Anders (
apurrstate) wrote in
driftfleet2017-12-19 11:13 pm
Entry tags:
[Closed] You have always worn your flaws upon your sleeve
Who: Anders, Riona and Justice
Then Anders and Wolfe
Broadcast: No
Action: Iskaulit herb garden, then Malum
When: Forward dated to early January
They'd had plenty of time to decompress from the stresses of the red planet and the exploding one before it. Anders had even taken the time to speak to Hermione and Vash about how might be best to talk to Justice about the issue the spirit had long since known Anders was avoiding. And he was avoiding it, as though putting it off would delay it forever. As if he could truly hide something so important from one of his closest friends and a spirit.
One day, either through Atroma's slip or his own, Justice would finally see the massive hole in Anders' soul, the piece of him ripped away by Allen's blade and sent back to the Fade, the chasm that would be damningly Justice-shaped. It was only by the grace of the Maker he hadn't found out yet. The Maker as well as Fenris and Hawke and anyone else who knew keeping their mouths shut.
But they couldn't hold this dance for the rest of their time here...and, in the end, it wasn't fair to either of them. It had nearly been half a year. The lies and dodged questions would have to stop. Anders needed to stop it.
He orchestrated carefully. First, he sent a message to Riona to tell her he'd changed his mind. It was a deeply personal matter, this conversation, but if anyone else had any right to be there, it was their commander and best friend. She could bring a balance to the situation, should...Anders didn't even know what. If Justice grew angry or somehow suddenly violent, it would be the least the mage would deserve. No, it wasn't for that, it was for if Justice went the other way and sunk into the despair he expected would be his friend's eventual reaction. Anders would want to comfort him, to be there for him, but Anders would be the source of distress to begin with. Justice would need someone else.
Justice might not even want to talk to or see him again after this. Anders would deserve that too.
After Riona, it was Hermione to tell her he needed the herb garden, a place with a soothing and natural atmosphere would, hopefully, help. Then Wolfe, just to let him know...in case. In case of anything. At the very least to let his love know where he was disappearing off to and not to search for him.
Last was Justice himself. Just a simple message sent to start off the inevitable avalanche.
"Meet me and Riona in the herb garden on the Iskaulit. I owe you some answers."
He didn't wait for any of the replies, he went to the greenhouse himself and tended the elfroot and embrum and deep mushrooms and various other plants he and Hermione had planted there for their potions. Busy and familiar work to cope with the painful and ever-tightening knot threatening to choke him from his chest.
One way or the other, it would all be over after today.
Then Anders and Wolfe
Broadcast: No
Action: Iskaulit herb garden, then Malum
When: Forward dated to early January
They'd had plenty of time to decompress from the stresses of the red planet and the exploding one before it. Anders had even taken the time to speak to Hermione and Vash about how might be best to talk to Justice about the issue the spirit had long since known Anders was avoiding. And he was avoiding it, as though putting it off would delay it forever. As if he could truly hide something so important from one of his closest friends and a spirit.
One day, either through Atroma's slip or his own, Justice would finally see the massive hole in Anders' soul, the piece of him ripped away by Allen's blade and sent back to the Fade, the chasm that would be damningly Justice-shaped. It was only by the grace of the Maker he hadn't found out yet. The Maker as well as Fenris and Hawke and anyone else who knew keeping their mouths shut.
But they couldn't hold this dance for the rest of their time here...and, in the end, it wasn't fair to either of them. It had nearly been half a year. The lies and dodged questions would have to stop. Anders needed to stop it.
He orchestrated carefully. First, he sent a message to Riona to tell her he'd changed his mind. It was a deeply personal matter, this conversation, but if anyone else had any right to be there, it was their commander and best friend. She could bring a balance to the situation, should...Anders didn't even know what. If Justice grew angry or somehow suddenly violent, it would be the least the mage would deserve. No, it wasn't for that, it was for if Justice went the other way and sunk into the despair he expected would be his friend's eventual reaction. Anders would want to comfort him, to be there for him, but Anders would be the source of distress to begin with. Justice would need someone else.
Justice might not even want to talk to or see him again after this. Anders would deserve that too.
After Riona, it was Hermione to tell her he needed the herb garden, a place with a soothing and natural atmosphere would, hopefully, help. Then Wolfe, just to let him know...in case. In case of anything. At the very least to let his love know where he was disappearing off to and not to search for him.
