Anya Lehnsherr | Earth 97400 (
fridgetothefire) wrote2013-09-27 12:37 am
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027 ☣ some messages
[Private to Zane, Abigail, and Cassel, vaguetimed after the breach, Wednesday-ish?]
...how are you guys?
[Private to Ben, Wednesdayish]
Thank you.
[Private to Sylvanas, thursday]
[Her voice is small, nervous and tentative, though there isn't really fear in it, just uncertainty that she ought to be asking at all.]
I know we haven't spoken, much. I'm really sorry if this is - rude or painful, or anything, and you don't have to answer. I just.
You hate Arthas, right?
[Private to Mal, Friday, text, sent right before she dies]
I've decided to let Arthas make me a zombie for a few days. If all goes as planned, I will be able to resist any and all brain-eating urges. If it's messed up or he lied to me about what's going to happen, being killed will reset me to my normal self. I don't want any of the people who love me to have to do it. Could you check by Cabin 1x17 in the next few minutes and make sure I don't emerge on the warpath? If you don't want to, I'd trust Beatrix to do it too.
Thanks.
[Private to Arthas, Friday]
I'm ready. Is now good for you?
[OOC: I may add other starters to this post as older things play out/I think of them. If anyone has something they want to have brought up with Anya BEFORE she becomes a zombie, let me know and I will add it. There will probably be a separate public zombie post later.]
...how are you guys?
[Private to Ben, Wednesdayish]
Thank you.
[Private to Sylvanas, thursday]
[Her voice is small, nervous and tentative, though there isn't really fear in it, just uncertainty that she ought to be asking at all.]
I know we haven't spoken, much. I'm really sorry if this is - rude or painful, or anything, and you don't have to answer. I just.
You hate Arthas, right?
[Private to Mal, Friday, text, sent right before she dies]
I've decided to let Arthas make me a zombie for a few days. If all goes as planned, I will be able to resist any and all brain-eating urges. If it's messed up or he lied to me about what's going to happen, being killed will reset me to my normal self. I don't want any of the people who love me to have to do it. Could you check by Cabin 1x17 in the next few minutes and make sure I don't emerge on the warpath? If you don't want to, I'd trust Beatrix to do it too.
Thanks.
[Private to Arthas, Friday]
I'm ready. Is now good for you?
[OOC: I may add other starters to this post as older things play out/I think of them. If anyone has something they want to have brought up with Anya BEFORE she becomes a zombie, let me know and I will add it. There will probably be a separate public zombie post later.]
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[It's - strange. She's still his sister, but not his sister. He knows so much about her, but barely anything about her. And he wants to protect her, but he wants her to do all kinds of dumb things all by herself, because that's what she's meant to do. Dumb things and smart things.]
[He doesn't know what to do with a sister.]
[Wordless, too, he reaches out to her, offering his hand to take hers, if she wants it. He's not so fragile anymore that he'll break if it's not taken. But it's hers, if it'll help.]
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[He is completely shattered, yes, but a little more whole again in the ringing silence of explosion and the deceptive strength of her company. He doesn't know what to do with a sister, but he can try, can't he?]
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If she knew all his uncertainties, she would hide her crumbling face and laugh. That he is here, that he is with her, that he wants them to be part of each other at all - this is what she became a monster yearning for. But they can't speak, so there is only this: the fondness in her eyes, the lightness in her bearing the longer they linger together, wearing the comfort he gives her bright and clear as a pennant, making an offering of honesty back.]
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[Sometimes destroying things, little things, can make it so much easier to build everything else up.]
[There's debris on the ground. He doesn't move to pick it up, or even to stand. He just smiles at her, hoping to receive a smile in return.]
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Her smile is - not easy, but full and inexorable in answer, a little bit chagrined. She'd offered the excursion to comfort him, but she's not so blind to miss it happening the other way. You don't always have to be she bari, he said. And she does, she is, but - she can have this anyway, sparkling glass fragments and private smiles and a nebulous, permeating kindness like the warm light of an impressionist painting.]
I love you, Cassel Sharpe.
[Her voice still sounds quiet to their adjusting ears, though she speaks them normally. It doesn't matter. The words are clear.]
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[He would make her anything she wanted, including joy, if it were in his repertoire. Instead he's got a grin and the touch of her hand and the knowledge that she knows she's family. She's vital. She makes him feel as though maybe his soul is a little bit worthy of joy itself.]
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[She didn't mean to ask - but then she wanted to ask, and for a moment, filled up with the smell of the forest and the afterimages of sparks still in her vision and the ache of her cheeks where she's smiling back at him, suffused with how warm and good and easy this was, to just be this way with each other until things were better - and it seemed so stupid not to say it. She'll just squeeze his hand a little tighter if he says no, and maybe set off another rocket, awkward and laughing as they try to arrange it with one hand each. But she wants to, if he doesn't mind.]
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[So instead of saying yes or no or anything at all, he just stands and pulls her close and holds her: like an anchor, like something he can anchor. His hands press to her shoulderblades and he can feel the strength of her backbone holding them just so far apart, her steel-and-soft sister-form. Her strength. She is stronger than him, and he loves her for it, but then again, he'd love her anyway.]
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I was so cruel to him.
[A sigh, a whisper. It's easier to say when it's impossible to meet his eyes.]
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What was his name?
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Malachai.
I don't even know what he was. I never did.
[This is soft, sad-shamed, a little lost. She'd looked, sometimes, stolen into libraries and glanced through the canine sections of Lamarck's Exposition of Zoological Philosophy, But none of the entries had ever been quite like him.]
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Malachai.
What did he look like? I - could help you look.
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[Wrong wrong wrong. Servants were dogs - content servants, devoted ones. Sometimes soldiers, the stalwart sort that never wanted to be anything else.]
Like a jackal, maybe, sandy and rangey, but bigger. Longer, anyway. Thin. His back legs were slung a little strangely, and he had stripes on his hindquarters.
[She used to count them, over and over. Fifteen on his back, nineteen on his tail.]
He - he wanted to trust someone. And we were trapped for years and years. I don't know if we could have done a damn thing either way, that young, but I never forgave him.
[She cut him out and rejected him and she didn't even need a blade.]
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[When he pulls away now, he doesn't look in her eyes or even at her face; instead, he tugs her hand toward his chest and inspects the spaces between her fingers.]
I feel like that's probably a metaphor, or something. I don't know.
Did you love him? Is that why you punished him so hard?
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That would be too sweet, I think.
It was more like - if he wasn't part of me, then I had someone else to blame. So I acted like that was true until I believed it.
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If it'd been me, really me, the way I was when I got here, I would have been just as cruel to her as you were to him. I would've made her hurt.
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[She's calm when she says it, solid, like sun-warmed stone. There's not a speck of doubt in her, not about that.]
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[She's right. It's true. Otherwise, why would he still love her the way he does? Why is she still family?]
[Lives that never were stick with you, even once they're, by all appearances, gone.]
They're - facets. And to people like us, especially, who are still becoming - what we will be.
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You don't have to say.
[She tries to imagine, and can't. Her instinct is to say a bird, a jay or a jackdaw, clever and flashy and infuriating; but that's too easy, open. It's just what she wants him to be. The truth is that neither of them has ever been able to just fly away.]
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A lemming.
[For what that's worth.]
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Oh my gosh. You must have been intolerably cute.
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[Okay even he can't lie about that.]
She was pretty adorable.
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