Raine Sage (
ruinsprofessor) wrote2014-02-28 07:36 pm
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--"Raine Sage. I can't reach the console right now. If it's an emergency, don't wait to get a hold of me, keep moving. I'm sure I'll hear about it soon. If not, leave a message and I'll contact you when I can."
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[ So many of them here could do so much damage -- and Raine seems to be right in the thick of all of them. The thought's never far from his mind, even without his latest tangle with Valdis. He follows it with a shrug, but he agrees with her observation. ]
There are. She's young enough it could still go either way, though.
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[Raine looks a little bit grim at the reminder. Valdis does come to mind, though her power's a self-destructive one. The rest of Raine's close friends could equally well qualify by Bakura's standards; while their powers all come with prices, a price isn't quite the same thing.]
['Young' doesn't quite earn an askance look-- Raine's among enough centuries-old friends that, relatively, Zatanna does seem young. But by the same token, her students are younger still, and their power in some respects beyond the bounds of what was once considered possible.]
That's fair. Still, she's been here for some time, hasn't she?
[She's had the chance to experiment and hasn't gone completely mad with power, in other words.]
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She might be the oldest Foreigner here, actually. I can't think of anyone else who's been here longer, at least. That Welcome Center kid, maybe.
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[Raine takes the same time to think about it, finds she has to agree with Bakura. At least to the best of her knowledge.]
So many of the longer-term Foreigners have gone, since I've been here.
[Some of them she misses. Obligatorily, her thoughts turn to Genis again, and she sips her coffee instead of continuing on.]
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[ He nods in agreement to what she said, but it didn't take a clairvoyant to realize where her thoughts went along with it. He hadn't wanted to unduly remind her of her absent brother. ]
I'll have to get the Ring back from the sefatjiw before too long.
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And how do you intend to do that?
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I doubt my speaking to her would help.
I can only hope you succeed.
[For once she holds her tongue on it, but be careful is nearly as distinct in her tone as if she'd said it.]
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But no, I doubt it would change much.
I hope she doesn't go prodding at the Ring with that sword of hers.
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[But if it would help, she would.]
That... wouldn't be good, no. [Raine frowns at her coffee.] It's very strongly associated with light. There's more to it than just that, of course, but it's a particularly destructive blade.
[She'd never want to see it crossed with the Material Blades.]
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Oh, I know what it's got going for it. But as they say, the best weapon is just the pointed end of a bad one.
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In other words, anything would do? Is the Ring so vulnerable?
[It sounds like concern. The Ring is metal, and has life woven into it. For some reason she'd thought it a particularly durable thing-- after all, it sustained Bakura thousands of years, didn't it?]
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Hardly vulnerable, no. It cannot be melted, damaged, or drained of power. The shadow alchemy made sure of that. Its bearers, on the other hand, tend to be a little less indestructible.
[ a mirthless smile ]
I should know, I killed its first one.
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[Raine doesn't know that she expected anything less, but even so, it's something a little startling, to have Bakura admit it so bald-facedly.]
[Well. A great many of her friends have killed, after all. This has already happened, and there's no changing it, nor does it change the Bakura she knows. In any case, Raine doubts he killed for the fun of it. Maybe it's just that she wants to believe the best of him, but they've spoken of costs enough... no. Bakura knows the weight of a life.]
But you're still concerned for the sword's possible influence on it.
[She's missing a step, which she hopes he'll be considerate enough to fill in.]
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And he hadn't technically gotten rid of the man completely, as Mahaad's last act was to fuse himself with his ka, and remaking himself as the Dark Magician that continued to serve the Pharaoh, even in modern times. Damned persistent Priest!
Raine's puzzlement left him wondering if there was any good way to eloborate... but there really wasn't. ]
When I was sealed in the Ring, I wasn't the only thing in there, seba-rekhet. You feel how dark it is, but you're only seeing part of the picture. I was never the worst thing bound to this Item.
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[Wrong. It sets her on edge sometimes when she's paying attention to it, like being in the depths of the Temple of Shadow with Abyssion laying claim to the Devil's Arms. Mostly she's used to what Bakura feels like, but sometimes...]
[The fact that there is worse bound into the Ring makes her eyes sharp, and she frowns at him.]
And it came with you? What is it?
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[ Bakura wasn't the type to toss around that word lightly, but there was no hesitation in how he used it here. ]
It is... hm.
[ Perhaps he'd better back up a bit. ]
The Items were created through shadow alchemy, which was written in a book called the Thousand Years Tome. The Priests only managed to translate the ritual and its spell, but also inside of it was information on what it had been written to seal away: a being called Zorc. Whether a demon, or a dark god, he's used both titles, and he predates Egypt. The Tome claimed that the gods themselves sealed him the first time, to avoid being destroyed by him.
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[That's... a very bad sign.]
I take it that this being was... unsealed?
