[open] never meant to start a fire
Mar. 19th, 2016 06:15 pm![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
It could have ended a few different ways. Nearly all of them would have been a victory. Only one or two of them would have been this.
Eileen had almost assented to chess, this first go around. She had contemplated the odds of staying in place unchallenged long with an initial foray based solely on mental agility, just as much as she had contemplated wandering across traditional Suit lines toward something like throwing daggers or poker. It had all ultimately fallen away, leaving her with just the one choice.
Her biological father's first challenge had been a knife fight, Tobias told her once.
Scherma fights haven't been particularly vogue in the Clubs since the late 1980s, but it isn't difficult to find a Four willing to take her up on it. (The Threes had all been wary. Most of them were young enough to have had an otherworldly sense about her their entire lives--or to simply be petrified of the concept of the King's daughter Challenging them at all.) Sergiu Somma is of the slightly older guard, after all. He's also more than a head and shoulders above her; already not bad odds for a weapon that relies so much reach.
She doesn't ask for a big crowd. Rachel and Elisha are quietly invited, of course, with the grim sort of determination that's been settling into Eileen's features more firmly every day for the last year. Kevin is asked to be a referee. Her uncles are informed, almost in passing, certainly without any proper intention that they'll actually find the time (or allow her cousins to attend). It's mentioned exactly once without a proper date or information to Ethan and Elani. It's assumed that Julien will appear if he wants to.
It's a delicate dance to tell Leigh and Jake it's happening. There's a stumbling rush with both to explain they don't need to come, and that she'll tell them all about it after; and that this is the way things just have to be.
Eileen still likes to wear her hair fairly long, but it's pulled up tight today in the sort of bun that makes the eyes water slightly. She still likes to wear skirts and pastels, but today her slacks are long and everything's black, apart from the pink ribbon winding her hair so tightly to her head. (Her mother would say the crease in her brow is her father all over, but her mother isn't here to take note of it.)
Somma looks as unconcerned as ever when they take the small pitch. Eileen looks as much like a quiet mask as she has in years.
The points of the stiletto knives are slightly blunted, the ends dipped in rather neon paint to catch where the point would have burrowed into flesh from a proper hit. It's meant to be as calm and civilized as this sort of thing can get--first to five touches, no actual blood.
And of the many ways it could have ended, most of them would have stuck to that ambition.
The first point goes to Somma; a sharp jab at her shoulder where she loses her footing just slightly in balzo. Her own first point follows quickly, blade twisting around abruptly in her hand into a pakal grip for what would have been a deep wound just above Somma's hip. Her next point is imperfect; glancing against the ribs as she barely ducks below his own swing down toward her shoulder. His next follows quickly as he catches her tempo and his blade catches her arm.
And it's just a little too hard, apparently, because the blunted tip doesn't prevent the fact that the lime green streak marking his point is slashed through with a thin line of blood.
A piece of her knows that it could have been fine. A piece of her admits that it could still have been a civilized bout the rest of the way up to five. But something in her (something Spade, people might say; something survivalist, something purely angry) won't let that be the case.
She barely waits for the next whistle before she leaps in, catching a point against Somma's other hip. Her silence gives way to a snarl when he anticipates her next feint and his blade catches her wrist as her own finds his ribs. There's a certain severity to the silence between them as Kevin hesitates, exhales, and finally blasts what seems as if it might be the final whistle.
Of the one or two ways it could have gone wrong, this one feels easier to live with.
Because this one neither of them see coming, even as Eileen evades Somma's first broad slash, even as his wrist catches hers briefly like an odd sort of parry, even as she ducks again to slip past his next offensive strike. Neither of them expect it when they briefly step back into a careful circling; neither of them know it will happen when she makes her dart forward.
It's smooth and elegant as she feints left, drawing a fluid forward strike from him. It's graceful as she leaps nearly even with him, blade twisting again in her hand as she swings it down at his back. And it's brutal and ugly that the way she plunges the knife bounces just wrong off the bone of his hip, snapping the blade slightly and letting the momentum of her strike dig the proper broken edge deep into his side. Instinct takes over the minute she feels the give of flesh, and the sharp twist she gives pulls an anguished shout from Somma's lips.
The whistle sounds distant as she wrenches herself from the pitch. She hears Kevin somewhere distant telling her it's all right now. She senses the damp towel thrust into her hands, fingers moving mechanically to handle the blood she hadn't realized was there.
It isn't such a big thing, in the grand scheme. It's a pretty good scratch, Somma chuckles as he shakes her newly-clean hand (and it's such an odd sensation, two damp and sterile hands briefly clutching together). It's probably not going to kill anyone, a medic reassures as he begins hustling Somma toward the surgery. It isn't death. It isn't a terrible accident. It's just that it is enough to leave an odd taste in her mouth while she wonders why it isn't such a terrible thing that it should have been nothing and now it's stitching up a few organs.
Her feet find Elisha first. There's no help for it. Rachel will be next.