Last was Justice himself. Just a simple message sent to start off the inevitable avalanche.
"Meet me and Riona in the herb garden on the Iskaulit. I owe you some answers."
He didn't wait for any of the replies, he went to the greenhouse himself and tended the elfroot and embrum and deep mushrooms and various other plants he and Hermione had planted there for their potions. Busy and familiar work to cope with the painful and ever-tightening knot threatening to choke him from his chest.
One way or the other, it would all be over after today.

no subject
Has she just lost a friend?
A part of her wants to vomit. A part of her wants to scream. A part of her wants to take Justice by the shoulder and shake him, or just beg him to forgive her. She'll do none of these things, though. Instead, she simply nods. "I understand." There's pain and grief, even a hint of anger in her words. "Then I'll remove myself and give you space to think." What else is there to say? As much as she doesn't want to just leave Anders like this, she needs to go. Her composure won't hold forever.
Maybe it's just been too long on her end. Ten years, with nary a word to Anders or Justice in all that time. Perhaps she's just lost touch with Justice's character and can no longer connect with him as well as she once did. Would she have been able to handle this better if she were still her younger self here? It's all speculation, pointless at that. The damage is done, and now she has to accept it, whatever comes to pass.
"Come on, Kiter." The mabari whines in protest, but she gestures for him to follow, and reluctantly he does. She goes up to Anders, placing a hand on his shoulder and squeezing. "We'll talk later," she murmurs.
And it pains her as she looks at Justice, wondering if this is the last time they'll ever speak. His anger and hurt may run deep enough that he might not want to talk to her again. She sniffs, forcing back tears. "I'm sorry the mortal world failed you. I hope..." No, it doesn't matter. She shakes her head. "Good-bye."
With that, she turns and leaves, Kiter following behind.
no subject
But nothing is so simple as to be fixed with one hug and your heart on your sleeve, that was the stuff of fairy tales, not life. Life was this cruel cold scene where Riona is leaving, her pain abundantly clear and Anders nearly whispers an apology as she says her good-by to him. They'd talk later and Anders would be at her feet then, apologetic and remorseful that he'd hurt her like this, all for being too selfish to take the storm alone.
But now they were alone and if there was one thing Anders was confident of in this whole exchange, it was that he knew how Justice's thoughts and reasonings webbed out from each new idea. This one was chillingly familiar, thoughts he'd once thought were just his own now screamed from Justice's tone and subtext and posture and Anders couldn't help but wonder if they'd somehow kept each other in a cycle of nearly stepping off that ledge and then pulling themselves back again for years without ever noticing.
He stood at the edge of the cliffs of the Wounded coast, the orange halo in the distance and frosty glares at camp all reminders of why he might as well step of the edge and into the choppy, rocky, waters below.
He hadn't. He never had, as many times as the thought had come up. It had sprung up throughout his life, but first he had cowardice, then he had friends and family to keep him back, then Hawke and then...maybe Justice had always been there as well, as much the motivation and the prevention as every outside source.
Now it was Ander's turn.
As soon as Riona was gone, Anders hands curled around Justice's upper arms, grip tight to the point of nearly being painful as he searched those achingly blue eyes.]
No. Don't you dare. You don't get to make that choice.
[Again, Hawke runs through him as he speaks, his words a near echo of what Hawke had said to him.]
It hurts, believe me, I understand, but you will live. You want to atone? Grant justice to those you've wronged? You'll live and atone with your continued actions, not by selfishly running away. Help others. Try. Stay by your cause, that's what will make it better.
It won't feel like it, it'll always feel like it's not enough and sometimes you'll wonder if death wasn't the better option, but it's not. Death is a luxury we can't afford. For every person you help, they will have suffered without you, and that's what'll keep you going.
[One of his hands freed it's death-grip and instead gently brushed the tears staining Justice's face.]
Look at me and swear you'll live, even if it's agonizing.
no subject
Is this the last time they see each other, he wonders?
Then she’s gone, and he’s said nothing. He wonders if he will regret that. He thinks he will.
Anders’ hands on his arms forcefully demand his attention. Justice wants to be gone, wants to disappear and rest and think, and he almost vanishes, popping away to someplace where he can be alone. He only barely holds firm to this space, the force of Anders’ will keeping him here for the moment.
