Valdis (
redlightgreenlight) wrote in
tushanshu_logs2015-10-03 09:08 pm
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Entry tags:
Those Who are Dead are not Dead (Catch All)
Characters: Valdis and OPEN
Date: Month of October 2015 (2016 in game)
Location: Various
Situation: Various
Warnings/Rating: Various
The departure of the Chihuelans could be called a relief, the tension seemed gone from the city and the Kedan seemed more accepting than ever of the Foreigners. Though her teaching hadn't been utilized, she was certain that they hadn't seen the last of the Chihuelans and that the Justicar and her forces would be back someday, but for now she was thankful for the rest. Now they could focus on the other problems plaguing Keeliai, such as the cultists and the sinking of Tu Vishan.
Date: Month of October 2015 (2016 in game)
Location: Various
Situation: Various
Warnings/Rating: Various
The departure of the Chihuelans could be called a relief, the tension seemed gone from the city and the Kedan seemed more accepting than ever of the Foreigners. Though her teaching hadn't been utilized, she was certain that they hadn't seen the last of the Chihuelans and that the Justicar and her forces would be back someday, but for now she was thankful for the rest. Now they could focus on the other problems plaguing Keeliai, such as the cultists and the sinking of Tu Vishan.
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"That's a broad topic," he replied. "Anything in particular?"
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She shifted, leaning one elbow against the armrest of the chair and crossing her legs.
"And I didn't think of it until recently, but the feeling of the Shadow Realm and the feeling of the Ring are similar. Are they connected somehow?"
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There's a more deliberate non-reaction this time, still trying to vague her intentions here. "The Items can work like gateways to the Shadow Realm," he replied. "Because shadow alchemy was what created them; dark magic and sacrifice."
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Especially not Wan, it would only have hurt him more.
Bakura was unusually still, but she was relieved that he seemed willing to answer her question despite whatever thoughts were going through his head. The idea that the Ring was like a gateway to another plane was concerning, but not as concerning as the other part.
"Sacrifice?"
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"Sacrifice," he repeated, and now there's a brittle note in his voice. "Ninety-nine lives, that was the spell's cost. A village, slaughtered in secret at the pharaoh's command, for a power said to rival that of the gods. And they got almost every living person when they did it... save one."
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"How old were you?" she said quietly, meeting his gaze evenly. She felt no pity for him, he wouldn't want it anyway and it wouldn't help anyone now.
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If he didn't want to tell her, she wasn't going to press the issue. The Ring was dark magic indeed if lives had to be sacrificed to create it. Perhaps she should focus on the Shadow Realm instead of his ghosts and history.
"What is the Shadow Realm then?"
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"What is any shadow? A reflection of dark cast by the light. It's... a layer, or an echo, of the world. Like how the Dreaming and the Death planes are to the Life plane here."
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If the Shadow Realm was a plane similar to that of the Dreaming, then she could see the lure of harnessing its power, even if that power was unpredictable. But there had to be something more to it, especially since Bakura was in possession of the Ring that was created from the blood of his kin.
"If the Pharaoh created it, then how did you end up with the Ring?"
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Fate or design? Even Bakura didn't know that, but it was hard to believe that the Item which housed so much of Zorc's essence -- far moreso than all others combined -- was acquired first through mere coincidence.
"I had almost all of them, at one point. The Ring, the Puzzle, the Eye, the Scales..." He rested his thumbs against his temple, pressing points of pressure there, and there's torment in the next words, though they're less to Valdis and more to absent listeners.
"I came so close..."
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"When you came back," she said, "After we defeated Malicant, your soul was broken, did the Shadow Realm do that to you?"
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"No. That was because my soul was so tied up in Zorc's at the time, and the Pharaoh summoned Horakhty in his final attack. The creator of light against the dark god... it went as well as you might imagine. Or perhaps, given your sword, it's less imagination and more observation."
Bakura traced an absent thumb over the edge of the Ring. "There shouldn't have been anything left of Zorc, following that, but the demon remains. It's not unlikely that's the same reason there was still enough of me to get pulled back here."
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"Revelations was designed to destroy darkness," she replied, "I don't know how it works, but I am still here, so are you and so is Zorc, so it is a failed design."
The fact that he thought his soul was tied up with that of Zorc was concerning. But the idea that Zorc was the reason that Bakura was still alive had to be incorrect, that wasn't how demons worked, no, it was far more likely that Zorc only lived because of Bakura.
"Why is his soul intertwined with yours?"
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"Because I gave it to him. Most parts of it, at least. You've heard Wreath and I talk about how a soul is divided up... I offered most of mine away, because I needed power to defeat the Egyptian God kaa, and Zorc needed a way to take physical form again. That was the deal."
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"To what end?"
Despite her concerns over the Demon and his ties to Bakura, she said it calmly and without judgement.
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He dropped his head against his hands, elbows propped on the desk's top. "I calculated for everything. I eliminated every factor that worked against me in the past. I should have won."
And yet he'd lost to the one factor which hadn't even existed in the past, a factor he hadn't planned on beating because it was outside the scope of the game. A fusion of the three God kaa? It shouldn't have even been possible. But what did that matter now, with the Gate closed, his ghosts lost, and his own presence destroyed?
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She wasn't entirely certain how to respond without somehow setting him off. He disliked her giving him advice, and she knew little about the Memory Gate, but there were many paths into the Death Plane, if you knew how to open them.
"I'm sorry," she said finally.
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"And now I'm here doing... this," he said, gesturing carelessly at the dojo, or perhaps the whole of Keeliai; it could be interpreted either way. "For lack of anything else to do, it seems. Like it's so easy to just start over and be normal."
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She knew the feeling, and not just because of her empathy. Starting over as if nothing had happened and pretending that you could be normal was impossible. After everything he had been through, there wasn't any going back, and he was too far gone. Perhaps they all were.
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"Regardless, you asked about the Shadow Realm and got an earful. Not what you were expecting?"
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And to be perfectly honest, she still had more questions than answers, but she had probably pried enough for one day and she had plenty to think about for now.
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"Thank you," she said, noting how tired he had become. Memories such as those he must have been reliving did that to you. "I'll be on my way."
She moved to stand, wondering just how quickly Raine would be able to speak with her.
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He reopened the folded letter and picked up the pencil again. What he'd been doing wasn't pressing, but he could do with the distraction.
"I'll tell you what I told Raine, khapshemet. Don't go poking around things with Zorc, or you might not like what you find. The whole of Keeliai might not like it. Understand?"
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