Despite that, there won't be words quite ready when she goes to find Jake. It feels a bit like searching for an apology she isn't sure is necessary and feels fairly certain won't actually come.
Eileen had almost assented to chess, this first go around. She had contemplated the odds of staying in place unchallenged long with an initial foray based solely on mental agility, just as much as she had contemplated wandering across traditional Suit lines toward something like throwing daggers or poker. It had all ultimately fallen away, leaving her with just the one choice.
Her biological father's first challenge had been a knife fight, Tobias told her once.
Scherma fights haven't been particularly vogue in the Clubs since the late 1980s, but it isn't difficult to find a Four willing to take her up on it. (The Threes had all been wary. Most of them were young enough to have had an otherworldly sense about her their entire lives--or to simply be petrified of the concept of the King's daughter Challenging them at all.) Sergiu Somma is of the slightly older guard, after all. He's also more than a head and shoulders above her; already not bad odds for a weapon that relies so much reach.
She doesn't ask for a big crowd. Rachel and Elisha are quietly invited, of course, with the grim sort of determination that's been settling into Eileen's features more firmly every day for the last year. Kevin is asked to be a referee. Her uncles are informed, almost in passing, certainly without any proper intention that they'll actually find the time (or allow her cousins to attend). It's mentioned exactly once without a proper date or information to Ethan and Elani. It's assumed that Julien will appear if he wants to.
It's a delicate dance to tell Leigh and Jake it's happening. There's a stumbling rush with both to explain they don't need to come, and that she'll tell them all about it after; and that this is the way things just have to be.
Eileen still likes to wear her hair fairly long, but it's pulled up tight today in the sort of bun that makes the eyes water slightly. She still likes to wear skirts and pastels, but today her slacks are long and everything's black, apart from the pink ribbon winding her hair so tightly to her head. (Her mother would say the crease in her brow is her father all over, but her mother isn't here to take note of it.)
Somma looks as unconcerned as ever when they take the small pitch. Eileen looks as much like a quiet mask as she has in years.
The points of the stiletto knives are slightly blunted, the ends dipped in rather neon paint to catch where the point would have burrowed into flesh from a proper hit. It's meant to be as calm and civilized as this sort of thing can get--first to five touches, no actual blood.
And of the many ways it could have ended, most of them would have stuck to that ambition.
The first point goes to Somma; a sharp jab at her shoulder where she loses her footing just slightly in balzo. Her own first point follows quickly, blade twisting around abruptly in her hand into a pakal grip for what would have been a deep wound just above Somma's hip. Her next point is imperfect; glancing against the ribs as she barely ducks below his own swing down toward her shoulder. His next follows quickly as he catches her tempo and his blade catches her arm.
And it's just a little too hard, apparently, because the blunted tip doesn't prevent the fact that the lime green streak marking his point is slashed through with a thin line of blood.
A piece of her knows that it could have been fine. A piece of her admits that it could still have been a civilized bout the rest of the way up to five. But something in her (something Spade, people might say; something survivalist, something purely angry) won't let that be the case.
She barely waits for the next whistle before she leaps in, catching a point against Somma's other hip. Her silence gives way to a snarl when he anticipates her next feint and his blade catches her wrist as her own finds his ribs. There's a certain severity to the silence between them as Kevin hesitates, exhales, and finally blasts what seems as if it might be the final whistle.
Of the one or two ways it could have gone wrong, this one feels easier to live with.
Because this one neither of them see coming, even as Eileen evades Somma's first broad slash, even as his wrist catches hers briefly like an odd sort of parry, even as she ducks again to slip past his next offensive strike. Neither of them expect it when they briefly step back into a careful circling; neither of them know it will happen when she makes her dart forward.
It's smooth and elegant as she feints left, drawing a fluid forward strike from him. It's graceful as she leaps nearly even with him, blade twisting again in her hand as she swings it down at his back. And it's brutal and ugly that the way she plunges the knife bounces just wrong off the bone of his hip, snapping the blade slightly and letting the momentum of her strike dig the proper broken edge deep into his side. Instinct takes over the minute she feels the give of flesh, and the sharp twist she gives pulls an anguished shout from Somma's lips.
The whistle sounds distant as she wrenches herself from the pitch. She hears Kevin somewhere distant telling her it's all right now. She senses the damp towel thrust into her hands, fingers moving mechanically to handle the blood she hadn't realized was there.
It isn't such a big thing, in the grand scheme. It's a pretty good scratch, Somma chuckles as he shakes her newly-clean hand (and it's such an odd sensation, two damp and sterile hands briefly clutching together). It's probably not going to kill anyone, a medic reassures as he begins hustling Somma toward the surgery. It isn't death. It isn't a terrible accident. It's just that it is enough to leave an odd taste in her mouth while she wonders why it isn't such a terrible thing that it should have been nothing and now it's stitching up a few organs.
Her feet find Elisha first. There's no help for it. Rachel will be next.
