[ Margaret locks the bathroom door with a self-satisfied smirk ( and a lot of vindictiveness ) and steps back to survey her handiwork, the tip of her tongue rubbing over one canine as she narrows her eyes at the door that is shaking with the force behind two fists thumping against the other side.
Going to the school at Falner is hard and not nearly as fun as she thought it would be. The first few weeks were okay, but then one of the boys in the class she shared with her brother had started bothering Renae, constantly coming over and picking the seat to his other side -- or behind him, or in front -- once she'd convinced her twin that the seat by the window had an excellent view of the lawn and Father Clayce.
It's been the worst birthday month she's ever had, her mother leaving them to the care of her uncles while she was away on an assignmebt where they couldn't tag along. She understands, at some level, that things are changing, now that they have come to live at Netsach--
--but did it really have to change so much?
She hears the boy call out ( pitiful, really ) but she's angry and she's hurt and she still remembers the confused look on her brother's face when she'd practically dragged him away before confronting the offending party. ]
[And what Maggie is going to hear next is a yelp of surprise from the boy, followed by the sight of him floating rather harmlessly up and out of the cell that she locked him in.
Have one Aidan Clayce standing in the doorway, one hand outstretched, each gesture directing the boy towards him, then back on his own two feet beside one very unimpressed Malice King looking at Maggie straight in the eye.
There is also their headmistress hovering anxiously in the background. It is hard to tell if she is embarrassed, fearful, angry, or all three and then some, much less about what.
There is, as well, a Calintz Duskrider close by, trying very hard not to grin. You sure you got this, Clayce? That look seems to say.]
I'll catch up with you later, Calintz.
[And even while he's speaking to his companion, his eyes have not moved away from Maggie, not for one second.]
Edited 2014-01-02 03:00 (UTC)
IT IS THE BEST USERNAME and i cannot take credit for it sob
[ Mutinous is a word she has yet to properly encounter, but that is precisely the word to describe the look on her face when unseen forces undo her improvised plan. When she whirls around, there is a distinct moment of surprise ( shock, really ) at the sight of Father Aidan Clayce with his eyes leveled on her own.
She barely registers the headmistress, only somewhat notes with the quick darting of her gaze, one oddly amused-looking Calintz Duskrider ( she knows him, she likes Calintz, why couldn't they have stayed at the Heartnet-Duskrider house instead of where her snooty Uncle Nathaniel barely even acknowledges her mother when they sit down for dinner at home ) before her eyes turn back to the boy and then up to Father Clayce who is looking at her like she were a bug.
She crosses her arms then.
He's not so scary ( yes, Maggie, that is totally not your lower lip trembling just a smidge ) -- she's seen scary.
And besides. He's Renae's favorite. Not hers.
If it were Alistair giving that look, it would be a completely different thing.
[It doesn't take much to know exactly what she is thinking and what she is feeling even if she has no idea. Children were always much more transparent than they thought they were.
He's still watching her even as the headmistress is babbling, alternately apologizing/begging for understanding/trying to convince the Voidseeker that this was beneath his attention. He wants, for a moment, to have Cisco's daughter know what it is like to have to stare one's faults in the face. The rest will follow.]
I will take care of this, Miss Larkin. [Breaking the facade just long enough to turn and smile at the headmistress (no, this was not her fault at all, she was not going to lose her job over this). Then he's looking first at the boy, then at Maggie.]
You two. With me. Now.
[Then he's turning and walking away, as if he does not care whether they will listen to him or not.]
[ He turns to leave and she digs her heels in, even if her stomach feels sour and her lips press together.
The boy was bothering her brother. Bothering. For weeks. Interrupting his reading and taking his attention away in the middle of class and joining them when they were having breaks. She can't even bother Renae when he's reading at home, whenever he retreats away from their large and slightly overwhelming extended family to the room that was once their mother's from a time so long ago. What right did this perfect stranger have to do something she couldn't?
