( Krul had pet his head like this before - he hadn't been sure how to take it then, either. But... he's exhausted, too, and in this moment, it doesn't feel terrible, despite everything.
But in some way, understanding can hurt, when you're so certain you don't deserve it. )
... Okay.
( Mika will pull away and trail toward the couch recessed into a wooden frame. It could serve as a bed, and only these past few nights has he somewhat used it like one (to curl up in, not to sleep) - there's a set of abandoned blankets he pushes aside as he climbs onto it.
The small table with two chairs seems a more natural choice for guests, but Mika simply ignores it. )
[He doesn't mind - Ibuki preferred the bed, too. Comfort wasn't something he would deny. Not right now.
He settles himself, and starts to weave a tale.
--
Once upon a time, a long time ago, there lived a king.
This king was visited by a strange old man. The man had only half of everything. Half of a head, half of a body, half of his arms and legs.
"Who are you?" asked the king.
"I am death's messenger", said the half-man, "and I have come to take your soul."
The king was frightened. "It's far too soon!" he answered. "I beg you to give me seven years' grace so that I can prepare myself!"
The half-man fell quiet for a moment, and then said: "So be it. I will pardon you. But I am the only one who can choose the moment you must go. Know that you will see me again, between tomorrow and the end of the seventh year. You will not know when. You will not know how."
He went on his way, and the king wept.
The king ordered a solid fort to be built for him, surrounded by seven deep trenches, and a rampart defending its inner walls. A leaded iron door blocked the entrance, to where he had a small palace meant only for him, with only one small window as an opening to the outside, out which he never looked. There, he thought, he could protect himself from the threat of death.
He said to his porters and chamberlains, his servants and soldiers, "Don't let anyone in to see me! I mean no one!"
After one year had passed, his wife tried to come to see him. She couldn't get past the iron doors, and was turned away despite her weeping.
In the third year of his captivity, his daughter who he loved very much also came. She was also not allowed admission, no matter how she begged.
In the fourth, it was his son, in whom he held immense pride, who received the same treatment.
One day, during the seventh year, the half-man suddenly reappeared in front of the king, to his agony. "How did you get here?" the king demanded. "Who let you in???"
The half-man answered, "I go where I choose, and when I choose."
The king, enraged, called his porters and chamberlains, his servants and soldiers. "Why have you allowed this man in? Were you not instructed to not let anyone in?"
Those under his care swore they had never admitted such a man. "But, sire", they said, "Truth be told, these seven years we have seen your wife who wept for you, your much-loved daughter who pleaded, and your son in whom you are very proud. But we have kept your gates seals, and their locks guarded."
And so, the half-man said to the king, "A wall is nothing to me. Neither battlements, nor ramparts, nor ditches."
"What do you want?" asked the king. "To take your soul," said the man. "Is it necessary?" asked the king. "Yes," said the man. "But where will I be when you take my soul?" asked the king.
"Nowhere," said the man, "Except in the tomb you have created."
The king protested. "I never built any tomb! I built a mighty rampart with seven trenches! I built an iron door and a palace for myself!"
The half-man looked, with his single eye that saw all, and at last replied, "This palace is your tomb. This bed you lie on is one that you have made for yourself to lie in these last seven years. In fleeing me so, you have not escaped death. You have only wasted life."
The king looked at the half-man. He thought of his wife who had wept for him. He thought of his much-loved daughter. He thought of his son, in whom he still was so very proud.
He looked to the window for the first time in seven years. He saw a mountain, topped with snow, that he'd never seen before. He'd never touched snow. His heart yearned for it, beyond his fear. But he could not take it back.
So he laid down, and wept for his loss as his breath left his body, in the tomb of his own making.]
I think it's a possibility, just like anything else.
[He leans against his knees, his hands gently folded in front of him as his head tilts to look at Mika.]
Fear makes us into a lot of different things. It's a hungry wolf that demands we feed it. It tells us "never". It tells us "only". It tells us "always". And we feed it our time, our dreams, our decisions, because the fear feels so much larger if we don't.
I don't think it's wrong to be frightened. It's the heart's way of saying "I want to live." But you cannot let fear devour so much that your entire life, however long it lasts, becomes a tomb instead of a treasure.
... I don't know. It doesn't feel like enough. I feel like I need someone to hurt me. To yell at me for all the things I've done wrong and tell me how ugly I am. But...
( His head... sinks between his knees, his fingers running through his hair. )
Dangerous, at times, and not always at fault of your own. Stubborn. Maybe gloomy.
But not terrible.
[...]
If someone truly did that, and still forgave you, do you think you would believe it? Or would it just be further proof for your punishment to continue?
[Because he sincerely doesn't know if what Mika wants is actually forgiveness. Would he know it if it came to him? Would he even be willing to take it?]
... Probably. But I'd thank them... if they forgave me. If they punished me more.
