Skulduggery Pleasant (
skeletonenigma) wrote in
tushanshu_logs2014-08-11 12:23 pm
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Entry tags:
but you didn't have to cut me off
Characters: Skulduggery Pleasant
skeletonenigma and Solomon Wreath
peacefullywreathed
Date: After this network thread, around the beginning of the second week of August
Location: The common room of their suite, HUO-WEI in the Fire District
Situation: This animosity has got to stop. People are going to get hurt. Also, Skulduggery has a theory.
Warnings/Rating: Spoilers for the sixth book onwards, references to death and pre-canon torture, and a side helping of unintended emotional manipulation. Shouldn't be any present-day violence, though.
The rest of the day passed by agonisingly slowly. Time wasn't meant to pass slowly in the middle of a war. Even during the few brief rests Skulduggery enjoyed during the war with Mevolent, there was always something going on, something to pay attention to or something to plan. Here, the time passed slowly, and it passed quietly. It was enough to drive him mad.
He was the first one in the common room - not that that was a surprise - and he was early. Being early was a surprise. Skulduggery wasn't used to being early, but it was difficult not to be when the meeting place was the living room of one's own dwelling. There wasn't anything to read, and there wasn't anything to listen to, so he resorted to a very light meditation to pass the time. He refused to admit, even to himself, that a second and more important reason for the meditation might have been to calm himself down.
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Date: After this network thread, around the beginning of the second week of August
Location: The common room of their suite, HUO-WEI in the Fire District
Situation: This animosity has got to stop. People are going to get hurt. Also, Skulduggery has a theory.
Warnings/Rating: Spoilers for the sixth book onwards, references to death and pre-canon torture, and a side helping of unintended emotional manipulation. Shouldn't be any present-day violence, though.
The rest of the day passed by agonisingly slowly. Time wasn't meant to pass slowly in the middle of a war. Even during the few brief rests Skulduggery enjoyed during the war with Mevolent, there was always something going on, something to pay attention to or something to plan. Here, the time passed slowly, and it passed quietly. It was enough to drive him mad.
He was the first one in the common room - not that that was a surprise - and he was early. Being early was a surprise. Skulduggery wasn't used to being early, but it was difficult not to be when the meeting place was the living room of one's own dwelling. There wasn't anything to read, and there wasn't anything to listen to, so he resorted to a very light meditation to pass the time. He refused to admit, even to himself, that a second and more important reason for the meditation might have been to calm himself down.
no subject
He spread his hands and the air between them darkened and became deep with shadow, but it wasn't the sort of shadow a Necromancer usually summoned. This looked out of reality and into another, the area wisped with purple edges. "It involves summoning monsters and spells from the khajbit--a kind of shadow plane. How well that happens, and whether or not it backfires on you, depends on the strength of your soul, your convictions, and your understanding of your self."
Solomon looked at Skulduggery up and down. "You would probably cause the world to implode. Or at least yourself. Bakura can summon from the khajbit, but the duel we held happened within it, and the khajbit ... does not like to be controlled. It tests you, even while you're fighting an opponent. It seeks out your greatest weaknesses and manifests them against you. And if you fail the test ..." He shrugged, closing his hands together to make the small portal close. "We never got that far. I took us out of the khajbit and into the death-plane, and that was the end of the duel."
Thankfully. Solomon still had no idea whether the choice he'd made was a winning or a losing one.
no subject
It also meant Skulduggery needed to avoid the death plane from now on. He'd been there once before, and come out thankfully unscathed, but it was better to be safe than sorry. Or at least, that was how the saying usually went. Wasn't it?
"How skilled was Bakura?" he asked, standing up to take Wreath's empty glass back to the kitchen. "Would he have been alright on his own, or did you rescue him as well?"
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Which made sense; by Bakura's own admission, the khajbit was a place that could only be accessed with magic or by extreme strength of soul. The Ring seemed to have something to do with it too, but for whatever reason, probably because of the whiskey, Solomon couldn't remember if Bakura had explained its connection to the khajbit in detail.
But at that, Solomon had to laugh. "Bakura isn't a man who needs rescuing from anything--except possibly himself."
Rather like Skulduggery, in fact. Idiots. Both of them, they were idiots.
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Skulduggery had only seen Wreath drunk once before, and that was centuries ago. Yet his behaviour was almost exactly the same. Some things never changed.
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It was a sudden assertion, but a very calm one--the sort of calmness that only came from being uninhibited. Actually, he felt like he could really use another drink, but Skulduggery had taken his glass and Solomon was sober enough that the distance was enough of a deterrent to getting one, shadows or no shadows.
"He's another you," he added a little belatedly and very longsufferingly. "And it would be very, very bad if the two of you had to fight each other."
The only difference between them was that Bakura had far more control; which, frankly, was unnerving all on its own. But if Skulduggery was ever recognised as a combatant by the khajbit--well, everyone on the turtle could say goodbye to living.
no subject
Especially if the person attacking him was fighting that exact same precarious battle for control.
Since Skulduggery didn't particularly want to confide any of that to Wreath, however, he settled back down in the armchair and tilted his head to one side. "Adoptee?"
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"The idiot boy with the armour and the Hun complex," Solomon said with a wave of his hand. "Khan. Did you really think an apology would serve to fix things? The only reason Bakura walked away is because he realised there wasn't any reward in either remaining or attacking."
It was impossible to accept an apology from someone who didn't understand why they were apologising, or were apologising only for themselves. That rather defeated the point of it. Khan had claimed to be sorry about the murder--but he hadn't seemed to realise the injustice was as much in play as the harm.
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Bakura was a man secure in himself, if nothing else. Gene was the one Skulduggery had been worried about from the beginning. Yes, Bakura would probably continue on with seething resentment and anger, but that would be his choice and his burden to bear. Gene didn't have to make the same choice out of fear, and the very fact that he'd agreed to a meeting at all was enough to prove he wasn't irredeemable.
"Since you're drunk," Skulduggery added, "was there anything else you wanted to know?"
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Solomon was drunk, but his anger was cold rather than hot; precise and almost calculating, if a drunken man could be said to be calculating at all. "And it's not him, either. You do the same to yourself. You haven't even told your friends about what you did, have you? Of course not. Because you make assumptions for them, dismiss their feelings and their pain, and make it your own. Yes, you poor thing. How sad for you to be powerful and talented and respected, and how we should pity you for the mistakes you've made, instead of grieve for the people you hurt."
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It made him angry, as he expected. Being angry was a matter of course these days. It had nothing to do with the accusations themselves - they were all valid, if based on faulty assumptions, and Skulduggery had promised himself long ago that he would never begrudge anyone else their opinions. So yes, he was angry, but not by what Wreath had said; rather, that Wreath had said anything at all. Drunk or sober, attacks fuelled by new revelations or ancient animosity, there were very few people who had the right to pass judgement on anything Skulduggery had done since the end of the war. Wreath was not one of them.
"Don't assume," he said coldly, "that a little background context means you know me." He stood up, and very calmly replaced his hat. "A pleasure talking to you, Wreath, as always. Good evening."
And he left without the intention of stopping.
no subject
But the skeleton didn't look back, and Solomon heaved himself out of the chair, muttering skeleton-related obscenities in a dozen different languages as he made his slow way back upstairs.