Characters:NPC Nothing, NPC Charger, NPC Steve and OPEN
Date/Time: Friday, September 23rd, midnight
Location: Wellspring Island
Rating: PG-13 and up
Summary: The beginning of the end.
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For a moment, he was starkly reminded of the tales he entertained himself with when sleep escaped him, thick, musty tomes that looked almost magical by the light of a dwindling candle. Tales of heroes of all shapes and sizes, ones that triumphed over massive creatures and brought peace to their kingdoms, ones that used only cleverness to their advantage to trick their enemy into falling. Huo stood before him, a shock of white in the darkness, asking to go out to help though he couldn’t fight.
And in that same moment, Sniper hated those stories, and hated that this place had brought him to feel such a thing. In those stories, they never spoke of the friends that would grieve should the clever one fall, and fall he often did, a victim of his own cleverness or a martyr reduced to nothing more than a symbol. They never spoke of all the dirty tricks they used, or how the others fell to protect him. Don’t try to be a hero, Huo, Sniper thought, a sudden melancholy seizing his bones. He did not want anyone he knew to be a hero.
He remembered how Hawk was a watchman, and how he that meant his friend was here, fighting no doubt. He remembered how out of breath he had been after turning into a dragon. And he knew without a doubt that Hawk would die in Huo’s place gladly, just as Sniper would act for Cloud or for Krile and how he was sure they would act for him. He had to shake his head to dispel the vision from his mind.
He prodded Huo again with Kabuto. “I should force you to go back to the bridge where you won’t do anything stupid,” he spat out, then set his jaw. “But if you’re gonna stay here anyway, then I’m following you there. I don’t wanna look in my journal in the morning and see some watchman writing about how you died valiantly not-fighting on the battlefield.”
He prodded Huo once more, just for the hell of it. “Dumbass.”
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After a long, long year, Edensphere had finally gotten that far under his skin. He could no longer keep his distance.
It startled, unnerved, angered him, reached him in the same way that being unable to rely on his knowledge had done. It struck him as an affront. But then Sniper's sling struck him just as surely, though not nearly as hard, and he looked down and saw another man for whom keeping his distance had never been an option, not even when - and Huo knew that that was often enough - he desperately desired it.
He raised both hands, striking fist against cupped palm, and offered Sniper a military salute.
"I thank you." His voice was warm. Sniper would not want to hear any more apologies for him, time wasted in praise of how honorable it was of him to be protecting a man very nearly his enemy. Huo had talked enough. The rest he will win through action. "We work well together. I shall do my utmost to be of service."
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He surveyed Huo for a moment, judgment in his eyes as he debated whether Huo would be more of a help or a burden with a slingshot. Merely a burden, he decided. Huo's aim was abominable, and Sniper wasn't about to trust him with explosives lest he accidentally blow himself up. There was a time and a place for training, and this was neither. "Nah," he mumbled to himself.
Sniper dug the handle of Kabuto into the ground now and leaned on it as he considered their options, weary from his already long day and daunted by the fight he knew was ahead of them. His clothes being wet was uncomfortable, but he gathered that he would be lucky if the only damage he sustained from this was a nasty cold.
"If we come across something really b-big and strong and I say run, you'll run," he said, nothing in his tone leaving any room for further debate on the subject. He hoped that if Huo saw the shiver that ran through him, he would simply write it off as the cold. In his mind, he could still see the earwig's stinger as it lurched unsteadily towards him, then white hot pain and terror so bad that it stilled his tongue and froze his limbs and no no no he didn't want to die again, it was way too hard to even try to be a brave warrior now, and he was so, so scared he was going to be sick, please oh god don't let there be another one of those.
And no, stop panicking Sniper, because when you panic you become insensible and you'll be of no help to anyone at all, let alone this man in front of you, stubborn as a mule yet as weak as a fish in the jaws of a mighty sea king. He squashed it down the best he could and told himself that they would not run into a giant earwig, for he did not think that he would be able to do so much as move if he encountered one. "If it's that big," he continued, a little more steadily this time, "then I'll be useless unless I can get enough distance to actually snipe. Got it?"
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Oh, they worked well together, so much was true. Yet it was still some cruel jest of Heaven's to pair them up like this.
"I defer to your judgment in this," he said, nodding. His voice, at least, he managed to keep steady, as well as his pose - straight-backed, alert, tense with powerful self-control. The ability to hold it was one of his few assets and he used it as much as he could. From a distance he may even have seemed truly confident to one who did not know his usual easy serenity. It may have been quite useful, had there been anyone watching from a distance. As it stood, he was really putting up the show only for himself. "We both, I think, have an understanding of what we are and are not qualified to tackle."
I don't want to 'tackle' anything. All he truly desired was information. But he tightened his fist about the handle of the knife and knew the thought to be completely useless. He caught Sniper's gaze and held it, as he had not truly done since their fateful conversation in the Yard. "But if I have an idea and no time to properly explain it - will you trust me?"
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Besides, this man would never throw him knowingly to the dogs, he knew. Never would he intentionally toss him into battle to execute a plan. Oh, a treacherous corner of his mind entertained the idea, but that wasn't him. He wasn't the type of guy to suspect such things from others, and more importantly, he never wanted to be.
And, well, they defeated a dragon together. That was worth something. Sniper held Huo's gaze right back and merely said, "Okay. Let's go."
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