( He... falls quiet, then. Thinking about what Solomon's said; thinking about... )
... But I feel a little better with Ginger.
( Is this healthy? Arguably. Arguably not. Ginger's easy to drown in. It's easy to forget about himself. He still feels guilty, but Ginger is a lot - more overwhelming than his own thoughts are, sometimes.
... Ginger would never do anything bad to me. ( Drain him dry, or whatever else. ) Don't say that. And don't say "despite." He is a kind person. If mean his heritage, you don't know what you're talking about.
Okay, so Solomon knows stuff, too. He wonders if Solomon is on Ginger's list of friends... )
... Is there a way to help him feel better? I try to think about it like my situation, but there's no fixing how I feel about me. But I want to help him.
( He says this without thinking twice about the hypocrisy of the sentiment, )
( He won't respond to the first thing Solomon says just yet, because - he doesn't want to believe there's nothing he can do for Ginger. But such is Mika's constant struggle - not being able to control Ginger's life (for the better) - and what Solomon's trying to tell him to ease off of. )
( Okay, this clearly takes Mika a second - demons are linked to vampires, but pacts - rather, contracts - are a human invention, because humans are insane. His brows furrow, like the term is familiar, and then...
Quicker than the human eye can track, he grabs Solomon by the collar. It's not an action that suggests impending violence - Solomon said he only offered, not that he completed it - however, it is very irate. )
Did you try to bind him? Was this a contract, human?
( Look what happens, he thinks a human is decent for three seconds and look what they do!!!!!!! )
[Yeah he should have expected this much. Unlike the previous escalation, Solomon shows no sign of threat here, sighing gently as he stays pliant under Mika's grip.]
He's fine, Mika. Nothing happened.
We discussed it briefly, and yes, I would have offered if our situation was different. But he wasn't interested. I don't have the power I normally would to guarantee it would even work on a nephilim.
... Never ever try that with him. No matter how circumstances change.
( Whether Solomon regains his own powers, or promises suddenly become legal. He doesn't care about the caveat that it has to be mutual, either: Ginger can be sensitive, and Solomon is very steady - he can imagine easily a future where Solomon catches him at just the right time. )
I will kill you. Without hesitation. Is that clear?
[Ah boy, this is like Lucifer with his brothers all over again.
He raises a brow, still clearly not threatened.]
That is between Ginger and I, Mika. Again, he has made it very obvious that he wants nothing to do with me in that regard.
If you're concerned that I'm lying, then speak with him about your worries. But I have no intention of making that kind of vow in our current circumstances. I'm not a fool.
No. I didn't think you would at all. That isn't why I brought it up.
[Thus why he is still calm, even as he adjusts his seating with an uncomfortable roll of his shoulders at the inhuman shove he just took. Oof ouch his bones.]
I told you the only things I could offer were not things he could take lightly. And I have no intention of lying to you about what those things are, given what you already know about Ginger.
I expect you to trust him to make the best decision for himself. I am not asking you to trust me. But this is not something I could ever force on him, even if promises were safe and my power was as it should be.
( While what Solomon says isn't wrong in theory... In practice, Mika struggles to believe it. )
People make decisions that are bad for them all the time. ( He says this strongly. ) Yuu-chan did, too. You want to know how I died? It's because this bastard Yuu-chan knew was traitorous and shady betrayed him again and was hunting him down to skewer him and strap him to an operation table for more inhumane tests.
( He nearly spits these words out - he really fucking hates Guren. But... he hates himself too. Because everything that happened with Guren - in Mika's eyes - was his fault. )
I had every chance to kill Guren, but I chose to trust Yuu-chan's right to trust who he wanted to trust. That things ended up as bad as they did is because I didn't look at his stupid choices and make the right one for him.
[The change is subtle. Not in tone or expression, but in the way his heart constricts, the way his pulse quickens in response in an uneven timber. Something, some part of this, deeply upsets him.
But his composure does not shift.]
But to care for someone is to let them make choices on their own, and be brave enough to tell them if you think those choices are wrong.
Trapping them in choices of your own making is no different than binding them to a contract against their will. There is a time and place for both.
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My statement still stands.
[His thumb strokes gently. An acknowledgement of the overwhelmed boy, not of the monster.]
Here. Sit with me for a moment. I have a story to tell you.
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But in some way, understanding can hurt, when you're so certain you don't deserve it. )
... Okay.
( Mika will pull away and trail toward the couch recessed into a wooden frame. It could serve as a bed, and only these past few nights has he somewhat used it like one (to curl up in, not to sleep) - there's a set of abandoned blankets he pushes aside as he climbs onto it.
The small table with two chairs seems a more natural choice for guests, but Mika simply ignores it. )
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He settles himself, and starts to weave a tale.
--
Once upon a time, a long time ago, there lived a king.
