[He doesn't stand in the kitchen, but rather the living area neighboring it, scoffing and setting his satchel down from his little excursion outside while she was baking. This time, he doesn't so much as glance at her.]
"Indiscriminately." [He parrots back, vaguely patronizing in tone. Even though she's right.] There was nothing indiscriminate about it. I thought long and hard about whether or not I would take the risk with you.
[As though that's supposed to make her feel better.]
You want to know how you should act? I imagine you'll at much the same as before. Unless you're afraid I might change my mind and slide a knife into your back when you're not looking?
[He's fairly certain Fang wouldn't allow that, anyhow.]
[She knows she's right which is why she won't waste energy arguing the point. The wild berries are next and Lucy takes her time arranging it artfully on top of the cake using the flowered honey as glue.
And yes, Weir's remark elicits a low burning growl from Lucinda's back. She glances over her shoulder.]
Shhh.
[No eyes on the back of her head, but Fang might as well be that pair. Speaking of head friends though...]
[Weir is still fussing with his things, not meeting her eyes. Eventually, he peels away at his outer layer of clothing, leaving a dark undershirt beneath โ the nights are still cold but itโs fine with the hearth blazing. He removes his hunting knife and rests it on the table. His other blade remains at his side, as it always does.
Really, he should be calling the Polymath an โitโ for all he knows, but his voice resounds as male in his head, so thatโs good enough for him.]
He lives in that place, down below. Calls himself an ancient god.
[Coming from a world of magic, psychics, and everything else in between, that is not the most farfetched thing she's ever heard of. But then again, things that called themselves "gods" are a flag in itself. Lucinda knows that there are creatures who can envelop and cause chaos in the mind and bodies of humans and without the arcane resources of magickind, they would claim her world with ease]
Does he use your eyes? And listen in on your conversations?
[The honey cake is done and she leaves it aside for now. She's fully paying attention to Weir though it's hard to tell how she's feeling about these revelations.]
You say he lives in the pit... But he occupies your mind? Ah, telepathy of sorts.
[One-way telepathy is perhaps the best way to describe it; the first time he's ever encountered another voice of an entity in his mind was... literally today, when Flora spoke with him. He's not sure he's much of a fan.]
We're connected.
[Which seems like not much of an explanation, but Weir is trying to judge how much to say, and when. Finally, he straightens, crossing his arms from where he stands to look at her.]
Years ago. [A pause.] The monster I brought up to the surface, to employ against you in my little test? That was nothing compared to some of the things that rove around down there at the deepest depths. There's one in particular that...
[He trails off, reassesses.]
Long story short, it nearly killed me. The Polymath saved me.
[Lucinda nods. Although she doesn't remember all of what Flora had said to Weir directly, she remembers everything else that Weir had told her prior to the fight. He had made his living by risking his life in that hell hole where the monster originated from. And if there were even worse things...
If there was ever a reason to have one's heart and mind hardened, that would be it, she supposes.]
...I call him that. Were you to ever lay eyes on him, you would understand why. When he folds himself up, awful thing that he is, he looks like a brain.
[Yeah, she's gonna share the cake with the nice vendors who gave her free stuff at this rate.]
If you only judge people by whether they're useful to you or not, I should hardly think that a village with a friendly populace who looks up to you is all that useful to a man who wants to be left alone.
[Lucinda's voice is unusually sharp though she tempers it by keeping her volume low and neutral like she usually does.]
So why is it they are like that? What do you and the Polymath have to do with how the world is at least in this corner?
The forest's fickleness about your presence was as much a surprise to me as it was to you, remember? Why you should equate any of that to my doing is a flimsy assumption.
[Besides, there's no way of knowing what the deal was with that. GOSH, PERHAPS IF THEY LEFT THE TOWN SOMEDAY THEY MIGHT FIND OUT THE EXACT REASONING--
But for now, he's clearly pausing before each reply.]
[This time, he answers without missing a beat (and not without some sarcasm), but only because he doesn't have to filter what he thinks he should say versus what he doesn't.]
Well, wouldn't wish to give you an unsatisfying answer. What I said is true: they're all gone now.
Normally, this is where I'd get a mind reader to help me out but I guess the Polymath would probably give them a bit of a start.
[Lucinda sighs and rubs her forehead. It's been a day.]
Look, Weir. I don't know how it would be a disadvantage for you to let me know the details of what's been going on around here. You've lowered my opinion of you by a significant amount already.
[imagine flora rolling on the ground and whining about this, that's basically what it sounds like to Lucy.
