I spoke to you before of the man that had put a knife in my back. It seems the shrine I encountered him at wasn't the only one he visited that day. If he tried to lure you away as well...
[Estinien is angry too, but in a controlled sort of way. He's had days to ruminate about it by now. The most troubling parts are the ones the doesn't want to get to, as he fears they may be a bit beyond her understanding at the moment.]
I know not what the Regent has asked of him, but I would not be surprised were I a marked man to the Kenoma. More than one of them assaulted me as I struggled through the streets, saying I'd made a problem of myself... Makoto was simply the one to finish the job. The only thing I know for certain is that he regretted he could not make my death more painful and wretched than it already was. 'Twas revenge, at least in part.
[A darker fury weighs more heavily in his chest - one tinged with regret.]
But those are all thoughts that do not fully distract her from the fact that estinien claimed to have died. His head had come off. He had been… what? Her gaze moves to the shard in her hand, seized with the urge to squeeze—
She doesn’t. Instead-]
You went to them… ?
[She thought that the Aions before her all had much stronger views on the factions, based on having experienced the Regent’s rule first hand. But he claimed to have… tried to befriend them?]
When we arrived in Venera to investigate the illness, the Kenoma were already present. I was reluctant to see my comrades simply wander among them, collaborate with them, as if they offered no threat - but the only alternative was to either leave the city or battle them in the streets. If I were to do the latter, unprovoked, I know well enough that few would support me.
So I listened to the urging of the other Pleroma. I chose to stay my lance, to simply watch over them in the event a conflict arose. I indulged in the unspoken treaty between sects, thinking that the plague ravaging the continent had taken priority...
I spoke to the Kenoma, here and there. They seemed genuine in their desire to help the sick. But yet...
[His frustration, his feeling of impotency, is obvious. He doesn't know whether to feel this as a betrayal, or whether it was simply his own foolishness that lead to his fall. He was wrong for having trusted.]
...'Twas only when the illness had taken me that they struck. One after another, they took advantage of my addled mind, until I could go on no longer... and then, when I'd been taken to pieces, the same Kenoma that had assured me of their mutual dedication to Venera were among those defending my killer from justice.
[How well does she know this first feeling he speaks of. How many times already in this world has she felt justified in challenging or physically reprimanding another person only for no one else to stand by her? How many times have people implied that her way of doing things, the only way she'd ever known as correct, was wrong somehow. That she should shut up, that she should not act, that she should accept the insults piled at her feet-
Surely it was a betrayal. Surely it was right that he view it as a betrayal.]
All of their names.
[Wait, no- She does not know those. She barely knows the names of the people supposedly on her "side", even-]
All of their faces.
[If he can... If this foul magic can show visions as well as transport speech and feelings across the land...]
[He's caught off guard for a moment, the passion in her demand mostly unexpected to him. He hadn't assumed she would care that much about what was done to him, or about the conflict between sects in general. He has to pause to sort through why she would ask this so urgently. Truthfully, he might have thought she'd just call him a fool.
Though some small part of him questions putting her on this path, another angry part feels validated by her clear intent. It's indulgent, maybe, to take someone up on this that is similarly inclined towards removing problems instead of letting them fester. In the heat of the moment, he lets the unexpected connection drive him forward.]
I'd met all of them before... some, their ill intent was less surprising.
[He begins trying to project the images of their faces to her. First, Makoto, who she already knows of. Then, he has to focus hard on the second-hand memories Himeka had showed him of what happened after his fall.]
Eustace came to Makoto's aid when he was struck down... he was one of the Kenoma that tried to keep me imprisoned, back at the start. Luo Binghe... I believe he would gladly see me killed, and he's tried before, but this time... he seemed content to watch. I know not his reasons.
[Each of their faces are supplied in turn. Then, the frustration and anger in his thoughts becomes sharper. He thinks of Kaeya.]
Kaeya was the man who behaved as if our goals were the same... he was also the one that, without hesitation, shielded Makoto from Himeka's vengeance.
[Estinien is right about one thing. Hayame does not care about the conflict between the sects. How can she, really? She had heard tale of what happened to the first Aions brought to this world, but to her they are just that- tales. Even coming from Estinien, who she hadn’t thought a liar, torture, brainwashing, and magical black sludge forced down throats is so removed from her own reality (at least, the magic part) that it sounds like a fantastic story. She had never met the regent. She had no friends among the native populace who might be affected by this world’s fate and may try to sway her one way or the other.
But what she does have is a knife, one that she’d once gratefully thought could be used to slit her belly open if need be. Now… perhaps even that will be denied her. And if it were…]
You offered me a blade when I had nothing.