This king was visited by a strange old man. The man had only half of everything. Half of a head, half of a body, half of his arms and legs.
"Who are you?" asked the king.
"I am death's messenger", said the half-man, "and I have come to take your soul."
The king was frightened. "It's far too soon!" he answered. "I beg you to give me seven years' grace so that I can prepare myself!"
The half-man fell quiet for a moment, and then said: "So be it. I will pardon you. But I am the only one who can choose the moment you must go. Know that you will see me again, between tomorrow and the end of the seventh year. You will not know when. You will not know how."
He went on his way, and the king wept.
The king ordered a solid fort to be built for him, surrounded by seven deep trenches, and a rampart defending its inner walls. A leaded iron door blocked the entrance, to where he had a small palace meant only for him, with only one small window as an opening to the outside, out which he never looked. There, he thought, he could protect himself from the threat of death.
He said to his porters and chamberlains, his servants and soldiers, "Don't let anyone in to see me! I mean no one!"
After one year had passed, his wife tried to come to see him. She couldn't get past the iron doors, and was turned away despite her weeping.
In the third year of his captivity, his daughter who he loved very much also came. She was also not allowed admission, no matter how she begged.
In the fourth, it was his son, in whom he held immense pride, who received the same treatment.
One day, during the seventh year, the half-man suddenly reappeared in front of the king, to his agony. "How did you get here?" the king demanded. "Who let you in???"
The half-man answered, "I go where I choose, and when I choose."
The king, enraged, called his porters and chamberlains, his servants and soldiers. "Why have you allowed this man in? Were you not instructed to not let anyone in?"
Those under his care swore they had never admitted such a man. "But, sire", they said, "Truth be told, these seven years we have seen your wife who wept for you, your much-loved daughter who pleaded, and your son in whom you are very proud. But we have kept your gates seals, and their locks guarded."
And so, the half-man said to the king, "A wall is nothing to me. Neither battlements, nor ramparts, nor ditches."
"What do you want?" asked the king.
"To take your soul," said the man.
"Is it necessary?" asked the king.
"Yes," said the man.
"But where will I be when you take my soul?" asked the king.
"Nowhere," said the man, "Except in the tomb you have created."
The king protested. "I never built any tomb! I built a mighty rampart with seven trenches! I built an iron door and a palace for myself!"
The half-man looked, with his single eye that saw all, and at last replied, "This palace is your tomb. This bed you lie on is one that you have made for yourself to lie in these last seven years. In fleeing me so, you have not escaped death. You have only wasted life."
The king looked at the half-man. He thought of his wife who had wept for him. He thought of his much-loved daughter. He thought of his son, in whom he still was so very proud.
He looked to the window for the first time in seven years. He saw a mountain, topped with snow, that he'd never seen before. He'd never touched snow. His heart yearned for it, beyond his fear. But he could not take it back.
So he laid down, and wept for his loss as his breath left his body, in the tomb of his own making.]
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When the tale is done, he is quiet for a time, before he eventually asks: )
... Do you think I'm the king, then, in this story? Hiding away from the inevitable?
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[He leans against his knees, his hands gently folded in front of him as his head tilts to look at Mika.]
Fear makes us into a lot of different things. It's a hungry wolf that demands we feed it. It tells us "never". It tells us "only". It tells us "always". And we feed it our time, our dreams, our decisions, because the fear feels so much larger if we don't.
I don't think it's wrong to be frightened. It's the heart's way of saying "I want to live." But you cannot let fear devour so much that your entire life, however long it lasts, becomes a tomb instead of a treasure.
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... But it's not my life at stake. It's always someone else's. Every time I fail to think ahead, they're the ones put in danger.
( Mika closes his eyes... )
... I don't mind becoming a tomb for them. I just... want to be the one to pay the price for once, for my carelessness.
( And in some adjacent way, what he really says here is this: I want to be punished. )
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No price you pay will bring any peace for how low you place yourself.
It doesn't take a keen eye to see that you're miserable, Mika. You've already had enough taken. And you're looking death in the face every moment.
Isn't this punishment enough?
[Why does he think he could possibly need more?]
cw: effectively fantasizing about flagellation
( His head... sinks between his knees, his fingers running through his hair. )
... Then I want them to forgive me.
( He wants them to love him.
... )
I'm terrible.
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Dangerous, at times, and not always at fault of your own. Stubborn. Maybe gloomy.
But not terrible.
[...]
If someone truly did that, and still forgave you, do you think you would believe it? Or would it just be further proof for your punishment to continue?
[Because he sincerely doesn't know if what Mika wants is actually forgiveness. Would he know it if it came to him? Would he even be willing to take it?]
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... I don't know.
( ... An exhale. And then, more wryly: )
... Probably. But I'd thank them... if they forgave me. If they punished me more.
