Posted: Sat Mar 19, 2011 4:31 pm
OoC:
Are you being sarcastic? I know it's cliche.
IC:
The second thief was gutted one final time by Dogura's blade.
[Thief #2 DEAD]
His remaining two brothers leaped over his body like feral cats, one of them trodding unceremoniously on his face and stamping it with grime. They pounced on Dogura, daggers extended like claws, their weight enough to make him stagger.
In one fluid motion that took place in less than a second, Arrika cuffed one on the back of the head and tugged him off, slamming him on the ground before he could cause Dogura any damage, and drove her knife into the back of the other.
[Thief #4 MISS]
[Thief #3 -12 HP]
The impaled thief did not relinquish his hold on Dogura, however, and like an unfeeling robot, buried his own weapon an inch away from the samurai's heart.
[Dogura -7 HP]
***
There was a moment of stone cold silence, a second in time that seemed to stretch on forever, where all he could feel was his heartbeat. And Thomas' hand upon his shoulder.
With a strangled roar Seth drew his knife. Thomas grabbed his wrists before he could cut him down, the tip of the knife an inch away from his heart.
Behind them, Netta did not seem to have realized what had just happened, and only shuffled her cards and muttered to herself more frantically.
Seth's entire body shook as he tried to fight Thomas off, tried to drive his knife closer and bridge the inch of separation, but the man was much stronger than he.
"Sauron!" he called out to the dark. Unbelievably, impossibly, his Twili cat responded with a familiar yowl. "Sauron?" Seth said, his eyes widening as the shaggy hellcat materialied from the shadows and curled up in Netta's lap. "Help me," the boy hissed, sweat breaking out on his forehead as he continued to grapple with Thomas. But the cat only purred, nudging Netta's hand for attention.
"Clever beast you have there, son," Thomas said quietly, and the word only enraged Seth further. It seemed as if the man exerted no effort at all in holding Seth off, and with a simple flick of his wrists, the knife was in his own hands.
"Give that back," Seth snarled when he realized that he had no weapons left. He was trapped, underground and in the dark, Blind and cold and essentially alone, and for the first time in his life he wished that Rhyss was here.
"Why?"
"So I can kill you, you bastard, you murderer, you-"
"I'm not a serial killer, kid. I did it for a reason," Thomas cut him off calmly. "And what will revenge get you? Bennett's dead and gone, and nothing you do will ever bring him back."
He was right, and Seth, always the cold pragmatic one, could not argue with him. "At least tell me why," he said, his voice shaking.
"Because I Saw that in less than a year, everything will fall apart. Bennett will expand the trade routes of his business and set up Arunite as the leader of one of his caravans. On the second day of his very first trip, the caravan will be attacked and set on fire by a group of highwaymen. They'll gut him and leave him, and slowly, he'll bleed to death."
Seth listened dispassionately; Arunite hated him more than anymore, and Seth hated him in return. What did he care if the coal-haired idiot got what he deserved? "Is that really it?"
"Zareth will never inherit any of Bennett's wealth. It'll fall apart months after Arunite's death." When Thomas saw that Seth held no love for his youngest brother either, he continued on. "Karina will never join a dancing troupe; she'll be too busy looking after your mother and Zareth, and playing secretary in Bennett's office. And your mother..."
Seth's aloof demeanor was gone, all of his attention hanging onto Thomas' every word.
"Bennet will cheat on her a dozen times. Everyone will know but her, and even when she sees what's right under her nose, she'll pretend she has no clue."
"Why would she do that? Just lie back and take it?" Seth demanded.
"She wants Zareth, at least, to have the things the rest of you never did."
Seth looked away.
"And one day, she'll stand on the railing of her gilded balcony, of her three story home in Castle Town, and look down at the streets below. But she won't be afraid. Then she'll look up at the sky, and it'll be a blue and cloudless morning... and I'll be with her, standing behind her, but it won't be enough to make her come down."
"And she'll jump," Seth finished.
"No. I'll push her."
The reply was so simple, so clipped and honest and absurd, that Seth could not help but laugh. Tears collected at the corners of his eyes as he clutched his sides, bent double and gasping for air. "It's all the same, so why not, right?" he managed to say.
"I suppose. But there was always a possibility that she would come down with me, and we'd run away, and another child she would come to hate would be born."
"A possibility What happened to fate? Isn't that what we're for?"
"Come now. Even you must have realized already that not everything is set in stone. We change our fates with our every action; the things that we See," he said, gesturing to Seth, himself, and Netta, "are just the things that could happen. Usually what most likely does happen."
Seth nodded slowly. He wanted to hate this man, to strangle him with his hands and beat him into an unrecognizable mess on the ground, but he would not fight him while he spoke things that he could not deny. "I've seen my death a million times, in more than one way," he supplied. "...so, by killing Bennett, everyone gets their happy ending?" Except Bennett, of course.
Thomas made a face. "You really believe that?"
"Of course not. I was just saying."