[And though the charity burns…
She knows some of those faces. Makoto, who had tried to convince her to come with him from the Firebrand shrine. Kaeya, the man who had pretended to be her brother in an Innocence fever dream and who had held her hands so tenderly… only to turn mysterious and cagey in the aftermath. Eustace- so that was the name of the man who had looked at her and proclaimed that all he saw was an animal that needed to be put down. And she may not know the one other, but-
What else does she have? What else can she do? If she cannot die properly, if she cannot think of a better way to live-]
[It's a touching gesture, as much as it is a worrying one. It's not that he's literally forgotten that he gave her the knife, but he realizes for the first time that the gesture is clearly weighing on her mind more prominently than it has his. He supposes he shouldn't be surprised. When he was first given the knife by the valley's guardians, he had felt liberated, too.
It feels like progress has been made here... which would be great, if it didn't seem like she might be consigning herself to another reckless objective, just as foolhardy and stubborn as trying to run across the continent had been. He's glad to hear her passionate about something, but what he wants most is for her to find something to live for, not something to die for.
He has to pause for a moment, considering how to respond.]
...Bringing their shards would be of the most use. [He's not even sure what would happen to their heads after they passed.] If brought to the forest, 'twould provide us the best hope of either cleansing the Kenoma's taint or preventing them from causing further harm.
[He won't tell her not to fight them at all, but...]
...Though I would much rather fight by your side, and see it done together.
But what else does she have? If she cannot die, if that path of last ditch escape is closed to her, then what is she to do about honor? What is there to do about this despair she feels, so heavy and oppressive that each day she wakes surprised she has not choked in the night?
If there is no death… then the only thing else she knows well is violence.]
Their shards as well.
[It seems she isn’t to be swayed about the heads, without the sense to explain that in her culture… that is how one knew the mettle of a warrior. That she had once dreamed of being bought by a warlord into whose hands she might deliver the severed heads of his enemies, proving herself worth perhaps even a fraction of the respect a human man received.]
There is a Kenoma I became indebted to before I knew… one who drank the foul curse and became darkened. I will bring his shard back, too, for I could not force the sludge out of his body any other way I tried…
[And she’d tried, but the only thing that had come from his stomach was vile and her own blood nicked on his sharp teeth. If she swears enough, if she makes enough vows, enough debts, will she cease wanting to plunge that knife into her belly and then her heart? Will she earn enough goodwill that perhaps Estinien might even-]
I could see it done.
[She wants to believe that. If he were there also… Well, perhaps it were more sure. She just doesn’t know well how to say it, “we could see it done”. Perhaps the link in their minds would fill the blank in for her.]
[It's interesting to know that she even tried with one of the Kenoma, as it would have been easy to assume that she would simply count them among the dead at that point. It does seem that oaths and debts mean a great deal to her, which he understands. He has his own debts he's following through on, after all.
Though they cannot truly see each other, Estinien can't help but project the emotional impression of the real smile he has at her saying that. Perhaps that's odd, given the way she is threatening to behead people, or the undertones of her own doubts about living... yet, it seems like something they are united on.
He feels some comfort in that.]
Aye. There are a few among the Kenoma I would sooner see cleansed than punished as well. We know not of any sure way to accomplish it... but with their shard in hand, there may yet be a chance to try.
I intend to put my efforts toward doing so, going forward. I would be glad for your aid.
She doesn't know what to do with that. Hayame is not smiling. She has not smiled since she came to this place, and before that... She had smiled at the arrows her brother had put in her hands, before the mission and her life and everything she'd known had gone to shit. She had almost smiled at Matsukaze.
It feels like she's forgotten how. Like if she did it... something in her might crack and break. But there is... comfort. A sick comfort, perhaps, but comfort, in finally being united with someone over something.
Hayame's mind is in turmoil, yet, staring at the knife in one hand, the shard of black gem in the other... until she slowly puts the blade away.]
[That said, there is something unresolved. He hasn't forgotten the state she was in when this conversation started.]
Will you be able to make it back to the forest? Even if you refuse to teleport, 'tis possible I could bring you supplies to tide you over for the rest of your journey.
[She can not say that he is welcome. Not until she brings him the heads or the shards. Words are cheap, no matter how much conviction she puts behind them, until they become reality.
And the reality is-]
Even if I were to debase myself so-
[To ask for... supplies, as if she could not provide (just barely) for herself? Succor from a man who teleported without balking at the foreign magics suffusing his body...]
... I could not tell you accurately where it is that I am. It would be pointless.
[She checks her direction once a day by reorienting towards the forest's position against the rising sun, and moves forward. She has no map.]
