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Open up! [ Beneath a new accent and an arrogant lilt all its own, it might take Komaeda a moment to place it, but it is certainly the voice of "Luc Ovesen." ] Lucius the Eternal has come to visit!
[ The delivery also sounds... needlessly threatening, so far as introductions go. ]
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His lazy afternoon, spent on his couch and surrounded by books, is interrupted by a pounding fist at his door. Komaeda leans over, turning down the radio that rests on the nearby windowsill as his ears train on just who might be interrupting him. Not many people know he lives here, and all of the ones who do would give notice before showing up.
Then he hears that voice—and his heart drops to the pit of his stomach. He had completely forgot about this guy! Panic rabbits his heart, but Komaeda doesn't let it consume him. Rather, he tucks his book into his arm as he rises from the couch and makes his way to the front door.
He's dressed unlike Nathan. Fleshy near-white tendrils, grown in place of his chestnut hair, is tied back and away from his face. Rather than skin, he has scales the color of sunshine (and unlike the dingy brown Lucius had last seen of him). His green eyes have enlarged into pools of mirrored blue pinpricked with tight pupils. Glasses rest on his nose, looking out of place with his appearance aside from the turtleneck and baggy sweatpants he wears.
When he smiles down at Lucius, it's all needle-sharp points.]
Luc.....ius-kun. [He corrects himself quickly, looking a bit... out of place.] It's nice to see you again.
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That doesn't fool Lucius, however. He still remembers how outrageously out of turn his words had been. His forking tail flicks behind him, barbs twitching in unison, and it's a gesture of interest as much as it is irritation.
Despite the fact that they're supposed to be leaving, Lucius steps inward. He presses into Komaeda's space, into the doorway, until his presence drives the young man back and he has room to circle him. ]
You wish that it were so. [ Komaeda smiles, but Lucius isn't blind to the discomfort in his posture. If Komaeda turns his head to watch the manticore's progress, he'll find his eyes lingering on every part of him but his face. As if taking inventory, Lucius files away details with a mechanical speed that belies his playful expression.
Above-average height, lanky build. A plain manner of dress, and skin that has been replaced by piscine scales. His hair is gone, too, but what has replaced it has the same crinkling appearance as Nathan's—and of course, there is the foretold missing hand, its replacement hanging at his left side.
It takes a moment, but the details come together in his mind. He remember a face, and the feeling of hair pulling free in the palm of his hand. That is when Lucius starts to laugh, a riotous uproar of sound—and though his lungs aren't so large now, Komaeda might recognize the sound of it, too. ]
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The book that had been tucked beneath his arm comes up though, held in front of him as if its small, hardcover could be used like some sort of shield. Lucius circles him like he's prey, and like prey, Komaeda's head swivels to keep those aureate eyes in careful view—but then... Lucius starts laughing.
Like the dissonance of melodious bells just slightly out of sync, he can hear Luc in that laugh, but also... someone else. Those teeth, too, look so familiar. Needle points and a serpent's tongue within, scars, and harsh laughter that makes him wince. Then it hits him, and his realization is worn plainly on his face. If his scales were capable of paling, they would, as his blood runs colder than it normally is. He swallows, dryly, and suddenly his wide blue eyes once holding subtle confusion grow to the size of saucer plates with panicking mania.]
Ha... [he exhales, voice wavering in his throat,] I just remembered...! My friend, he, he's coming over to calibrate my arm! You have to leave now—
[Komaeda's words cut with a burst of breathless, awkward laughter. As if it's so funny that there's a schedule conflict. As if the tinny of it will abate whatever horror Lucius could dish out to him this time. There's a certain boldness, too, as he shoves that book against Lucius chest and also him, back towards the door.]
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[ Not really, and any other time, Lucius would deny that "Luc" had been him at all. Now, though, the pressure of his hand bends Komaeda's wrist back at an uncomfortable angle, and he shoves forward to retake any ground he had lost before. Behind him, his dangerously barbed tail swings back and forth—a cat with a mouse under its paw. ]
Though, [ he hums, thought exaggerated, ] you look like you've outgrown that nickname. [ Lucius sidesteps from the press of the book against his chest, and when his hand comes up this time, it's to tug at one of the fleshy fronds that has replaced his unruly hair. ] Perhaps I should call you a tadpole instead? Ah, but that implies you might metamorphose into something greater yet!
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Rather than the awkward, albeit fearful, politeness he'd worn before, his expression drops into a mask of apathy. His gaze goes deadened, his brows arching over his eyes as his smile slips away. Beneath that martial grip, tendons relax, no longer straining against a force that tries to bend it.]
Can you let go of my hand?