There's a gentle nudge at her back and she makes a face, but the hands behind are small and insistent and familiar and she finally gives in because she will do everything her brother asks even if she doesn't like it. ]
Alright already. [ She hisses and marches off after where the Dragon had gone, and if she glances back once at her brother's stupidly imploring face, she only does it to puff her cheeks out at him. ]
[Aidan, in the meantime, was walking down the hallway and out towards the baseball field behind the school, the one right at the edge of the North Falner Forest. The boy Maggie had been "punishing" was trailing along just a few steps behind with his eyes fixed rather pointedly on the floor.
It's only after the Voidseeker asks him, quietly, if he's all right that the kid starts tearing up. There's a gesture from the man, and the bite wound is healing. Then there is Aidan reaching out, albeit briefly, to pat the boy's head.
Perhaps Maggie caught that, right before all three of them were heading out into the sunlight. Aidan appeared to be making a beeline for one of the grassy hills just outside of the triangle.]
[ She does, in fact, catch it: Aidan's lips moving to the question, the boy ( she's never bothered to learn his name, his only interest had been Renae and that had made her feel sick to the pit of her stomach ) tearing up, his fingers going to where she'd bitten him on the arm before she'd shoved and locked him in the bathroom. When Aidan waves his hand, she's about five feet away and it's not lost on her at all, the way the wound heals, the crying lessens and something uncomfortably close to guilt gnaws at the edges of her being.
She's a stubborn thing though -- and angry, in a way that she never was, when she, Renae and her mother were on the run. Back then, it had been nightmares and moving to a new place and curling around Renae, afraid, because there were nights that Mom was always stepping out of the house to run through the woods as a fox and Maggie was always so terrified that she wouldn't be there in the morning.
She lags behind, kicking at the grass and glancing back to the way she came, wondering why Renae's left her like this, to speak to the Dragon and the offending party on her own. ]
[It isn't too long before Aidan is sitting down on the grass, right at his favorite spot on campus. The wind is nice here, and no one bothers coming around but him.
It's the perfect place for a nice, long talk.
He tells the boy to sit at his left, then he looks up at Maggie. To her, though, he doesn't say anything: he simply points to his right.]
[ Something in her hind brain is telling her to bend, to just sit down just as she's been told.
But she doesn't want to, feels it adds more insult to injury and so her arms tighten over her chest and she breathes hard. ]
I've been sitting on my butt the whole day in class, Father Aidan. [ Her voice is prim and deceptively polite. ] Thank you, sir, but I'm okay to stand.
[He can feel the way the boy sitting to his left is shrinking, closing in on himself. He knows the child; he knows all of them.
But Maggie is his focus for the moment. She is, after all, the one who is more damaged between the two of them. It's written all over her face, and between her words.]
[ There is a lot that she could say -- the boy was always tagging along, asking questions, murmuring in class and writing down notes on the margins of his textbook to show to Renae, or glancing back towards them if all the seats but the one in front of them were filled.
She could talk about how her brother had stopped standing up to go with her whenever she needed to step out, and all because this boy was engaging him in one-sided conversation. ]
He talks too much. [ She says instead, conviction lining every syllable. ]
[Her 'conviction' was definitely going to have to match up to the firmness in Aidan's tone, which simply wasn't going to happen. His expression was as stone faced as ever, and it was almost as if the other boy was not in the area.
[ Her jaw clenches, and for a moment she looks like she might not reply.
It's frustrating how everything she knew as constant and fixed are suddenly not, because the kids had stopped reaching out to them the way they had at the very beginning, because it is hard to follow the things that every other kid knows when these are experiences that shs and her brother never had. ]
He just really talks too much. He bothers Renae in class, he tags along like a tail we don't need, he passes notes and hasn't stopped, not even when our teacher told him not to be distracting.
[There's only too much in everything that the child is NOT saying, and is trying to hide. There is even more that she can't even understand for herself.]
Did your brother ever say, specifically, that this boy was bothering him?