"Everyone would, most likely, end up better off than if he had lived."
What if he was lying? What if he hadn't had those visions at all, and Seth was about to let a murderer run free...?
He glanced up at Thomas, and when their eyes locked, he knew that he could never kill him. The man was too strong, too fast, too weathered. It would be like a kitten picking on a lion, and the man would just hold him an arm's length away with ease.
"Where have you been?" Seth asked finally.
Remorse crossed Thomas' face, sagged his countenance and slumped his shoulders. "Away. But not too far... I've always been here, kid. You just never noticed."
"Why? I could understand you leaving my mother, but why not take Sela and I with you if you knew that she hated us?"
"Tell me, Seth, have you had any visions today?" Thomas asked instead.
"No."
"Netta?"
"...no," the young woman replied quietly. She had finally put away the deck of cards and was now stroking the black cat on her lap.
"Neither have I. For some reason, when those blessed with Sight are near each other, their abilities are nulled, and they're left Blind. We can't even see visions of each other from a distance. We're not written in the Goddesses' book; our lives are not carved anywhere for anyone to read."
"You left us so you could See," Seth replied. "And you keep calling it a blessing. Do you like not being able to sleep because all you dream of are wars and the world ending?"
"I don't like it, son. But it's saved my life more than once."
"...you said you've been around me for years. You know where I live?" Seth continued warily.
"Yes. In a decent-sized house in Hyrule Fields, near Rauru."
"With..."
"A mage. Rhyss, isn't it?"
"Is that all you know about him?"
Thomas fell silent.
"Do you know what he does to me?" Seth suddenly hissed, his eyes narrowing. "What he does to me every night? How I'm bound to him like a dog? He would have killed me if it weren't for this damned Sight. Maybe, in that case, you could call it a blessing. But after what I've been through, maybe it would be better if I had ended up dead after all!" Seth's voice rang through the tunnels, echoing and bouncing, his words hurling themselves back at his face. "And you saw all this and just let him do it. You saw Kobas, and what he did to Arrika, and you just let him."
"I'm not the strongest person in the world- I couldn't just run in and save you. I had to piece together what I could See from Rhyss and Kobas, assumed that when I saw blank spots, it was because you were with him during those moments."
"So you didn't even try," Seth replied, and it wasn't a question, for he already knew the answer, and it stung deep.
Arrika: 25/41 HP, 9/29 SPL
Dogura: 55/83 HP, 27/27 SPL
Chow: DEAD
Thief 2: DEAD
Thief 3: 18/35 HP
Thief 4: 30/35 HP

IC:
The second thief was gutted one final time by Dogura's blade.
[Thief #2 DEAD]
His remaining two brothers leaped over his body like feral cats, one of them trodding unceremoniously on his face and stamping it with grime. They pounced on Dogura, daggers extended like claws, their weight enough to make him stagger.
In one fluid motion that took place in less than a second, Arrika cuffed one on the back of the head and tugged him off, slamming him on the ground before he could cause Dogura any damage, and drove her knife into the back of the other.
[Thief #4 MISS]
[Thief #3 -12 HP]
The impaled thief did not relinquish his hold on Dogura, however, and like an unfeeling robot, buried his own weapon an inch away from the samurai's heart.
[Dogura -7 HP]
***
There was a moment of stone cold silence, a second in time that seemed to stretch on forever, where all he could feel was his heartbeat. And Thomas' hand upon his shoulder.
With a strangled roar Seth drew his knife. Thomas grabbed his wrists before he could cut him down, the tip of the knife an inch away from his heart.
Behind them, Netta did not seem to have realized what had just happened, and only shuffled her cards and muttered to herself more frantically.
Seth's entire body shook as he tried to fight Thomas off, tried to drive his knife closer and bridge the inch of separation, but the man was much stronger than he.
"Sauron!" he called out to the dark. Unbelievably, impossibly, his Twili cat responded with a familiar yowl. "Sauron?" Seth said, his eyes widening as the shaggy hellcat materialied from the shadows and curled up in Netta's lap. "Help me," the boy hissed, sweat breaking out on his forehead as he continued to grapple with Thomas. But the cat only purred, nudging Netta's hand for attention.
"Clever beast you have there, son," Thomas said quietly, and the word only enraged Seth further. It seemed as if the man exerted no effort at all in holding Seth off, and with a simple flick of his wrists, the knife was in his own hands.
"Give that back," Seth snarled when he realized that he had no weapons left. He was trapped, underground and in the dark, Blind and cold and essentially alone, and for the first time in his life he wished that Rhyss was here.
"Why?"
"So I can kill you, you bastard, you murderer, you-"
"I'm not a serial killer, kid. I did it for a reason," Thomas cut him off calmly. "And what will revenge get you? Bennett's dead and gone, and nothing you do will ever bring him back."
He was right, and Seth, always the cold pragmatic one, could not argue with him. "At least tell me why," he said, his voice shaking.
