Peter's lunch meeting with Tear had gone far better than he could have even expected. It was a good thing that he wasn't the sort of person who judged by age, seeing how the girl had proved herself to be very capable despite the fact that she was only a teenager. Not that Peter would ever admit it out loud, but Tear was a lot more mature than his
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Minds seared in tandem, an eating sensation unregistered in Nigredo's system until after the fact. The younger disconnected instinctively, body retreating to his end of the sofa and hands closing against his chest. Waveform clung longer than was necessary, however, and by the time Albedo made to pull back, several things slid into place.
Here was progress unraveling. Here, the lines of defense carefully disregarded were pulled tightly around Nigredo, who despite signs of a migraine, processed the impressions. Of course. Of course. What good was that? Nigredo couldn't control it. Couldn't even begin to speculate how ( ... )
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He had been ridiculous. Had tossed aside logic in favor of base reactions. And Executioner? Here? Where, Nigredo, was the proof of that? Albedo was fine physically. (Mental faculties were under question, but that had always been the case, no?) Not a scratch or cut on him. Albedo was alive. Drugs were to blame. His brother's exposition, therefore, struck mocking pain where horror had once dwelt, and soon, Nigredo wanted only to laugh ( ... )
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One might have anticipated a lecture--some form of punishment for the elder child. This was a step unwanted in Nigredo's world: having one's last living connection gamble his life for a mediocre reward registered as problematic. It might have been more appropriate to tug at Albedo's ear and hope the pain would be enough to instill how terribly wrong he had been.
But constitution was insufficient. Sanity was questionable. Nigredo didn't have the head to touch his brother. Instead, he spoke truthfully, vaguely wishing this would somehow reach the white-haired child. "I know you meant well, Albedo." He managed a bitter smile. "But please don't ever do that again."
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It was the smile, more, that affected the middle Variant. A strange expression and still emotion. He swallowed, leaned closer even as he wanted to back away, hand tightening the slightest on Nigredo's leg. A memory flashed. Something clouded. An example he had wanted to make. A dark room with a locked door, and one to two, and then. And this was....
Yes. This was quite possibly near the same as that. His head tilted at a sharp degree. His eyes watched. "Does it... Does this hurt you?"
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The answer was more obvious than most, but relaying his sentiments on this matter proved difficult. It wasn't necessarily about the youngest getting hurt by a brother's careless actions. Rather, it was more the consequences of said actions on the brother himself. Pain would continue in its myriad of forms and reasons, but it had yet to compare to a hurt (or dead) sibling ( ... )
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There was something curious, still, in the creature that looked up from Albedo's eyes. Something curious among the mass of loss and sorrow. He opened his mouth to question and found he couldn't speak the words. Albedo licked his lips once, pressed them together, and forced one word. "...Explain."
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Albedo, however, asked for clarification, and Nigredo found himself willing to do so, though far from certain as to how to fulfill the request. Eyelids lowered halfway as he attempted to form coherency. "...You have a lot of things to live for," he repeated, lips thinning into a line. "You have friends who care about you. You have things you need to do." He wavered momentarily and forced himself to stare out into the Sun Room. "You have a...purpose. I think it would be sad to just let that go."
Or to never have it in the first place, but that was a truth not to be shared.
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Surprisingly, the statement about friends was accepted enough to be moved aside. It was not that the subject was not still shaky--but that Albedo could take care as it was when clear, of his and others', and at least with one other, Albedo would consider them friends. Friends as others had defined to him, friends as ones cared about.
That was accepted. The rest was not. Albedo's voice came deceptively low, though lacking any tint of anger. Only a firm demand of explanation. "Then tell me, brother." His eyes watched the youngest of the set, bland and churning both. "Tell me my purpose. Tell me exactly what I need to do."
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"I can't tell you." The link made it clear: he didn't know. What was it, then, that others could do? How did they act in the face of defining their purpose? "You have to find out what you need to do on your own."
He thinned his lips into a line. {But you can move, can't you? You have that.} The fact of existence. The enviable point.
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His brother couldn't know. Couldn't know that he had spoken that girl's words. Had echoed what Albedo had just mused on, and just contemplated. That he could move. So Nigredo, then. Nigredo thought like that girl. Believed that movement was not something left for him, and envying Albedo for the ability to.
Truthfulness of the matter aside, how could Nigredo think that Albedo could move, could have the choice to exist in a liveable way? Albedo had always defined himself as something dying, despite the irony, and yet here were two that claimed different.
His throat closed. He stared at Nigredo.
Here were two that felt more alone than he.
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