Would you like to ask me, then? I wouldn't lie to you.
[ it's become part of their ritual, hasn't it, to ignore and talk past the things they've had to do with each other under duress? it always seemed like the best course of action, if only to spare sensibilities. but perhaps that isn't the wisest course of action, if all that's being left unsaid can so easily be misinterpreted as something bad. ]
I think of you as a very dear person to me, Miss Hamel. You are beautiful inside and out. If I were more selfish, I would even call you a friend.
I think what happened was unfortunate, but not because of what we did, but that it had to happen in the way it did. You suffered something you couldn't control because you went out of your way to help me. Helping you in return was the least I could do, and I don't regret it.
And I know if you ever needed help again, in any way, I wouldn't hesitate to do what I can.
You have only ever been kind and patient and helpful, Miss Hamel. I doubt there is anything you could do that would make you an inconvenience in my eyes.
And I feel the same. I don't consider helping you as going out of my way... at some point, my Mania would have acted up, and it might not have been you who was nearby. I was very fortunate.
But I have to admit, I'm not certain why you would think calling me a friend would be selfish.
I'm... glad you can look to me as someone safe you can rely on.
[ though perhaps conflicted is the better word. ]
Mine is not a life too dangerous for keeping precious things, Miss Hamel. Admittedly, the circumstances here are a little different, but I haven't done nearly enough to earn a friend as kind as you.
I don't know the circumstances that would have you feeling this way, and I won't press for it if makes you uncomfortable... but if you would ever like to talk about it, please know you will always have my ear.
[ as promised, marco is there and waiting for her. there is wind, somehow, despite still technically being within the hotel. he imagines it's magic, much like the vale and gardens invoke a feeling of being "outside," and like everything else about this place he doesn't trust it.
still, he has found a bench they can sit on, in case she doesn't have a specific place in mind already. he stands when she approaches, ready to receive her. ]
[ he maintains his distance, though he finds he has to suppress the urge to step forward and reach out to her, especially when she curls in on herself like that. his hands flex briefly, but they stay steady at his sides. ]
I can't say there's ease in any of it. But nonetheless...
[ She nods to the bench, letting him know he can sit down again as she moves to place herself at some distance from him, but directly in front. Center stage, as it were. ]
[ his expression crumples, briefly, into one of empathy. he can understand the struggle in explaining one's self... but he has been on the other end of that; he hopes she can feel some of the lightness he had.
that's why he swallows back the urge to be near her, to physically offer comfort with his presence, and step back so he can reclaim his seat on the bench. back straight, hands curling over his knees, he nods. ]
[ Hamel closes her eyes, arms drifting above her head, almost unconsciously.
And then, she dances.
Within a few seconds, the area around them blurs, reforms. Hamel herself is gone, but there's another Hamel now, dancing a much bolder, playful dance for a crowd that chants for more. As she gazes out at the crowd, however, all she can see is... negativity. Dark jellyfish, phantoms, grasping for her, and it's too much--she wavers mid-step, collapses on the stage.
Words, a soft voice set against a fiercer one. The music is equally soft but sorrowful. They're arguing; the male voice is telling her not to return to the stage, that he knows she's afraid of it. The female voice, Hamel's, answers that she must.
A man with hair the same shade of Hamel's stumbles towards a carnival; the music warps, becomes happy but manically so. And as Hamel runs after him, pleading, Norman, stop--
There's so much madness in the air. It presses down, unforgiving, and Hamel abruptly realizes--this had been a carnival, once, an attempted revival, but thanks to the shadowy figure, girlish in voice and silhouette, everyone there has been pulled into the Deep Mania. Everyone is a Corruptor now, except her brother, and Hamel herself, already a Sinner.
The figure offers her a deal--to take her brother's place, to join her in the carnival, because she's different, isn't she? She's different from all of them.
Hamel doesn't think twice. Her illusion overtakes the carnival, the Corruptors, the figure. It forces her brother out. And she dances. To maintain the illusion. To soothe the agonized hearts of the Corruptors, who can no longer return home or to themselves. To put that figure to sleep.
Over and over and over again. For years upon years upon years, unaging.
She is eventually pulled free from it. Despite her refusal. Despite how the Corruptors beg her not to leave them, clinging to her skirts, screaming and wailing, the Chief manages to extricate her.
And it's then that she learns that her brother never left. Never moved on with his life. Hamel's time had remained unchanging, but his had sped up, waiting just outside the carnival for his sister until he had perished, an old man. ]
[ the illusions are so much more different than the ones she'd invoke during their dances. in these, there is no warmth, no comfort. just something cold and hard, like the truth, and by the end marco finds himself seeking the security of that hug he keeps wanting to offer hamel — not just for her. but for himself too.
he knows all too well the crushing weight of failure in realizing you didn't actually spare anyone any of the pain and suffering you worked so far to protect them from. ]
...How could you have known?
[ he forces himself to stay seated, to not approach her until she wants it — until she deems herself deserving of the physical comfort he so desperately wants to offer her. maybe, even now, with just his voice, is he presuming too much. offering what she does not think she should accept.