[ She goes quiet, and the urge to drop her gaze to her hands weighs like the pressure building in her chest.
Why was he asking if Renae had to say things specifically, as if to imply that she couldn't possibly know what was going on in her twin's head. How could this man who had lived so strong for so very, very long, surrounded by so much in abundance, ever understand what it was like to have only the barest of...
She's breathing hard now, lips pressed together in defiance. ]
I know Renae best. [ She hisses, just barely aware that her fingers have fisted at her sides.
And then quieter, but no less resolute: ] I know him best. Me.
I don't doubt that. What I do doubt is your ability to keep your interests separate from his.
[It's at that point that Aidan's tone becomes gentler, as does the look in his eyes. People who love the most tend to do the most damage, after all, and it only gets worse when they have the best of intentions...
...Or when they need even more attention than the recipient of their affections.
He turns to the boy at that point, because he knows Maggie needs some time to absorb the gravity of his statement.]
What were you trying to do, Alan, while 'bothering' Renae?
[The answer is simple, as expected.
"I-I just wanted to be his friend, sir. Kinda wanted to be both their friend."
[ She sniffs then. Stubborn, digging her heels into the ground because there's a sense of static in her head, like nothing makes sense, like nothing connects and all she can hear is the way her breathing sounds too loud -- not even in her ears, though it is there too.
[The damage has been done: that much is obvious in the girl's reaction.
He focuses his attentions on the boy, and smiles.]
You can go now, Alan. We'll talk more later.
[There's the Deer In Headlights Look, of course, of a boy who originally thought that he was in Deep Shit then realized that he was free to go. Then another look, this time directed at Maggie.
A hand on Alan's shoulder, however, is more than enough to get him going. Aidan watches the boy leave, then turns back to Maggie.
He's not going anytime soon. He has all the time in the world to fix this.]
[ She hates him. He's not nice at all, the Dragon. He's not anything like what Mom had told them, nothing at all.
Weren't you afraid, Mama?
The first time I saw Aidan? No, not really. But the second time, yes. You have to understand, sweetheart: I was a newly Changed fox, and anything bigger, anything that big, is a predator you learn to either trick or respect.
And with Aidan... let's just say I felt like a toothpick he could chew on.
She's wiping furiously at her eyes then, walking without direction until she nearly trips on one of the plates sitting quietly on the field, and snaps to attention--
--to find her eyes fixed on a pair, in the distance, that she knows ( she does, she does ) better than her own. ]
[He doesn't need to follow her gaze to know what - who - she is looking at. He and Rethe could talk about this later, if they wanted to. There was no 'need' for the two of them, not with something like this.
So he's keeping his attentions focused on Maggie. To ask her if she's okay is an insult: she's as proud as her mother was, and - in some ways - always has been. So he's moving, crouching right in front of her. Watching, and waiting.]
I think you and I need to talk.
[No need to order this one around. She needs to come around all on her own this time.]
[ Maggie doesn't nod, doesn't say okay or yes, sir like she would if this was Alistair. She just stiffly huffs ( a tiny puff of air slipping past pursed lips ) and slumps right down to sit. ]
I'm tired. [ Not really. ] That's only why I'm sitting.
March 2040 | The Adjustment Period
Going to the school at Falner is hard and not nearly as fun as she thought it would be. The first few weeks were okay, but then one of the boys in the class she shared with her brother had started bothering Renae, constantly coming over and picking the seat to his other side -- or behind him, or in front -- once she'd convinced her twin that the seat by the window had an excellent view of the lawn and Father Clayce.
It's been the worst birthday month she's ever had, her mother leaving them to the care of her uncles while she was away on an assignmebt where they couldn't tag along. She understands, at some level, that things are changing, now that they have come to live at Netsach--
--but did it really have to change so much?
She hears the boy call out ( pitiful, really ) but she's angry and she's hurt and she still remembers the confused look on her brother's face when she'd practically dragged him away before confronting the offending party. ]
Lmfao will never get over that username.