And she gets it; the medium is frustrated at him. A normal person would be mad, enraged even, probably resorting to threats at Weir right now. Unfortunately, Lucy's never been normal and her upbringing before and after her life in Vietnam has ensured that for better or for worse. Some misplaced sense of pride as an esper who's known for tackling tough circumstances is making her more patient than he deserves.
Fine. She'll let him lead the conversation (and then she can sleep for 12+ hours)]
Your powers? I'd label them as magic. Phenomena that manifest from magical energies from within or drawing upon the world itself to make something impossible, possible.
[To his credit, Weir manages to not make a face at his abilities being called magic, for as much as he disagrees with it. He does not necessarily want to be clumped into that same category, not does he believe it's the same thing at all.]
No. This- [He twists a wrist, and a small ball of light emanates from his palm, then lifts up and glides over to Lucinda. A very basic cantrip for creating illumination in the dark. One can assume the Weir knows it only for utility.] -is magic. This is what you describe. The kind of small feat that everyone can access to a certain degree. The magical energies of this world are like a well; anyone can skim the surface.
But to plumb its depths required innate talent and endless study. Casting times, incantations. Perhaps even reading from the pages of a tome. Resources that most of the common folk do not have. There is a reason there were only ever a handful of true magic-wielders in the world, but the power they utilized was great.
[Frowning, he pauses there. He'll continue, but he wants to get a read on Lucinda first; and likely, she can see where he's going with this. His abilities, though she might qualify them as magic, are not the same. They come naturally to him. They require no such preparation, acting like a biological extension of what he can already do, even if he was far from born with them.]
[It's a slow start, but for Lucinda who's dealt with magickind before, she's making some connections. If there are few casters in this world, it meant that they had to be someone who had more access than common folk. And knowing magickind, they focused more on their advancing their arts rather than the people. At least in her world, she understands their function but they're a troublesome group at best, a nightmare to deal with at worst when they let their power get to their heads.
When he tried to control her body back in the forest, that was more akin to ESP to her; her mind started to fill with static before Flora took the reigns. But she'll hear him out on the rest before making any more assumptions.]
Was the reason there are few true magic-wielders because one would have to be someone of privilege or wealth to be able to further their studies?
... And are those resources you would be able to find in that pit?
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"Indiscriminately." [He parrots back, vaguely patronizing in tone.
Even though she's right.] There was nothing indiscriminate about it. I thought long and hard about whether or not I would take the risk with you.[As though that's supposed to make her feel better.]
You want to know how you should act? I imagine you'll at much the same as before. Unless you're afraid I might change my mind and slide a knife into your back when you're not looking?
[He's fairly certain Fang wouldn't allow that, anyhow.]
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And yes, Weir's remark elicits a low burning growl from Lucinda's back. She glances over her shoulder.]
Shhh.
[No eyes on the back of her head, but Fang might as well be that pair. Speaking of head friends though...]
Flora tells me you have a friend of your own.
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Flippantly, and not terribly helpfully:]
"Friend" is not the word I would use.
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[Lucinda finally deigns to look at Weir with curiosity.]
What is the nature of it if you don't mind me asking?
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[Weir is still fussing with his things, not meeting her eyes. Eventually, he peels away at his outer layer of clothing, leaving a dark undershirt beneath โ the nights are still cold but itโs fine with the hearth blazing. He removes his hunting knife and rests it on the table. His other blade remains at his side, as it always does.
Really, he should be calling the Polymath an โitโ for all he knows, but his voice resounds as male in his head, so thatโs good enough for him.]
He lives in that place, down below. Calls himself an ancient god.
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[Coming from a world of magic, psychics, and everything else in between, that is not the most farfetched thing she's ever heard of. But then again, things that called themselves "gods" are a flag in itself. Lucinda knows that there are creatures who can envelop and cause chaos in the mind and bodies of humans and without the arcane resources of magickind, they would claim her world with ease]
Does he use your eyes? And listen in on your conversations?
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[Weir just assumes the Polymath is always listening, always watching, even if he doesn't hear his static in his head.]
Just assume that every conversation we've had, everything I see, he sees, too.
[And finally, he flicks a glance over at Lucinda.]
A bit like your spirit friends, in that way.
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You say he lives in the pit... But he occupies your mind? Ah, telepathy of sorts.
[She knows the deal.]
When did you first encounter it?
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We're connected.
[Which seems like not much of an explanation, but Weir is trying to judge how much to say, and when. Finally, he straightens, crossing his arms from where he stands to look at her.]
Years ago. [A pause.] The monster I brought up to the surface, to employ against you in my little test? That was nothing compared to some of the things that rove around down there at the deepest depths. There's one in particular that...