[Grim. If the being predates the Items, Raine can really only see one way for it to have gotten bound to one. It got loose, or was set loose, and someone re-sealed it.]
[With the way his past is, the way the Items apparently required quite a bit of sacrifice of life to be made... Raine will not be surprised if there was a significant death toll surrounding the entire debacle.]
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[ a pause, and then: ]
So that's what I did.
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[He broke the seal on something he himself acknowledges as evil. Why would he-- no, Raine can pinpoint with alarming accuracy why. The thing she already knows he'd do anything for, the 'justice' he seeks for his family and village. She is still uncertain about his distinction between justice and vengeance.]
How was it that this seemed necessary?
[It's flat, not particularly happy. She still wants to think he wouldn't go that far if he thought there was any other choice. Granted, there probably was another choice, which was don't, but... Bakura could not have done nothing were what he sought within his reach, Raine is sure of that much.]
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There was no one else to turn to, to try and make right what had been done.
Akhenaden wiped the minds of all the soldiers who'd participated in the slaughter. Later, when Akhenamkhanen found out about what the ritual had entailed, instead of trying to help them, he had every reference to Kul Elna destroyed. Even the gods' kaa continued to obey his son, like everything was still--
[ there's a faint curdle of the word here, like it burns the back of his throat as he says it ]
--was still ma'at.
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[She puts her coffee down on the nearby counter before it can fall from her hands or worse. Grits her teeth. And sorts through, piece by piece.]
[To be forgotten is a kind of death; to intentionally obliterate a person, let alone an entire village, from memory as well as life, is an act of cruelty. So the Items were created with the deaths of Bakura's family, and it was further compounded by assuring that no one would or could remember them. Save, of course, one very angry survivor with the capability to hold a very lethal grudge. And all appearances in the world, if she understands him right, were that it wasn't wrong; no person remembered to object and no god cried out against it. The world turned, and the slaughter was forgotten, and Bakura harbored vengeance in his heart like a slow-growing seed.]
[It is not a mystery why.]
[Raine fixes on something small, at first.] You say his son. Not he himself? [It's... odd. But it matters less compared to the rest. A headshake.]
...Never mind. I...
[It's horrific. His choice of tactics is little better, but she can see why. 'I'm sorry' is hideously inadequate; 'how could you' doesn't even enter into consideration.]
It wasn't right.
[But she hardly has to tell him that. Here is the problem: she remembers that utter certainty she had of him, early on, about his ghosts, his family. She doesn't doubt that. And she would not want to be in his way, no matter the good terms they're on now.]
[For all that, Raine finds herself strangely calm. For now.]
Then how did it end up sealed with you?
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Raine's understanding of more of the context might then better illuminate why Bakura called justice and vengeance the same in this case. He did want revenge for them being taken from him, for no other reason than they had been deemed too worthless as a thieves village to be anything other than fodder, but there is justice to be had in their salvation, restoring what was taken from them: not just their lives, but their very existences.
And that was why he had taken their loss so hard, not simply because it denied him revenge, but because it meant they were well and truly lost, not merely to him but to everything, to every form of existence. The ghosts had wanted their vengeance, yes, but more than that, they had simply wanted to again be. ]
Akhenamkhanen died, before I was strong enough to-- before I had a chance of beating his Priests, the new wielders of the Items. His son, Atem, boy-king, took the throne.
[ True, Atem had been in his fifteenth year. But he was younger than Bakura, and would always be the child king. ]
When the Items were removed from their tablet after the ritual, the Ring was the last one removed... it was stuck, because Zorc was trying to seal himself inside of it. For the most part, it worked. Not all of him, but some. In the past, when I took my war to the Palace, to take on the Pharaoh and all his Priests, I needed to give Zorc the strongest form I could, to win against them -- I gave him my ka.
But the Pharaoh used his name, living magic, and sealed all the shadow magic away at the cost of his memories. As we were the shadow's players, both of us were were sealed too -- he in his Item, the Puzzle, and myself in the Ring.
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You-- gave him your... But that's--
[Congratulations, Bakura, you've stumped her for forming complete sentences with how ridiculous that was. He gave something he calls an evil god part of his soul, and then spent the best part of three thousand years sealed with it. Raine can't even begin. She considers, briefly, slapping him again, but the trouble is she can see very clearly how desperation and being so alone would have led Bakura right to that.]
[Did he never stop to think that maybe he was worth more than just an instrument of vengeance? Raine is equal measures horrified and furious and something approaching offended, both by him and on his behalf, and the end result is that she just keeps staring at him for a long moment.]
You idiot.
[But she closes her eyes, and scrubs a hand across her face, and when she looks at him again it's a studying look.]
Why tell me all this now? Full disclosure was hardly necessary.
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Because you should know.
[ You should know who you're spending your care on, and what I am. ]
And I should have told you sooner.
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