( He... falls quiet, then. Thinking about what Solomon's said; thinking about... )
... But I feel a little better with Ginger.
( Is this healthy? Arguably. Arguably not. Ginger's easy to drown in. It's easy to forget about himself. He still feels guilty, but Ginger is a lot - more overwhelming than his own thoughts are, sometimes.
Whether blood or a bottle, maybe that's enough. )
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So long as you're being careful. Ginger is a very kind soul despite what he struggles with, and he cares about your well being very much.
I just worry that the two of you might drain each other dry in your attempts to protect each other. You're both very similar, in that regard.
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... Ginger would never do anything bad to me. ( Drain him dry, or whatever else. ) Don't say that. And don't say "despite." He is a kind person. If mean his heritage, you don't know what you're talking about.
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I didn't say he wasn't kind, Mika.
I just know, very well, that the struggle he faces is a very hard one, even for full-blooded demons. Just like you struggle with your own state now.
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Okay, so Solomon knows stuff, too. He wonders if Solomon is on Ginger's list of friends... )
... Is there a way to help him feel better? I try to think about it like my situation, but there's no fixing how I feel about me. But I want to help him.
( He says this without thinking twice about the hypocrisy of the sentiment, )
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[The similarities are striking. One just exists on a much more emotional plane than the other, in Solomon's eyes.]
I don't know. His realm of life is more familiar to me than yours. But the only things I could offer him are not things he would take lightly.
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... Like what?
( He won't respond to the first thing Solomon says just yet, because - he doesn't want to believe there's nothing he can do for Ginger. But such is Mika's constant struggle - not being able to control Ginger's life (for the better) - and what Solomon's trying to tell him to ease off of. )
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A pact.
[He won't explain just yet. Mika has mentioned demons, after all. Does this ring for him like it did for Ginger?]
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Quicker than the human eye can track, he grabs Solomon by the collar. It's not an action that suggests impending violence - Solomon said he only offered, not that he completed it - however, it is very irate. )
Did you try to bind him? Was this a contract, human?
( Look what happens, he thinks a human is decent for three seconds and look what they do!!!!!!! )
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He's fine, Mika. Nothing happened.
We discussed it briefly, and yes, I would have offered if our situation was different. But he wasn't interested. I don't have the power I normally would to guarantee it would even work on a nephilim.
And more importantly, a pact has to be mutual.
[As in, it has to be a promise, both ways.
And he knows Mika knows what that would mean.]
Now please let go of me.
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His grip grows tighter. )
... Never ever try that with him. No matter how circumstances change.
( Whether Solomon regains his own powers, or promises suddenly become legal. He doesn't care about the caveat that it has to be mutual, either: Ginger can be sensitive, and Solomon is very steady - he can imagine easily a future where Solomon catches him at just the right time. )
I will kill you. Without hesitation. Is that clear?
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He raises a brow, still clearly not threatened.]
That is between Ginger and I, Mika. Again, he has made it very obvious that he wants nothing to do with me in that regard.
If you're concerned that I'm lying, then speak with him about your worries. But I have no intention of making that kind of vow in our current circumstances. I'm not a fool.
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( Emphasizing that again!! But he's made his point, so he will let go, roughly. )
Don't listen to me talk about wanting to help him and then think I'll be happy hearing you want to bind him. Did you really think I'd be supportive?
( The irony of Mika later becoming a contracted demon who's much happier than he is now is unknown to him, but very real. )
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[Thus why he is still calm, even as he adjusts his seating with an uncomfortable roll of his shoulders at the inhuman shove he just took. Oof ouch his bones.]
I told you the only things I could offer were not things he could take lightly. And I have no intention of lying to you about what those things are, given what you already know about Ginger.
I expect you to trust him to make the best decision for himself. I am not asking you to trust me. But this is not something I could ever force on him, even if promises were safe and my power was as it should be.
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People make decisions that are bad for them all the time. ( He says this strongly. ) Yuu-chan did, too. You want to know how I died? It's because this bastard Yuu-chan knew was traitorous and shady betrayed him again and was hunting him down to skewer him and strap him to an operation table for more inhumane tests.
( He nearly spits these words out - he really fucking hates Guren. But... he hates himself too. Because everything that happened with Guren - in Mika's eyes - was his fault. )
I had every chance to kill Guren, but I chose to trust Yuu-chan's right to trust who he wanted to trust. That things ended up as bad as they did is because I didn't look at his stupid choices and make the right one for him.
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I'm aware.
[The change is subtle. Not in tone or expression, but in the way his heart constricts, the way his pulse quickens in response in an uneven timber. Something, some part of this, deeply upsets him.
But his composure does not shift.]
But to care for someone is to let them make choices on their own, and be brave enough to tell them if you think those choices are wrong.
Trapping them in choices of your own making is no different than binding them to a contract against their will. There is a time and place for both.
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