouds dissipating everywhere except directly over them.
"But I -- I'd serve my master well. I'd please him, do his bidding, when it's just. I do not like my bonds, but I could not--"
She lifts her shoulders.
"I met a demon here that said that it had helped another me o'erthrow Prospero's spell. But in exchange, for magic always costs, it took my place as servant to the Duke. And he ran mad," she says, miserable, "ambitious, murd'rous, vile. And so the demon killed him."
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