[He trails off, reassesses.]
Long story short, it nearly killed me. The Polymath saved me.
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If there was ever a reason to have one's heart and mind hardened, that would be it, she supposes.]
[Feather thinks otherwise.]
The Polymath... Does he call himself that? [Lucinda takes a seat. This is going to be a long conversation.]
1/2
No.
[Too much static with that resounding in his head, Weir clearly grimaces.]
Shut up.
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...I call him that. Were you to ever lay eyes on him, you would understand why. When he folds himself up, awful thing that he is, he looks like a brain.
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... I suspected you were talking to yourself for some reason. But I didn't want to make any assumptions at the time.
It's nice to know that you treat both god and man with the same amount of distaste.
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Yes, well, for as much of an annoyance he is, I might give him credit where it's due: he is useful.
[And this, it sounds like, is the sticking point. The line drawn in the sand, where Weir decides how much value he puts into a person or thing.]
I can hardly say the same for you.
[this is how he treats someone baking a nice cake!!]
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If you only judge people by whether they're useful to you or not, I should hardly think that a village with a friendly populace who looks up to you is all that useful to a man who wants to be left alone.
[Lucinda's voice is unusually sharp though she tempers it by keeping her volume low and neutral like she usually does.]
So why is it they are like that? What do you and the Polymath have to do with how the world is at least in this corner?
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Ah, she's going to have to try a little harder than that if she want him to spill this particular branch of truths.]
And what makes you think I have any power over how I'm treated in this village?
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[She turns in her chair to fully face him, crossing her arms and legs.]
I'll ask a different question then. Were there other people like you who had to go down to the pit and crawl through it to make a living?
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[Besides, there's no way of knowing what the deal was with that. GOSH, PERHAPS IF THEY LEFT THE TOWN SOMEDAY THEY MIGHT FIND OUT THE EXACT REASONING--
But for now, he's clearly pausing before each reply.]
Of course. None of them are alive any longer.
[TECHNICALLY...TRUE,,,]
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[Not that she doesn't doubt that some people just don't live long with a job like that. But Lucy's looking at him critically.]
Also, you pause too much before replying to me.
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Well, wouldn't wish to give you an unsatisfying answer. What I said is true: they're all gone now.
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Normally, this is where I'd get a mind reader to help me out but I guess the Polymath would probably give them a bit of a start.
[Lucinda sighs and rubs her forehead. It's been a day.]
Look, Weir. I don't know how it would be a disadvantage for you to let me know the details of what's been going on around here. You've lowered my opinion of you by a significant amount already.
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Oh, is that a challenge, Lucinda? I imagine I could lower it further into the grave if I had to.
[Perhaps it would be more beneficial to lead the conversation himself, then.]
The abilities you saw from me โ what would you label them if asked?
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[imagine flora rolling on the ground and whining about this, that's basically what it sounds like to Lucy.
And she gets it; the medium is frustrated at him. A normal person would be mad, enraged even, probably resorting to threats at Weir right now. Unfortunately, Lucy's never been normal and her upbringing before and after her life in Vietnam has ensured that for better or for worse. Some misplaced sense of pride as an esper who's known for tackling tough circumstances is making her more patient than he deserves.
Fine. She'll let him lead the conversation (and then she can sleep for 12+ hours)]
Your powers? I'd label them as magic. Phenomena that manifest from magical energies from within or drawing upon the world itself to make something impossible, possible.
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No. This- [He twists a wrist, and a small ball of light emanates from his palm, then lifts up and glides over to Lucinda. A very basic cantrip for creating illumination in the dark. One can assume the Weir knows it only for utility.] -is magic. This is what you describe. The kind of small feat that everyone can access to a certain degree. The magical energies of this world are like a well; anyone can skim the surface.
But to plumb its depths required innate talent and endless study. Casting times, incantations. Perhaps even reading from the pages of a tome. Resources that most of the common folk do not have. There is a reason there were only ever a handful of true magic-wielders in the world, but the power they utilized was great.
[Frowning, he pauses there. He'll continue, but he wants to get a read on Lucinda first; and likely, she can see where he's going with this. His abilities, though she might qualify them as magic, are not the same. They come naturally to him. They require no such preparation, acting like a biological extension of what he can already do, even if he was far from born with them.]
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When he tried to control her body back in the forest, that was more akin to ESP to her; her mind started to fill with static before Flora took the reigns. But she'll hear him out on the rest before making any more assumptions.]
Was the reason there are few true magic-wielders because one would have to be someone of privilege or wealth to be able to further their studies?
... And are those resources you would be able to find in that pit?
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