Have one Aidan Clayce standing in the doorway, one hand outstretched, each gesture directing the boy towards him, then back on his own two feet beside one very unimpressed Malice King looking at Maggie straight in the eye.
There is also their headmistress hovering anxiously in the background. It is hard to tell if she is embarrassed, fearful, angry, or all three and then some, much less about what.
There is, as well, a Calintz Duskrider close by, trying very hard not to grin. You sure you got this, Clayce? That look seems to say.]
I'll catch up with you later, Calintz.
[And even while he's speaking to his companion, his eyes have not moved away from Maggie, not for one second.]
IT IS THE BEST USERNAME and i cannot take credit for it sob
She barely registers the headmistress, only somewhat notes with the quick darting of her gaze, one oddly amused-looking Calintz Duskrider ( she knows him, she likes Calintz, why couldn't they have stayed at the Heartnet-Duskrider house instead of where her snooty Uncle Nathaniel barely even acknowledges her mother when they sit down for dinner at home ) before her eyes turn back to the boy and then up to Father Clayce who is looking at her like she were a bug.
She crosses her arms then.
He's not so scary ( yes, Maggie, that is totally not your lower lip trembling just a smidge ) -- she's seen scary.
And besides. He's Renae's favorite. Not hers.
If it were Alistair giving that look, it would be a completely different thing.
Her chin juts out a little at that. ]
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He's still watching her even as the headmistress is babbling, alternately apologizing/begging for understanding/trying to convince the Voidseeker that this was beneath his attention. He wants, for a moment, to have Cisco's daughter know what it is like to have to stare one's faults in the face. The rest will follow.]
I will take care of this, Miss Larkin. [Breaking the facade just long enough to turn and smile at the headmistress (no, this was not her fault at all, she was not going to lose her job over this). Then he's looking first at the boy, then at Maggie.]
You two. With me. Now.
[Then he's turning and walking away, as if he does not care whether they will listen to him or not.]
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The boy was bothering her brother. Bothering. For weeks. Interrupting his reading and taking his attention away in the middle of class and joining them when they were having breaks. She can't even bother Renae when he's reading at home, whenever he retreats away from their large and slightly overwhelming extended family to the room that was once their mother's from a time so long ago. What right did this perfect stranger have to do something she couldn't?
There's a gentle nudge at her back and she makes a face, but the hands behind are small and insistent and familiar and she finally gives in because she will do everything her brother asks even if she doesn't like it. ]
Alright already. [ She hisses and marches off after where the Dragon had gone, and if she glances back once at her brother's stupidly imploring face, she only does it to puff her cheeks out at him. ]
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It's only after the Voidseeker asks him, quietly, if he's all right that the kid starts tearing up. There's a gesture from the man, and the bite wound is healing. Then there is Aidan reaching out, albeit briefly, to pat the boy's head.
Perhaps Maggie caught that, right before all three of them were heading out into the sunlight. Aidan appeared to be making a beeline for one of the grassy hills just outside of the triangle.]
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She's a stubborn thing though -- and angry, in a way that she never was, when she, Renae and her mother were on the run. Back then, it had been nightmares and moving to a new place and curling around Renae, afraid, because there were nights that Mom was always stepping out of the house to run through the woods as a fox and Maggie was always so terrified that she wouldn't be there in the morning.
She lags behind, kicking at the grass and glancing back to the way she came, wondering why Renae's left her like this, to speak to the Dragon and the offending party on her own. ]
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It's the perfect place for a nice, long talk.
He tells the boy to sit at his left, then he looks up at Maggie. To her, though, he doesn't say anything: he simply points to his right.]
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( She's not sorry. She's not. And he can't make her feel sorry. ) ]
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Margaret Montelibano. [He speaks very, very quietly, just enough for a bit of the dragon to come out behind the skin and cadence of a man.] Sit down.
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But she doesn't want to, feels it adds more insult to injury and so her arms tighten over her chest and she breathes hard. ]
I've been sitting on my butt the whole day in class, Father Aidan. [ Her voice is prim and deceptively polite. ] Thank you, sir, but I'm okay to stand.
