๊ด๊ฆ๊ค๊๊๊ ๊ค๊ค ๊ฉ๊ฆ๊๊ช ๊ ๊๊๊ธ! A new use for River-child's granted abilities. You are on the fast-track to ASCENSION now, my boy.
[Gods be. Weir's answer is telepathic, for once, now ricocheting between two voices in his head. His eyes glow brighter as a result.]
Will you shut up? I can't deal with two of you in my skull.
[He wrenches the "strings" of Lucinda's energy harder, uncaring for how he treats her body in these few moments. How strong is your hold on her, Feather?]
Perhaps I was just going to draw her close enough to slit her throat.
[With a free hand, he unearths his regular hunting knife from its sheath, and with a practiced throw of a huntsman, tosses it with a deftness that sends it careening in a spin right towards Lucinda's chest, hoping to meet its target without any fanfare at all, bastard that he is.
One more opportunity to be clever enough, or fast enough, to get out of this one, girl! Weir isn't shy about backstabbing... or front-stabbing, for that matter!]
[While Flora taunts, calm and collected Feather makes Lucinda stand firm. And if she can gently wake her up, she can also act swiftly to grab the knife by the blade with the tip barely grazing her chest. Her palm is cut making blood drip down the blade and onto the dirt.
Fang is finished with the hound. He didn't need to be precise, but its bones are completely broken, its head completely smashed โ there is no body left to be useful for a third time.
As Feather throws the knife on the ground and steps on it, Fang unwinds himself around the trees to make his way back to Lucinda. His waving body blinks in and out of Weir's view but his fierce glowing eyes remain and are focused on him. He hovers over the medium and then winds himself around her. There's a rumbling growl, signaling that he's more than ready to make short work of Weir as well.
Flora speaks for them all, sweetly, threateningly.]
[Weir has long relinquished his hold on the monster, knowing its body would be useless as soon as the dragon was done with it. Instead, he watches with something akin to disappointment when his knife is so quickly caught mid-air, though maybe he can take some small pleasure in knowing that he at least made her bleed.
But, generally? Heโs far from surprised. Were Lucinda alone, no doubt it would have been a simple matter to take control of her mind and body, kill her outright in that way without the need for a creature from the Pit. But no, she has her spirit friends latched onto her like lesions โ and they might as well add three more minds to contend with, three more founts of energy that he cannot, with his own single mind, untangle and control all at once.
No, her powers basically have loopholed his own to find victory and thatโs rightly annoying.]
Are you proud to be a โguestโ of the Vale by way of being only a thorn in my side? By being unwanted, yet too much trouble to toss away? How flattering for you and your precious Lucinda.
[Weirโs no fool. Heโs not fighting a fucking dragon. Heโs killed a god before, but that was with far more resources on hand, and this is just him, alone, standing in a forest with another god nattering in his head. A buzz of laughing static, so very amused at this turn of events.
His eyes revert back to normal. The hold on Lucindaโs mind and body disappears unkindly, like a snapped string. Thatโs his answer.]
[Fang snarls at Weir, having heard his unflattering reply. He begins to shrink until he's about the same size and proportion as Lucinda, his body still shielding her. Feather relaxes her hold on Lucinda's limbs when they all note that he's yielding.
Flora, the vain and prideful spirit that she is, gets the last word in.]
[Her voice fades away. Fang dissipates into smoke that snakes down Huyen's spine. Feather takes Lucinda's hands and pats her awake one more time. Lucinda's eyes fully open and she sighs, rolls her shoulders, and smiles at Weir as if she just woke up from a pleasant dream.]
So.
[The cloak she threw on the ground at the beginning of the fight is right at her feet. Lucy picks it up and wraps it around her shoulders and checks her wounded palm, wiping off the residual blood.]
[Flora's sentiment, right before he severs the connection between them, is not one that Weir takes to heart. It takes more than a few passing words from a cheeky flower spirit(?) for him to draw a true connection between himself and another person; in fact, he can only take it as an indignity. What does a ghost from another world pretend know about him that it can speak with such certainty about dark places? They have not seen a dark place like the one that thrives hungrily beneath their feet.
But he has no further words on that.
