"I'm pretty sure Arthas was one, but no one ever gave him back his powers. So I have no idea what exactly she can do, and the minute her warden gives them back I'm planning to ask for a demonstration." Although he'll do it tactfully. Of course.
"Say the Admiral gave you a power of your choice. What would it be?"
He considers it as he cuts up the apples, using his hip to try and move Lark out of the way so he can check on the oats. "Ah, I don't know. Well, I think someone asked me this once and I gave the most bullshit of bullshit answers. I don't even remember it now. But if the Admiral gave me a power - hm."
He knows he's going to have to justify it after he says it, so he actually gives it a bit of real thought. "The power to manipulate time."
He can guess what point in time Pagan might change, or avoid. He doesn't want to make him dwell on that so, instead, "Who, or where, do you see yourself being after you've manipulated what you wanted?"
He shakes his head. "It's not like that," he assures him. "But think about it. Having all the time in the world to make a decision? To stop time and consider every angle, instead of making split second decisions every second? It isn't about going back and forth in time. It isn't about changing the past," he tells him significantly.
"It's about having time to consider what should be done."
"That's what I tried to view this place as," he admits, and part of him is annoyed at how naïve he'd been. The rest of him has managed to wrestle some use out of everything at home having stopped as he spent a decade here.
"But if I could take that power, spend time perfecting my next move like that?" He'd take it in a heartbeat. "That's clever. I've never heard anyone pick that."
"Exactly. It's what this place is," he tells him. "Practice for the real world, isn't it? Giving us time to think about what our next move should be. Punishment for speaking wrong, doing wrong, but oh, it's just a slap on the wrist. Because the real world will be worse. But this place can't be the real world, can it? Can't have real world consequences because we've already fucked that up." He laughs.
"This is nursery school, my boy." He stirs the oats. "And I - appreciate it now. Having been here."
"It's endless practice. It's a thousand opportunities to learn something you would never have the time to master at home." He peers at the oats, takes a spoon, steals a bit. It's hot, though, so he doesn't put it in his mouth right away.
"I try not to say any of that to anyone here. But I'm glad," so, so glad, "that you see it, too."
There is nothing more frustrating than wanting to dissect events for lessons--not ones given by the Admiral but ones found through intuition--and having no one at all to discuss it with.
"Oh, I've known that for a while," he says dismissively, spooning a bit of the oats into a bowl with the chopped apples. "Try it with that. And be less impatient so you don't burn your mouth like a damn child."
"I have never been called impatient in- ow," yes, it is still very hot, and yes, Lark ate it anyway.
"It's good," he says, in the muffled way anyone who has just burned the roof of his mouth might.
He's very notably more patient now. "Hey, do you have a razor?" He hasn't had a chance to shave since he woke up, and he has a nice two week beard. It's where he's gone most grey, as it happens. "I hid mine from Alec but I'm pretty sure he found it and hid it from me."
He watches this happen just the same way as he would a child.
Because that's exactly what's happening.
"Hm," he says, clearing his throat and making a gesture towards the bathroom. "Everything's in there." Pagan has moved in. Once it was clear that Lark was not waking up in a matter of a day or so, he brought in all of his things for a long stay. Clothes. Blankets. A pillow.
He takes the time to shave, and then to make sure everything is exactly as where Pagan put it. Then he takes his bowl of oatmeal, which is still warm but won't burn, and devours it in perhaps five or six bites.
Pagan just watches him with a laugh from his spot at the table. "There's plenty. That's the thing with oatmeal. Now, I assume you'll want to get back into the mess of this place and I can get back to my life."
He has another bowl, but he sits at the couch and beckons Pagan to join him. It's a fairly clear sign he's in no hurry to get them out the door. "How has the mess been? Anything I'd be sorry I missed?"
He turns the television on mute and joins him, shrugging. "Would you believe me if I said I haven't been paying attention?" he asks. "I - well, it's so cyclical. He kills, she kills, we kill, and then we're back at the beginning. I'd rather watch my dramas." He gestures to the television.
"Good." A long sigh. "Nothing is ever going to change the violence that goes on around here, but you not being involved is...good. I'm glad. I think it's even a good sign of progress." Even if it's only coming from a place of exhaustion.
"That makes it sound like you have some idea of where you want to be headed," he says, quietly, wanting to let Pagan think. "I don't mean just 'off the ship'. Who do you see yourself becoming that makes this version of yourself feel stagnant?"
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"Say the Admiral gave you a power of your choice. What would it be?"
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He knows he's going to have to justify it after he says it, so he actually gives it a bit of real thought. "The power to manipulate time."
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"It's about having time to consider what should be done."
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"But if I could take that power, spend time perfecting my next move like that?" He'd take it in a heartbeat. "That's clever. I've never heard anyone pick that."
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"This is nursery school, my boy." He stirs the oats. "And I - appreciate it now. Having been here."
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"I try not to say any of that to anyone here. But I'm glad," so, so glad, "that you see it, too."
There is nothing more frustrating than wanting to dissect events for lessons--not ones given by the Admiral but ones found through intuition--and having no one at all to discuss it with.
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He shakes his head.
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"It's good," he says, in the muffled way anyone who has just burned the roof of his mouth might.
He's very notably more patient now. "Hey, do you have a razor?" He hasn't had a chance to shave since he woke up, and he has a nice two week beard. It's where he's gone most grey, as it happens. "I hid mine from Alec but I'm pretty sure he found it and hid it from me."
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Because that's exactly what's happening.
"Hm," he says, clearing his throat and making a gesture towards the bathroom. "Everything's in there." Pagan has moved in. Once it was clear that Lark was not waking up in a matter of a day or so, he brought in all of his things for a long stay. Clothes. Blankets. A pillow.
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Does he sound sad about that?
Maybe.
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He doesn't sound convinced.
"Sometimes I feel like I'm just standing still here."
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