(funny, how helpless one feels to be on the other side.) ]
You only did what you thought would help. You couldn't have known what went on beyond your prison.
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Would you like to ask me, then? I wouldn't lie to you.
[ it's become part of their ritual, hasn't it, to ignore and talk past the things they've had to do with each other under duress? it always seemed like the best course of action, if only to spare sensibilities. but perhaps that isn't the wisest course of action, if all that's being left unsaid can so easily be misinterpreted as something bad. ]
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You would truthfully tell me the entirety of your thoughts about it?
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choose your words very carefully, marco. ]
I'll answer truthfully whatever you wish to know.
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[ Sorry, Marco. ]
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I think of you as a very dear person to me, Miss Hamel. You are beautiful inside and out. If I were more selfish, I would even call you a friend.
I think what happened was unfortunate, but not because of what we did, but that it had to happen in the way it did. You suffered something you couldn't control because you went out of your way to help me. Helping you in return was the least I could do, and I don't regret it.
And I know if you ever needed help again, in any way, I wouldn't hesitate to do what I can.
You have only ever been kind and patient and helpful, Miss Hamel. I doubt there is anything you could do that would make you an inconvenience in my eyes.
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And I feel the same. I don't consider helping you as going out of my way... at some point, my Mania would have acted up, and it might not have been you who was nearby. I was very fortunate.
But I have to admit, I'm not certain why you would think calling me a friend would be selfish.
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[ though perhaps conflicted is the better word. ]
Mine is not a life too dangerous for keeping precious things, Miss Hamel. Admittedly, the circumstances here are a little different, but I haven't done nearly enough to earn a friend as kind as you.
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I don't know the circumstances that would have you feeling this way, and I won't press for it if makes you uncomfortable... but if you would ever like to talk about it, please know you will always have my ear.
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It's likely something that should be discussed in a more familiar manner.
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Now?
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[ It's never really fine. ]
— action ;
still, he has found a bench they can sit on, in case she doesn't have a specific place in mind already. he stands when she approaches, ready to receive her. ]
Miss Hamel. Hello.
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[ With a little nod and an even smaller smile. She has her arms wrapped around herself--not defensively, more for self-soothing purposes. ]
... I think, instead of explaining it, I ought to be able to show you. If you're willing?
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[ he maintains his distance, though he finds he has to suppress the urge to step forward and reach out to her, especially when she curls in on herself like that. his hands flex briefly, but they stay steady at his sides. ]
Whatever will be easiest for you, Miss Hamel.
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[ She nods to the bench, letting him know he can sit down again as she moves to place herself at some distance from him, but directly in front. Center stage, as it were. ]
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that's why he swallows back the urge to be near her, to physically offer comfort with his presence, and step back so he can reclaim his seat on the bench. back straight, hands curling over his knees, he nods. ]
I'm ready.
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And then, she dances.
Within a few seconds, the area around them blurs, reforms. Hamel herself is gone, but there's another Hamel now, dancing a much bolder, playful dance for a crowd that chants for more. As she gazes out at the crowd, however, all she can see is... negativity. Dark jellyfish, phantoms, grasping for her, and it's too much--she wavers mid-step, collapses on the stage.
Words, a soft voice set against a fiercer one. The music is equally soft but sorrowful. They're arguing; the male voice is telling her not to return to the stage, that he knows she's afraid of it. The female voice, Hamel's, answers that she must.
A man with hair the same shade of Hamel's stumbles towards a carnival; the music warps, becomes happy but manically so. And as Hamel runs after him, pleading, Norman, stop--
There's so much madness in the air. It presses down, unforgiving, and Hamel abruptly realizes--this had been a carnival, once, an attempted revival, but thanks to the shadowy figure, girlish in voice and silhouette, everyone there has been pulled into the Deep Mania. Everyone is a Corruptor now, except her brother, and Hamel herself, already a Sinner.
The figure offers her a deal--to take her brother's place, to join her in the carnival, because she's different, isn't she? She's different from all of them.
Hamel doesn't think twice. Her illusion overtakes the carnival, the Corruptors, the figure. It forces her brother out. And she dances. To maintain the illusion. To soothe the agonized hearts of the Corruptors, who can no longer return home or to themselves. To put that figure to sleep.
Over and over and over again. For years upon years upon years, unaging.
She is eventually pulled free from it. Despite her refusal. Despite how the Corruptors beg her not to leave them, clinging to her skirts, screaming and wailing, the Chief manages to extricate her.
And it's then that she learns that her brother never left. Never moved on with his life. Hamel's time had remained unchanging, but his had sped up, waiting just outside the carnival for his sister until he had perished, an old man. ]
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he knows all too well the crushing weight of failure in realizing you didn't actually spare anyone any of the pain and suffering you worked so far to protect them from. ]
...How could you have known?
[ he forces himself to stay seated, to not approach her until she wants it — until she deems herself deserving of the physical comfort he so desperately wants to offer her. maybe, even now, with just his voice, is he presuming too much. offering what she does not think she should accept.
(funny, how helpless one feels to be on the other side.) ]
You only did what you thought would help. You couldn't have known what went on beyond your prison.
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