[He can admit to himself that the offer was ambitious to begin with, as finding her would be difficult regardless. As it is... he won't force his help on her. Not unless it's absolutely essential.]
Then, in the meantime, I will keep in touch. Mayhap once you've reached the forest I can provide some direction.
[Maybe the best he can do for the moment is check in on her occasionally and ensure that things haven't gotten worse. Gods, he hopes she will acclimate to teleporting at some point.]
[... She appreciates it. That he does not try to push his charity on her in this case. Even when she knew it might come from being a "good person" (whatever the hell that was...) How it burned to be reminded so clearly of her own failures.
As if she didn't already know every single one.
It takes her a lot of pride swallowing, but. He has been. Helpful. And so-]
... Once I reach the forest.
[And she will, in a few days, a few too many pounds lighter than when she set out from Venera, her hooves cracked and dry, her mane dulled and her coat matted, but. She will.]
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[Estinien is angry too, but in a controlled sort of way. He's had days to ruminate about it by now. The most troubling parts are the ones the doesn't want to get to, as he fears they may be a bit beyond her understanding at the moment.]
I know not what the Regent has asked of him, but I would not be surprised were I a marked man to the Kenoma. More than one of them assaulted me as I struggled through the streets, saying I'd made a problem of myself... Makoto was simply the one to finish the job. The only thing I know for certain is that he regretted he could not make my death more painful and wretched than it already was. 'Twas revenge, at least in part.
[A darker fury weighs more heavily in his chest - one tinged with regret.]
I was a fool to walk among them peacefully.
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“Makoto”. She would remember that name.
But those are all thoughts that do not fully distract her from the fact that estinien claimed to have died. His head had come off. He had been… what? Her gaze moves to the shard in her hand, seized with the urge to squeeze—
She doesn’t. Instead-]
You went to them… ?
[She thought that the Aions before her all had much stronger views on the factions, based on having experienced the Regent’s rule first hand. But he claimed to have… tried to befriend them?]
no subject
So I listened to the urging of the other Pleroma. I chose to stay my lance, to simply watch over them in the event a conflict arose. I indulged in the unspoken treaty between sects, thinking that the plague ravaging the continent had taken priority...
I spoke to the Kenoma, here and there. They seemed genuine in their desire to help the sick. But yet...
[His frustration, his feeling of impotency, is obvious. He doesn't know whether to feel this as a betrayal, or whether it was simply his own foolishness that lead to his fall. He was wrong for having trusted.]
...'Twas only when the illness had taken me that they struck. One after another, they took advantage of my addled mind, until I could go on no longer... and then, when I'd been taken to pieces, the same Kenoma that had assured me of their mutual dedication to Venera were among those defending my killer from justice.
sorry for the delay! business trip kicked my butt
Surely it was a betrayal. Surely it was right that he view it as a betrayal.]
All of their names.
[Wait, no- She does not know those. She barely knows the names of the people supposedly on her "side", even-]
All of their faces.
[If he can... If this foul magic can show visions as well as transport speech and feelings across the land...]
Do you know them?
it's trips kicking butts all around
Though some small part of him questions putting her on this path, another angry part feels validated by her clear intent. It's indulgent, maybe, to take someone up on this that is similarly inclined towards removing problems instead of letting them fester. In the heat of the moment, he lets the unexpected connection drive him forward.]
I'd met all of them before... some, their ill intent was less surprising.
[He begins trying to project the images of their faces to her. First, Makoto, who she already knows of. Then, he has to focus hard on the second-hand memories Himeka had showed him of what happened after his fall.]
Eustace came to Makoto's aid when he was struck down... he was one of the Kenoma that tried to keep me imprisoned, back at the start. Luo Binghe... I believe he would gladly see me killed, and he's tried before, but this time... he seemed content to watch. I know not his reasons.
[Each of their faces are supplied in turn. Then, the frustration and anger in his thoughts becomes sharper. He thinks of Kaeya.]
Kaeya was the man who behaved as if our goals were the same... he was also the one that, without hesitation, shielded Makoto from Himeka's vengeance.
no subject
But what she does have is a knife, one that she’d once gratefully thought could be used to slit her belly open if need be. Now… perhaps even that will be denied her. And if it were…]
You offered me a blade when I had nothing.
[And though the charity burns…
She knows some of those faces. Makoto, who had tried to convince her to come with him from the Firebrand shrine. Kaeya, the man who had pretended to be her brother in an Innocence fever dream and who had held her hands so tenderly… only to turn mysterious and cagey in the aftermath. Eustace- so that was the name of the man who had looked at her and proclaimed that all he saw was an animal that needed to be put down. And she may not know the one other, but-
What else does she have? What else can she do? If she cannot die properly, if she cannot think of a better way to live-]
If you desire it, I will bring you their heads.