Justice doesn’t think he’s ever seen Anders so passionate as when he demands that he live. With that numbness and unreality, Anders’ urgency seems far away, but forceful, like a rope trying to pull him to shore as he drifts out to sea.
It’s the hand on his face that grounds him again. Has he ever been touched on his face before? Anders is brushing something away. Justice realizes belatedly that he’s been crying, and the surprise is just another dull blow to his numbed heart.
“Death is an appropriate sentence for corruption, possession, and wanton murder of the innocent,” Justice says, and even his own voice feels like it belongs to someone else. “But you are the one I wronged. If you do not believe it is the correct sentence in this case, then I will not judge it so.”
It’s only just that a victim have a say in the sentencing, and it’s not like his other victims really have a chance to voice their opinion. There are extenuating circumstances—Anders does care for him and seems to blame himself for some of what happened, and thus this may make his judgment questionable. But it’s not Justice’s place to challenge his victim’s will.
But saying he won’t put himself to death for his crime is far cry from swearing to live. When he speaks next, he speaks with all the clinical numbness that has fallen over him, talking like he’s working out a logic puzzle rather than discussing the possibility of suicide.
“A dead spirit serves its virtue more than a corrupt spirit. If I cannot be trusted to fulfill my purpose, then it is better that I die before I cause harm. All traces of me would dissolve, as would everything I created, and I doubt even Atroma has the means to undo that. Perhaps in this way, I can avoid ever doing any of this.” Justice doesn’t know if that would change anything for Anders, but perhaps it would. Perhaps he can change his fate by simply ending it here with his foreknowledge, and Anders will never be possessed. Perhaps he’d never even be trapped in that situation in the first place. It’s not a stretch for Justice to think that Anders’ friendship with a possessed corpse contributed to the Wardens’ willingness to betray him.
But still, killing himself runs directly counter to Anders’ request that he atone. Anders has a right to justice for the wrongs he’s suffered, and if he will not be satisfied with death, then he deserves something else. Can Justice give him something else, though? Is he capable of fulfilling his virtue, knowing how deep corruption’s roots may run? Would it be better to risk leaving Anders with nothing in the hopes that he will have never suffered injustice at his hands in the first place?
Which is more important? Trying to do better, knowing how catastrophically he may fail? Or removing the possibility of failure entirely, and possibly hurting his victim more in the process?
Justice has a sinking feeling that there may not be a right answer this time. The thought is dizzying, threatening to pierce the numbness again, and he’s forced to hold Anders’ arms to keep himself upright. “I do not know what is best. I need to think.” He does not want to leave Anders with that, though. He doesn’t want Anders wondering if he is dead or simply avoiding him if they don’t see each other. “I will inform you of my decision when I make it.” And Riona, he decides. He wants Riona to know too if he chooses to die. He doesn’t like the idea of leaving her to find out from Anders.
no subject
And still, that demand wasn't what he heard coming from his own mouth.
"Alright." It would be too kind to call it a whisper, more like a rough escape of air without voice moving past this lips. What else could he say? What right did he really have to demand anything of Justice?
Death is an appropriate sentence for corruption, possession, and wanton murder of the innocent. It was true and it was as much his truth as Justice's. If Justice deserved to die for Anders' crimes, then Anders himself deserved far worse.
"Please-" He choked on his own voice as he spoke up again, but stopped and stepped away from his friend to offer the escape he wished. "No, I have no more right to ask anything of you. I won't keep you here any longer."
In case Justice somehow got it in his mind Anders had some right to speak to him anymore, Anders turned away to his plants as though they could really hold any sliver of his attention now.
no subject
Without justice, he is nothing. He has no name, no purpose, no identity. The thought that anyone might care for him independent of that, that anyone might care for him even if he does fail to live up to that integral part of himself, is entirely foreign.
There are so many things he doesn't understand. So many things he still is struggling to process, struggling to grasp. Maybe he never will.
Anders lets him go and turns away. It is both a relief and one last knife in his chest. Justice has a feeling that he's just lost both his friends. Maybe he did a long time ago, and he's only the last to find out.
After all those years in the Fade, working and fighting on his own, Justice still has never felt more lonely than he does in this moment.
"I am sorry, Anders. For everything."
It's not much, but it's all he has right now.
Justice vanishes. He goes far away, somewhere he can be all alone. The leopard starts yowling, pacing up and down the greenhouse like that will make him come back.
He never does.