Despite that, there won't be words quite ready when she goes to find Jake. It feels a bit like searching for an apology she isn't sure is necessary and feels fairly certain won't actually come.
no subject
Date: 2016-03-22 11:41 pm (UTC)It's just that part of the ache of the moment makes it important to ask.
"Would-- he have been-- upset? With me?"
no subject
Date: 2016-03-23 12:24 am (UTC)"No, little one." There's absolute certainty in her tone, "He would have been-- upset that it's troubled you, but not upset you chose that. He-- he understood this, just as well as we do."
This is the world we were raised in.
no subject
Date: 2016-03-23 07:37 pm (UTC)Her brow doesn't quite clear, however.
"How... do you explain-- something like this? To someone who... doesn't understand?"
no subject
Date: 2016-03-24 04:24 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2016-03-24 08:54 pm (UTC)"...and..." It's probably a frivolous question. It's still one she feels compelled to ask. "...and Dad wouldn't-- be upset about that either?"
no subject
Date: 2016-03-24 09:02 pm (UTC)"No," she says firmly, "He wouldn't be upset."
Neither of her fathers would.
no subject
Date: 2016-03-24 09:48 pm (UTC)"I hate-- feeling in the middle about it."
Feeling half that she wanted to honour tradition and half that it didn't make sense. Feeling half proud of how well she had done and half horrified that she had done so well.
no subject
Date: 2016-03-24 10:43 pm (UTC)The Deck as a whole, mainly, but certainly the words apply for Rachel herself if not her niece.
no subject
Date: 2016-03-25 11:24 am (UTC)"...thank you. For-- being here."
no subject
Date: 2016-03-25 11:36 am (UTC)Which she's fairly certain Eileen knows, but it can't hurt to reaffirm.
"Go and see Elliot and Edgar when you're all done, mm? They're playing in the Clubs gardens."
no subject
Date: 2016-03-25 09:18 pm (UTC)But she can't help tensing up again.
"...I feel like... I shouldn't."
It feels like her hands are still dirty, despite their lack of actual physical blood.
no subject
Date: 2016-03-26 12:02 am (UTC)"Your parents would hold you after Challenges," she murmurs, "It made them feel-- better. Like there was a reason they-- would work as hard as they did and do some of these more-- painful things."
no subject
Date: 2016-03-26 12:04 pm (UTC)"--really?"
...i am missing tags left and right this time around. this time it's my phone's fault, though :|a
Date: 2016-03-27 01:43 am (UTC)Not like the more complicated way love could become, even between a parent and child, as the years went on.
phone, get out of the way of hugs o9
Date: 2016-03-27 03:24 pm (UTC)"...you did?"
There's something oddly reassuring in know her aunt had held her as a baby to fight back this sort of uncertainty. It added to the safety of holding onto her aunt now.
the worst it is o999
Date: 2016-03-27 03:56 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2016-03-27 05:17 pm (UTC)Her attention flits briefly to a blond head sticking to the far wall as she leans properly back into standing on her own two feet. "I'll-- find Uncle Elliot, then. After-- After I talk to Jake."
no subject
Date: 2016-03-27 05:28 pm (UTC)Another press of a kiss to her forehed before she lets go.
"I love you."
Important to say, before Eileen moves on.
no subject
Date: 2016-03-27 06:00 pm (UTC)"Thank you, Aunt Rachel." And, because it's important to affirm, "I love you too."
And she will, once she's more settled and once her hands aren't shaking, find her way to tell Elliot and Edgar the same thing.
no subject
Date: 2016-03-27 07:13 pm (UTC)Even Elliot will try to make himself a little more scarce after greeting Eileen and directing Edgar's attention to his cousin.
Edgar's smile is bright; uncomplicated as he reaches to be picked up, "Edie!"
bbs name was too long to fit on a tag o9
Date: 2016-03-27 07:42 pm (UTC)It hits her oddly like a punch in the gut, seeing his smile. It springs an unexpected flood of tears to her eyes to hear his bright little voice calling her name and see--however blurry--his little hands waving for her to pick him up.
The tremble leaves her fingers as she drops to the ground to sweep the boy up into her arms. It's a tight sort of hug, but Edgar will survive for a moment or two while she composes herself, surely.
curse ridiculously long naming traditions o999
Date: 2016-03-27 08:20 pm (UTC)"Edie Edie Edie," comes the babbled giggle.
and double-barrel names generally o999
Date: 2016-03-27 09:27 pm (UTC)He'll have to handle the continued slide of tears down her cheeks and against his hair, but there's a shaky attempt at a laugh and smile for him as well. "Th-That's right. It's me. S-Smart boy, hm?"
o9999
Date: 2016-03-28 12:17 am (UTC)And he's gonna lean back slightly, bottom lip sticking out fretfully as he notes her tears. One small hand is going to reach up to try to wipe them away.
"Sad?"
no subject
Date: 2016-03-28 12:31 am (UTC)"No." He's little. That's what matters, before the inexplicable truth. "Not s-so much anymore, okay? I was before and it just-- d-didn't all come out. But it's-- okay now. I promise. I'm not sad."
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