[“Or die trying”. Hah.]
no subject
It feels like progress has been made here... which would be great, if it didn't seem like she might be consigning herself to another reckless objective, just as foolhardy and stubborn as trying to run across the continent had been. He's glad to hear her passionate about something, but what he wants most is for her to find something to live for, not something to die for.
He has to pause for a moment, considering how to respond.]
...Bringing their shards would be of the most use. [He's not even sure what would happen to their heads after they passed.] If brought to the forest, 'twould provide us the best hope of either cleansing the Kenoma's taint or preventing them from causing further harm.
[He won't tell her not to fight them at all, but...]
...Though I would much rather fight by your side, and see it done together.
no subject
But what else does she have? If she cannot die, if that path of last ditch escape is closed to her, then what is she to do about honor? What is there to do about this despair she feels, so heavy and oppressive that each day she wakes surprised she has not choked in the night?
If there is no death… then the only thing else she knows well is violence.]
Their shards as well.
[It seems she isn’t to be swayed about the heads, without the sense to explain that in her culture… that is how one knew the mettle of a warrior. That she had once dreamed of being bought by a warlord into whose hands she might deliver the severed heads of his enemies, proving herself worth perhaps even a fraction of the respect a human man received.]
There is a Kenoma I became indebted to before I knew… one who drank the foul curse and became darkened. I will bring his shard back, too, for I could not force the sludge out of his body any other way I tried…
[And she’d tried, but the only thing that had come from his stomach was vile and her own blood nicked on his sharp teeth. If she swears enough, if she makes enough vows, enough debts, will she cease wanting to plunge that knife into her belly and then her heart? Will she earn enough goodwill that perhaps Estinien might even-]
I could see it done.
[She wants to believe that. If he were there also… Well, perhaps it were more sure. She just doesn’t know well how to say it, “we could see it done”. Perhaps the link in their minds would fill the blank in for her.]
no subject
Though they cannot truly see each other, Estinien can't help but project the emotional impression of the real smile he has at her saying that. Perhaps that's odd, given the way she is threatening to behead people, or the undertones of her own doubts about living... yet, it seems like something they are united on.
He feels some comfort in that.]
Aye. There are a few among the Kenoma I would sooner see cleansed than punished as well. We know not of any sure way to accomplish it... but with their shard in hand, there may yet be a chance to try.
I intend to put my efforts toward doing so, going forward. I would be glad for your aid.
no subject
She doesn't know what to do with that. Hayame is not smiling. She has not smiled since she came to this place, and before that... She had smiled at the arrows her brother had put in her hands, before the mission and her life and everything she'd known had gone to shit. She had almost smiled at Matsukaze.
It feels like she's forgotten how. Like if she did it... something in her might crack and break. But there is... comfort. A sick comfort, perhaps, but comfort, in finally being united with someone over something.
Hayame's mind is in turmoil, yet, staring at the knife in one hand, the shard of black gem in the other... until she slowly puts the blade away.]
... Then you may have it.
[So that she may have something like a purpose.]
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[That said, there is something unresolved. He hasn't forgotten the state she was in when this conversation started.]
Will you be able to make it back to the forest? Even if you refuse to teleport, 'tis possible I could bring you supplies to tide you over for the rest of your journey.
[If he can figure out where she is, at least.]
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And the reality is-]
Even if I were to debase myself so-
[To ask for... supplies, as if she could not provide (just barely) for herself? Succor from a man who teleported without balking at the foreign magics suffusing his body...]
... I could not tell you accurately where it is that I am. It would be pointless.
[She checks her direction once a day by reorienting towards the forest's position against the rising sun, and moves forward. She has no map.]
no subject
[He can admit to himself that the offer was ambitious to begin with, as finding her would be difficult regardless. As it is... he won't force his help on her. Not unless it's absolutely essential.]
Then, in the meantime, I will keep in touch. Mayhap once you've reached the forest I can provide some direction.
[Maybe the best he can do for the moment is check in on her occasionally and ensure that things haven't gotten worse. Gods, he hopes she will acclimate to teleporting at some point.]
no subject
As if she didn't already know every single one.
It takes her a lot of pride swallowing, but. He has been. Helpful. And so-]
... Once I reach the forest.
[And she will, in a few days, a few too many pounds lighter than when she set out from Venera, her hooves cracked and dry, her mane dulled and her coat matted, but. She will.]