[from here]The room was very bright. That was the Bride's first thought and then she noticed why. Gold. Everything was gold. Everything, that was, except the Sphinx on a pedestal in the center watching them with eyes far more intelligence than any beast should have
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The prediction proved absolutely correct.
Perhaps too perfectly. Unwanted trauma never came in gold--at least, not to Nigredo's understanding. It might have appeared as the giant beast in the center of the room, but its features and stance were none that he had witnessed before. Not even in the simulator. Without meaning to, the child stepped further into the room, eyes wide, entranced at the pure strangeness of it all.
He might have seemed a little too taken in, by the way he was staring blankly at the beast.
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Oh goody, a big, shining room! That was clearly worth him almost tripping over the two of them. Albedo made a noise of distaste, shifting to the side to go around the pair. Shining walls, and little else seemed to be the norm, but for a pedestal and a large statue resting there. Except the statue didn't seem so much as a statue as something playing at living. The boy looked it over in an abstract fashion, vaguely curious. ( ... )
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The sphinx seemed impassive, almost unimpressed, until the white-haired kid spoke. Then, the creature's eyes narrowed and flicked immediately towards Albedo.
"If you keep on like that, I will 'pick' you," the beast snarled, sounding quite unlike his usual composed self. Realizing, perhaps, that his trend of unprofessionalism had reached a new low, the sphinx shook his head and muttered something to himself.
Finally, he cleared his throat and continued. "I... apologize. I don't... normally cater to more than one group of humans per night, you understand."
At the word 'humans', the creature smirked slightly, revealing jagged teeth that seemed even more unsettling when juxtaposed against his half-civilized demeanor.
"So," he said lightly, a little dangerously, "I assume you're here to play my game?"
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‘Going back’ meant going back, not forward through another door that was probably not an exit, but before she knew it, the kids were trying to get past her, anyway. Ugh, for god’s sake! A fuse had been lit inside her--one that had no healthy source, to be sure--and she turned on them, jaw set. She wasn’t being force-fed anymore of this bullshit! With that in mind, she overtook Nigredo, and like a flash, reached out to pinch his cheek between her thumb and forefinger. Not nicely, either. “I said enough!” Yoshiko reprimanded. “Don’t talk in definites.” Because this isn’t an exit, how could it be, you’re just a kid, don’t pretend you know!No, this was not a ( ... )
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Her fingers were like pins of ice in his skin. Why, of all things, did a girl's abuse hurt the worst?
She eventually seemed to understand the extent of their situation and jumped, leaving a rather sour Nigredo to rub a palm against his face. This emotion increased tenfold when Albedo's laughter caused their host to throw out a threat in return. The youngest practically glared at the middle child, the suppressed headache flaring to awareness. "No, I'm sorry," he told the creature, as though the words were the most natural to offer in this instance. "Please don't mind him."
A pause. "What do you mean by 'game'?"
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He kept laughing eyes on the creature, even as Nigredo apologized for his efforts. Near to the pedestal, Albedo tipped his head, a smile on his lips. His brother had asked the game, and Albedo would await the response. He was ever-so-hopeful now, really. The creature had threatened, and Albedo waited to make good on it. He giggled once, light. "You're interesting.~" he chorused. "Are you the game?"
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