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Let's hope that you are.
[This was going to take a while. Then, as if to prove his point, he starts with her.]
What happened?
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He was bothering Renae.
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[He can feel the way the boy sitting to his left is shrinking, closing in on himself. He knows the child; he knows all of them.
But Maggie is his focus for the moment. She is, after all, the one who is more damaged between the two of them. It's written all over her face, and between her words.]
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She could talk about how her brother had stopped standing up to go with her whenever she needed to step out, and all because this boy was engaging him in one-sided conversation. ]
He talks too much. [ She says instead, conviction lining every syllable. ]
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[Her 'conviction' was definitely going to have to match up to the firmness in Aidan's tone, which simply wasn't going to happen. His expression was as stone faced as ever, and it was almost as if the other boy was not in the area.
He'd bring that one in later.]
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It's frustrating how everything she knew as constant and fixed are suddenly not, because the kids had stopped reaching out to them the way they had at the very beginning, because it is hard to follow the things that every other kid knows when these are experiences that shs and her brother never had. ]
He just really talks too much. He bothers Renae in class, he tags along like a tail we don't need, he passes notes and hasn't stopped, not even when our teacher told him not to be distracting.
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[There's only too much in everything that the child is NOT saying, and is trying to hide. There is even more that she can't even understand for herself.]
Did your brother ever say, specifically, that this boy was bothering him?
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Why was he asking if Renae had to say things specifically, as if to imply that she couldn't possibly know what was going on in her twin's head. How could this man who had lived so strong for so very, very long, surrounded by so much in abundance, ever understand what it was like to have only the barest of...
She's breathing hard now, lips pressed together in defiance. ]
I know Renae best. [ She hisses, just barely aware that her fingers have fisted at her sides.
And then quieter, but no less resolute: ] I know him best. Me.
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[It's at that point that Aidan's tone becomes gentler, as does the look in his eyes. People who love the most tend to do the most damage, after all, and it only gets worse when they have the best of intentions...
...Or when they need even more attention than the recipient of their affections.
He turns to the boy at that point, because he knows Maggie needs some time to absorb the gravity of his statement.]
What were you trying to do, Alan, while 'bothering' Renae?
[The answer is simple, as expected.
"I-I just wanted to be his friend, sir. Kinda wanted to be both their friend."
And now he's turning back to face the girl.
Ball's in your court now, Margaret.]
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She spins on her heel at that.
Because she's not wrong.
And she is not going to cry. ]
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He focuses his attentions on the boy, and smiles.]
You can go now, Alan. We'll talk more later.
[There's the Deer In Headlights Look, of course, of a boy who originally thought that he was in Deep Shit then realized that he was free to go. Then another look, this time directed at Maggie.
A hand on Alan's shoulder, however, is more than enough to get him going. Aidan watches the boy leave, then turns back to Maggie.
He's not going anytime soon. He has all the time in the world to fix this.]
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Weren't you afraid, Mama?
The first time I saw Aidan? No, not really. But the second time, yes. You have to understand, sweetheart: I was a newly Changed fox, and anything bigger, anything that big, is a predator you learn to either trick or respect.
And with Aidan... let's just say I felt like a toothpick he could chew on.
She's wiping furiously at her eyes then, walking without direction until she nearly trips on one of the plates sitting quietly on the field, and snaps to attention--
--to find her eyes fixed on a pair, in the distance, that she knows ( she does, she does ) better than her own. ]
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So he's keeping his attentions focused on Maggie. To ask her if she's okay is an insult: she's as proud as her mother was, and - in some ways - always has been. So he's moving, crouching right in front of her. Watching, and waiting.]
I think you and I need to talk.
[No need to order this one around. She needs to come around all on her own this time.]
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I'm tired. [ Not really. ] That's only why I'm sitting.
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Belated edit because hahaha, OCD...
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