Instead, when Lucinda comes back to reality, of course she treats it as casually as anything โ thatโs just her modus operandi by now, isnโt it? Weir actually scoffs. He doesnโt look as though heโs extended much effort in this whole ordeal, and now the idea of having to explain himself feels like the real upcoming trial. One of the perks of her dying would have been to avoid all of that nonsense.
[But, again, he's no fool. The whole point of this little test was to see what he could get away with: simply murdering her and being done with his little issue or if he's burdened with her presence for however longer. It's clear, now, what the reality is.
He takes the knife, looking at her evenly, then unearths a cloth to wipe the blade clean.]
Though you've more than proven that you are not a problem so easily taken care of. [DRY-] I suppose it's too much trouble to ask you to sod off and find refuge in another town?
If you think this was more than a single day's preparation of work, then you're wrong.
[Girl he wasn't going to put that much effort into it. That said, perhaps it's a bit unnerving that Weir can simply drag a dead creature out from the Pit, give it life, use his abilities in such a way against her, and simply call it "not any work." It says something for his character; what he's willing to do if it meets a certain criteria of sensibility in his own eyes.
Knife clean, he slips it back into its sheath at his hip, opposite of where he keeps the one with the ebony blade, and frowns deeply at her.]
North's that way. [POINTS TOWARDS IN THE DIRECTION OF NORTH, where the road would wend out of the forest and spill out into the land beyond. YOU WANNA DO IT AND SPARE HIM THE EFFORT--] I'll not stop you.
[True, she and her friends had to put more effort than he did technically. For a second there is a flash of irritation (or rather it was always there) but she relaxes again.
As Weir points in the direction of north (god this world needs a google maps) she raises her brow at him.]
I have the ingredients for a honey cake that I don't want to go to waste.
Oh, but he catches that little flicker of irritation and it feels nice. A small win, and he'll take it, considering he's generally netted himself what he views as a loss.]
Of course you do.
[The thinnest of smiles.
He considers checking on the monster-turned-to-paste, just to see if there's any amount of energy he can salvage and store in his blade, but decides against it. Unlikely. The thing is probably so demolished that anything remaining has long dissipated.
So. WHATEVER!! He just turns and leads them back to the mare, who will undoubtedly be very spooked from the ruckus, but unlikely to have wrested itself away from the tree.]
Then keep up.
[Gracious as always.
Surely this does not make for a sullen, silent, or even awkward ride back to the Vale.]
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[Gods be. Weir's answer is telepathic, for once, now ricocheting between two voices in his head. His eyes glow brighter as a result.]
Will you shut up? I can't deal with two of you in my skull.
[He wrenches the "strings" of Lucinda's energy harder, uncaring for how he treats her body in these few moments. How strong is your hold on her, Feather?]
Perhaps I was just going to draw her close enough to slit her throat.
[With a free hand, he unearths his regular hunting knife from its sheath, and with a practiced throw of a huntsman, tosses it with a deftness that sends it careening in a spin right towards Lucinda's chest, hoping to meet its target without any fanfare at all, bastard that he is.
One more opportunity to be clever enough, or fast enough, to get out of this one, girl! Weir isn't shy about backstabbing... or front-stabbing, for that matter!]
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[While Flora taunts, calm and collected Feather makes Lucinda stand firm. And if she can gently wake her up, she can also act swiftly to grab the knife by the blade with the tip barely grazing her chest. Her palm is cut making blood drip down the blade and onto the dirt.
Fang is finished with the hound. He didn't need to be precise, but its bones are completely broken, its head completely smashed โ there is no body left to be useful for a third time.
As Feather throws the knife on the ground and steps on it, Fang unwinds himself around the trees to make his way back to Lucinda. His waving body blinks in and out of Weir's view but his fierce glowing eyes remain and are focused on him. He hovers over the medium and then winds himself around her. There's a rumbling growl, signaling that he's more than ready to make short work of Weir as well.
Flora speaks for them all, sweetly, threateningly.]
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But, generally? Heโs far from surprised. Were Lucinda alone, no doubt it would have been a simple matter to take control of her mind and body, kill her outright in that way without the need for a creature from the Pit. But no, she has her spirit friends latched onto her like lesions โ and they might as well add three more minds to contend with, three more founts of energy that he cannot, with his own single mind, untangle and control all at once.