[He asks, but his tone is serious despite it's carefree lull. His robotic arm, neither seized nor holding the book anymore, falls to his side—behind him, his own fanned tail sways as if it's nothing so much as seaweed caught in an ocean's undercurrent.]
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Is that a request, [ Lucius asks, his smile tightening until the teeth that peer through form a knife's edge, ] or do you intend to make me?
[ Either one is fine. He has, as ever, worn a pair of matching blades at his hips. ]
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If we're discussing a matter of physical skill, I would lose every time. I'm not strong and my reflexes are bad, [the words are a lazy lull, as that deadened gaze remains transfixed, unblinking on Lucius,] really, I try to stay out of fights as much as possible — but I've rigged bombs in this apartment, and I'm not afraid to die — it wouldn't be the first time.
[Whether he's lying or not, it's hard to tell. His voice, his heartbeat, his entire demeanor remains relaxed as it would be as if he were discussing the weather.]
So, to answer your question: it's a request.
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What do you know — you and I have something in common! [ As if such a thing could impress Lucius the Eternal! He drops the hand, just as Komaeda has requested—but all that means is that Lucius resumes his predatory circuit in turn, his venomous tail dancing with the urge to snap forward and see how well he can do as he's threatened when his veins are filled with paralytic toxins.
Instead, he asks, ] How many times for you?
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Just once, but death has always followed me, so I'm not afraid of it.
[He isn't afraid to die—the end comes for everyone, eventually—and yet, he hears the echoes of his own words at the back of his mind. I don't want to die alone, they taunt him, as if his one selfish want in his previous life was nothing so much as the wishful thinking of a fool.]
Why do you care all of a sudden?
[That's what matters to him. More than the threat, Komaeda feels the back of his neck prickling at what morbid truth lies in the answer to that question.]
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When his cackling finally begins to quiet, he rasps, ] Dear little worm, you speak to Lucius the Eternal — a man who has been awash in death for eleven-thousand years. Speak to me of your comfort with death when you've died ten or a hundred times more!
[ Really, now—he was expecting at least twice. ]
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Okay— [comes his one-worded reply, because he's not really sure what to say to that!
Lucius either couldn't die permanently before, or he's died enough times in Ryslig that maybe he has acquired a weird taste for it. Either way, Komaeda isn't really sure why this is something Lucius has decided to fixate on, but he figures it's better than having his wrist broken trying to fight him off.]
Were you wondering if I've died as many times as you? [He can't help himself from asking, as he turns to fully face Lucius where he stopped in his circling stride,] what would you do if I said I had?
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But, [ he goes on, tapping a claw against his chin and rolling his eyes upward, ] if you had... Well, I'd start by asking what force wanted to keep you alive.
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[He said it, didn't he? That death follows wherever he goes. It's not something Komaeda boasts about, but when one lives their life near the precipice, they aren't afraid of falling in.]
You say you've died a lot, so you're not really worried about it, right? I know that I can die at any moment, in millions of different ways that are out of my control, so I'm also not worried about it.
[That's, at least, the simplest way of putting it in his mind.]
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[ Which still doesn't clarify where, exactly, Lucius has died so many times. He rocks back on his heel, chin tilted up almost as if in challenge. ]
Even so, I make sure that every time counts. [ There was the occasional landmine or freak accident, sure, but those are outliers, and besides the point. ] On the other hand, I suppose you intend to quietly accept your death, whatever the form it comes for you in?
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Who said I died for no reason?
[The thought of sacrificing himself for nothing sets the muscles in his jaw tight, because at the end of the day, wasn't that exactly what had happened? It was a gamble that didn't pay off in the end, but regardless, he can't change what's already been done.]
If someone wants to kill me, I won't stop them. [He pauses, and then his gaze goes upwards, somewhere else, as if searching for his thoughts as he thumbs his chin.] But I'm not really interested in dying for the sake of dying. I always knew, one day, my luck would kill me, it's just a matter of how. So, I prefer to make that choice myself — and if it's for hope, then I don't mind dying.
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For hope, is it.
[ Hope is a broad concept, and he doesn't typically hear noble sacrifice couched in those terms. Even so, he feels like he understands the intent; after all, a hope is something not yet come into fruition, and were he and his kin not ordered to fight and die for a utopian future humanity is still yet to achieve? ]
Still, I can't help but notice a little contradiction in your words. [ Lucius sways closer, and if Komaeda's mannerisms resemble that of a dog, then Lucius' are every bit as feline as his tufted ears. He pinches his fingers close, the pads of his index finger and thumb separated by only a thin margin. ] Either you wouldn't stop them, or you would struggle if the death weren't to your liking. Which is it?
