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Aug 11, 2018 19:05

It's the Earl Alois Trancy speaking. What?

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action. stabilimentum June 21 2011, 07:14:27 UTC
[Slowly, Claude flips over one of his hands until his palm faces up. It's an offer to be held, should Alois need him, because Claude is very pleased with these negative reactions.]

Master, he claims to have a "friend" helping him--perhaps the lawyer he requested. Applying for guardianship involves him filling out and then filing the necessary paperwork. Afterward, there will be a court hearing where a judge determines whether or not he is competent and responsible.

If your objections aren't enough to stop him, then I imagine Luca Macken's own disapproval might do it. [That is, go sit down with Luca and tell him no.] For Jack Vessalius to proceed in spite of you both--

[Really, with how devoted the brothers are to each other, Claude can't imagine a rift forming over a crossroads like this. No matter how nice Jack is to them, the Mackens have always had major issues with adults of authority. Claude witnessed some of the villagers' fallout firsthand.]

Morally reprehensible. And without consent from either of you, the courts will feel less favorable of Jack Vessalius.

[Claude can talk about morals like he knows what they are. It's so easy to forget he's a demon, sometimes.]

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action. masterbaiting June 21 2011, 18:57:57 UTC
He won't do it if I say no, [Alois says angrily, and ignores the offered palm in favor of climbing into Claude's lap so that he can see the screen more closely. (Sometimes it doesn't matter what he's offered; he'll make his own routes.) Most everything about him seems coiled tight, right now, thin wire springs capable of a fair amount of whiplash once set off. Then- ]

He won't, will he? Claude, he can't take that away from me, he can't do this. He shouldn't even be trying.

[Any slack in his springs is pulled in fiercely right away, and he goes tense against Claude; even his toes, which dangle as his legs hang over the edge of one armrest, are curled. He's thinking: Mustn't trust any of them, that shit.]

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action. stabilimentum June 21 2011, 20:11:53 UTC
[Claude has to be careful about this, he thinks. The finish line is clear, and right there in front of him, and he wants so badly to sprint to it but he knows that he shouldn't. He moves his hands away so Alois can sit down; settling in, he spends a moment admiring human body heat. Despite or because of all their flaws, human beings are the most beautiful Creations. They have unlimited potential, unlike angels and demons.

Slow and steady does it, right?] There is something more deplorable he could attempt, [he says, speaking directly into his master's ear. This is informal, comfortable, warmly wonderful, even when stress twists Alois into spiral springs. Claude touches a certain spot on Alois' taut back, trying to locate and unwind some of the tension. 'Lost at sea' into 'here with me'...

Alois shan't snap so soon.]

A worst-case scenario, if you will.

[His other hand reaches forward, skipping across the touchpad. With just a few fingertip flicks, Claude brings up the filtered post by Jack Vessalius that has been uploaded. Its public conversations are all Claude needs to see--"priest" isn't very ambiguous--and he locates one with a man named Miles Edgeworth, whom Claude knows his master dislikes. In this one, Jack is asking about legal custody of a minor. Claude guesses that Jack was just using terminology without knowing what it means, but that's helpful for weaving a scarier web.]

A custody battle.

[Click click click scroll--and Claude opens up a basic FAQ about the differences between adoption, custody, and guardianship.]

Custody doesn't necessarily go hand in hand with guardianship. It allows for much broader and far-reaching decision-making abilities. There are two forms: legal and physical. The latter would allow him to literally take Luca Macken away from you.

The man's motivations elude me, but it's possible he could seek either-or for Ciel Phantomhive and yourself. There would be numerous consequences--the financial assets would belong to him, for example. It reminds me of Arnold Trancy threatening your inheritance.

[Careful, careful...]

For as altruistic as he claims to be, I expect nothing to happen should you tell him no. [Careful.] Then again, his willingness to rush along a decision like this, without your input, strikes me as strange. This is merely my opinion, my master, but he should know better.

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