No, her powers basically have loopholed his own to find victory and thatโs rightly annoying.]
Are you proud to be a โguestโ of the Vale by way of being only a thorn in my side? By being unwanted, yet too much trouble to toss away? How flattering for you and your precious Lucinda.
[Weirโs no fool. Heโs not fighting a fucking dragon. Heโs killed a god before, but that was with far more resources on hand, and this is just him, alone, standing in a forest with another god nattering in his head. A buzz of laughing static, so very amused at this turn of events.
His eyes revert back to normal. The hold on Lucindaโs mind and body disappears unkindly, like a snapped string. Thatโs his answer.]
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Flora, the vain and prideful spirit that she is, gets the last word in.]
[The flower's voice softens just a touch, sharing a rare moment of compassion that's normally just for Lucinda.]
[Her voice fades away. Fang dissipates into smoke that snakes down Huyen's spine. Feather takes Lucinda's hands and pats her awake one more time. Lucinda's eyes fully open and she sighs, rolls her shoulders, and smiles at Weir as if she just woke up from a pleasant dream.]
So.
[The cloak she threw on the ground at the beginning of the fight is right at her feet. Lucy picks it up and wraps it around her shoulders and checks her wounded palm, wiping off the residual blood.]
Dinner?
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But he has no further words on that.
Instead, when Lucinda comes back to reality, of course she treats it as casually as anything โ thatโs just her modus operandi by now, isnโt it? Weir actually scoffs. He doesnโt look as though heโs extended much effort in this whole ordeal, and now the idea of having to explain himself feels like the real upcoming trial. One of the perks of her dying would have been to avoid all of that nonsense.
What a shame.]
Bring me my knife.
[โis his only response to that right now.]
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[Or so she jokes knowing full well that it's not going to happen. She's played his game and her friends rose up to the occasion like they always do.
Lucy squats to pick up the knife, holding it by the blade and offering it to Weir so he can take it by the handle.]
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[But, again, he's no fool. The whole point of this little test was to see what he could get away with: simply murdering her and being done with his little issue or if he's burdened with her presence for however longer. It's clear, now, what the reality is.
He takes the knife, looking at her evenly, then unearths a cloth to wipe the blade clean.]
Though you've more than proven that you are not a problem so easily taken care of. [DRY-] I suppose it's too much trouble to ask you to sod off and find refuge in another town?
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[Lucy yawns and covers her mouth with her cloak.]
But it would be nice to see what's beyond the Vale.
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If you think this was more than a single day's preparation of work, then you're wrong.
[Girl he wasn't going to put that much effort into it. That said, perhaps it's a bit unnerving that Weir can simply drag a dead creature out from the Pit, give it life, use his abilities in such a way against her, and simply call it "not any work." It says something for his character; what he's willing to do if it meets a certain criteria of sensibility in his own eyes.
Knife clean, he slips it back into its sheath at his hip, opposite of where he keeps the one with the ebony blade, and frowns deeply at her.]
North's that way. [POINTS TOWARDS IN THE DIRECTION OF NORTH, where the road would wend out of the forest and spill out into the land beyond. YOU WANNA DO IT AND SPARE HIM THE EFFORT--] I'll not stop you.
[free him]
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As Weir points in the direction of north (god this world needs a google maps) she raises her brow at him.]
I have the ingredients for a honey cake that I don't want to go to waste.
[this is your life now weir]
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Oh, but he catches that little flicker of irritation and it feels nice. A small win, and he'll take it, considering he's generally netted himself what he views as a loss.]
Of course you do.
[The thinnest of smiles.
He considers checking on the monster-turned-to-paste, just to see if there's any amount of energy he can salvage and store in his blade, but decides against it. Unlikely. The thing is probably so demolished that anything remaining has long dissipated.
So. WHATEVER!! He just turns and leads them back to the mare, who will undoubtedly be very spooked from the ruckus, but unlikely to have wrested itself away from the tree.]
Then keep up.
[Gracious as always.
Surely this does not make for a sullen, silent, or even awkward ride back to the Vale.]