"Because I Saw that in less than a year, everything will fall apart. Bennett will expand the trade routes of his business and set up Arunite as the leader of one of his caravans. On the second day of his very first trip, the caravan will be attacked and set on fire by a group of highwaymen. They'll gut him and leave him, and slowly, he'll bleed to death."
Seth listened dispassionately; Arunite hated him more than anymore, and Seth hated him in return. What did he care if the coal-haired idiot got what he deserved? "Is that really it?"
"Zareth will never inherit any of Bennett's wealth. It'll fall apart months after Arunite's death." When Thomas saw that Seth held no love for his youngest brother either, he continued on. "Karina will never join a dancing troupe; she'll be too busy looking after your mother and Zareth, and playing secretary in Bennett's office. And your mother..."
Seth's aloof demeanor was gone, all of his attention hanging onto Thomas' every word.
"Bennet will cheat on her a dozen times. Everyone will know but her, and even when she sees what's right under her nose, she'll pretend she has no clue."
"Why would she do that? Just lie back and take it?" Seth demanded.
"She wants Zareth, at least, to have the things the rest of you never did."
Seth looked away.
"And one day, she'll stand on the railing of her gilded balcony, of her three story home in Castle Town, and look down at the streets below. But she won't be afraid. Then she'll look up at the sky, and it'll be a blue and cloudless morning... and I'll be with her, standing behind her, but it won't be enough to make her come down."
"And she'll jump," Seth finished.
"No. I'll push her."
The reply was so simple, so clipped and honest and absurd, that Seth could not help but laugh. Tears collected at the corners of his eyes as he clutched his sides, bent double and gasping for air. "It's all the same, so why not, right?" he managed to say.
"I suppose. But there was always a possibility that she would come down with me, and we'd run away, and another child she would come to hate would be born."
"A possibility What happened to fate? Isn't that what we're for?"
"Come now. Even you must have realized already that not everything is set in stone. We change our fates with our every action; the things that we See," he said, gesturing to Seth, himself, and Netta, "are just the things that could happen. Usually what most likely does happen."
Seth nodded slowly. He wanted to hate this man, to strangle him with his hands and beat him into an unrecognizable mess on the ground, but he would not fight him while he spoke things that he could not deny. "I've seen my death a million times, in more than one way," he supplied. "...so, by killing Bennett, everyone gets their happy ending?" Except Bennett, of course.
Thomas made a face. "You really believe that?"
"Of course not. I was just saying."
"Everyone would, most likely, end up better off than if he had lived."
What if he was lying? What if he hadn't had those visions at all, and Seth was about to let a murderer run free...?
He glanced up at Thomas, and when their eyes locked, he knew that he could never kill him. The man was too strong, too fast, too weathered. It would be like a kitten picking on a lion, and the man would just hold him an arm's length away with ease.
"Where have you been?" Seth asked finally.
Remorse crossed Thomas' face, sagged his countenance and slumped his shoulders. "Away. But not too far... I've always been here, kid. You just never noticed."
"Why? I could understand you leaving my mother, but why not take Sela and I with you if you knew that she hated us?"
"Tell me, Seth, have you had any visions today?" Thomas asked instead.
"No."
"Netta?"
"...no," the young woman replied quietly. She had finally put away the deck of cards and was now stroking the black cat on her lap.
"Neither have I. For some reason, when those blessed with Sight are near each other, their abilities are nulled, and they're left Blind. We can't even see visions of each other from a distance. We're not written in the Goddesses' book; our lives are not carved anywhere for anyone to read."
"You left us so you could See," Seth replied. "And you keep calling it a blessing. Do you like not being able to sleep because all you dream of are wars and the world ending?"
"I don't like it, son. But it's saved my life more than once."
"...you said you've been around me for years. You know where I live?" Seth continued warily.
"Yes. In a decent-sized house in Hyrule Fields, near Rauru."
"With..."
"A mage. Rhyss, isn't it?"
"Is that all you know about him?"
Thomas fell silent.
"Do you know what he does to me?" Seth suddenly hissed, his eyes narrowing. "What he does to me every night? How I'm bound to him like a dog? He would have killed me if it weren't for this damned Sight. Maybe, in that case, you could call it a blessing. But after what I've been through, maybe it would be better if I had ended up dead after all!" Seth's voice rang through the tunnels, echoing and bouncing, his words hurling themselves back at his face. "And you saw all this and just let him do it. You saw Kobas, and what he did to Arrika, and you just let him."
"I'm not the strongest person in the world- I couldn't just run in and save you. I had to piece together what I could See from Rhyss and Kobas, assumed that when I saw blank spots, it was because you were with him during those moments."
"So you didn't even try," Seth replied, and it wasn't a question, for he already knew the answer, and it stung deep.
Arrika: 25/41 HP, 9/29 SPL
Dogura: 55/83 HP, 27/27 SPL
Chow: DEAD
Thief 2: DEAD
Thief 3: 18/35 HP
Thief 4: 30/35 HP