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[Komaeda's voice quiets, and this time, when Lucius strides closer, he doesn't back up. He doesn't do anything. He simply stands there, with an unflinching placid smile, and eyes that look better fit to a doll than the expressive orbs he'd shown the other before. It was as if something overcame him and reminded him of the empty husk he is meant to be.
His gaze follows the movement of Lucius' fingers, before slowly meeting those aureate cat-eyes again.]
I already said it, didn't I? For hope, I would gladly sacrifice myself. If my death is to become a stepping stone for someone's hope, then I won't stop them.
[He tilts his head again.]
Is that concept too complex to wrap your head around?
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It's only in the space created by that blow that Lucius turns the sword in his hand, and with blood from teeth knocked free decorating its hilt like delicate veins in a block of marble, he points the edge of the blade at Komaeda's throat. ]
In that case, will you be resisting now?
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Ah... how nostalgic...
[Komaeda laughs, though it isn't the tittering hysteria Lucius has heard of him before. It's heady like the taste of blood and the scent of gunpowder. It's breathless and wanton, like he's gotten some masochistic thrill over it. He rights himself even as he trembles in giddy anticipation of the tip of the sword that threatens death upon him.
He smiles still and though there are gaps in it now, needles frothed pink at his gums, it still holds the same serenity.]
I have no doubts that if you wanted to kill me, you would've done it already. So why did you stop?
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He has heard the sound before: from his own mouth, and from the mouths of his brothers, or the insane devotees all too eager to die at the uncaring whims of Slaanesh's greatest Champion. He lowers his blade; in its place, his hand lifts, and where its martial grasp had seized Komaeda by the wrist before, now it latches around his throat in a suffocating grip. ]
The honor of dying on the Eternal's blade isn't fit for a crawling worm like you. [ As he speaks, he draws Komaeda's face forward by his crushing hold around his neck. ] Besides, [ he shoves Komaeda away from himself, fingers loosening to drop the boy from his grasp, ] you look like you'd enjoy it far too much.
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And then he's tossed, as if he were nothing so much as refuse.
This time when he stumbles backwards, he loses his balance and crumples to the ground with arms thrown wide to soften the fall. He feels pain shriek through his wrist, and the blunt force of his prosthetic shoving back against his stump—the combination winding him further. With tears clinging to his long lashes, Komaeda pulls his good arm to his chest and flexes it, unconsciously testing it for damage and wincing at the aches.]
Do you like it better with a struggle? [He asks, though the playful tone he takes is lost to the rasping of a sprained throat.] Sorry, I've never been very good at doing exactly what people want.
[It made her furious, he remembers, because she could never figure him out. She dug her claws in, pulled his flesh from his bones and cracked his ribcage open. She searched, desperately, for a way to make him dance the way she wanted to; and yet, Komaeda has only ever moved to the beat of his own drum.]
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Not always, [ Lucius says, finally, and his pose drops back to neutral just as quickly as it had shifted in the first place. ] You said yourself that there would be no contest between us. If you cannot challenge me, I'd rather you be silent and simply die.
The trouble is, [ he purrs, grinning as he leans over Komaeda's prone form below him, ] there are some who would consider death by my hand to be a great honor. [ His sword comes up again, and this time, the flat of his blade taps a playful rhythm beneath Komaeda's chin. ] I can't go giving it out to just anyone. It'd drive the value down.
[ Not that the people who care are here, or that Lucius particularly cares himself. He straightens again, and with that motion, he slips his sabre back into its sheath. ]
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Fresh, bright crimson stands out brilliantly against his soft yellow scales, the sight of it completely at odds with the reflecting pools of his blue eyes.]
That's your only reason to not kill someone? How extremely boring. [Komaeda gives a soft huff of laughter; and then he clears his throat, coughs up a clot, swallows it back down and savors the taste of iron on his tongue. It hurts but the pain is distant, an ache felt in another life.] I already told you I can't fight you, swords are a bit scary, and my punches are weaker than a child's.
[But that doesn't mean he isn't capable of opposition. Fighting to win isn't something that occurs to Komaeda—rather, if he's going to tangle with someone, well... he plans to take them down with him.]
Still, now that I know your true nature, I can't let you leave this apartment so easily.
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Rather, his hands unfold at his sides. Rather, his arms lift. It's a beckoning motion, as if inviting Komaeda to take whatever shot he thinks he can manage—except, when he opens his mouth again, it isn't a taunt that rests upon his tongue. Instead, the question that leaves him— ]
And what exactly is my true nature, worm?
[ If there is a challenge there, it is only to the presumption that he is known. ]
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cw: uhhh belated violence warning
cw: vague death...? loss of conscious? it is a mystery