Goliath (
not_the_philistine) wrote in
trans_92011-10-23 05:27 pm
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Artificial night fell on the City, and Goliath and Bronx both awoke with their usual roars. The gargoyles bursting out of their stone skin were a familiar sound at sunset, and their roars carried over the darkening City.
Goliath dropped from his turret and glided towards the wall that surrounded the castle, landing before the gate that would open it to the rest of the crew. Elisa must have still been asleep or otherwise occupying herself in the castle, because the gate was closed. Goliath considered the gates, and the high, newly repaired wall that kept most visitors out of the castle. His instincts to keep the castle fortified against entry during his sleep were still strong, but he considered them as objectively as possible while examining the gate.
In times of conflict, this castle COULD still be used as a fortress. But if he was to open it to the crew formally, perhaps it was time to leave them open, and trust to the crew that he sought to protect.
Or perhaps that was still a step that could wait until he had met more of the crew, and trusted them a little better.
[ooc: a few players have expressed an interest in having their characters sneak into the castle to explore while Goliath is asleep during the day. If you have a character who would snoop around an old castle uninvited, feel free to tag in!]
Goliath dropped from his turret and glided towards the wall that surrounded the castle, landing before the gate that would open it to the rest of the crew. Elisa must have still been asleep or otherwise occupying herself in the castle, because the gate was closed. Goliath considered the gates, and the high, newly repaired wall that kept most visitors out of the castle. His instincts to keep the castle fortified against entry during his sleep were still strong, but he considered them as objectively as possible while examining the gate.
In times of conflict, this castle COULD still be used as a fortress. But if he was to open it to the crew formally, perhaps it was time to leave them open, and trust to the crew that he sought to protect.
Or perhaps that was still a step that could wait until he had met more of the crew, and trusted them a little better.
[ooc: a few players have expressed an interest in having their characters sneak into the castle to explore while Goliath is asleep during the day. If you have a character who would snoop around an old castle uninvited, feel free to tag in!]
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"Maybe they're just telling us what we want to hear," she suggested. "Maybe they want us to have hope."
Although they'd have fought without it, it undoubtedly made them stronger.
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Which raised other questions, if it was true - such as why the Daligig considered them better off lied to, even if the lie was for their own good.
"If I could believe it, it would give me comfort."
He set his hand on Elisa's arm, regretting that in sharing his suspicions with her, he was also telling her he believed she would never see her city again.
"I truly hope I am wrong."
For both their sakes - but for her more than his. He could adopt a new home. He had done it already, several times, and it had been a trial he had never wished on her.
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"So do I," she admitted, placing a hand over his. "But I'd rather find out the truth."
If they knew the truth, they could find a way to deal with it.
"It might be my city, but it's the people that make it my home." She just wished she knew how many of her loved ones were actually sleeping in the pods. "We'll cope, whatever happens."
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He'd only met the Mazas under circumstances of duress, but in those times, they had each proven their worth.
"They may not be trustworthy, but they are not fools. I know you will see them again."
He might have been reluctant to make that proclamation before, but he had comforted himself so many times thinking much the same of his own family, and Elisa's presence was all the proof he needed, for the time, to believe it completely.
'We'll cope.' How that 'we' comforted him.
As he had done many times since she'd awoken, he resisted the urge to pull her into his arms and hold her close. It was not in his usual conduct to resist displays of affection, but he had missed her so long that to act on his every urge to do so would have had her in his arms too often to count.
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She believed - hoped - that it was true, but it was still good to hear it from someone else.
"I look forward to getting to see the Daligig, too," she added darkly. It was a detective's job to put together the pieces and get to the bottom of even the most complex of cases. Maybe this case needed a new pair of eyes. There was a chance - and, even if it was a slim chance, it was better than nothing - that she'd be able to find something that the others had missed.
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And he'd stay with her while she questioned them. It wasn't that he was afraid for her safety around the Daligig - if they'd wanted to harm the crew, they would have done so already. He just didn't particularly want to be away from her.
Besides, if the Daligig DID change their minds and decide to hurt some of the crew members, he didn't want to be elsewhere if they decided to start with her.
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"Thank you," she said again, sincerely. For comforting her and for being there for here and for everything.
Which was something else that they still needed to talk about.
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He held her close and took comfort in the familiar warmth of her body, the softness of her hair, in her being there for him to speak to and protect in person at all.
"Much has changed in the time we have been sleeping, but this has not. I will always protect you, and I will always help you to do what needs to be done to protect our home."
Even if their home was this city, or even this strange ship, for now. Whatever else was unspoken or unclear about and between them, this would never not be so.
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For the clan, the city or for them. Stacy couldn't have chosen a more awkward moment if she'd tried.
She paused for a moment before speaking again, almost - but not quite - nervous.
"You know I meant everything I said that morning, right?"
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There'd been a brief point in time when he hadn't been sure of her words, but those doubts had dried up so quickly in the wake of her re-awakening that he presently couldn't think why he would have ever doubted her for a minute.
"I've had a long time to wish I'd been there to find out what would happen next. For the city and the clan - and for us."
He brushed a lock of her hair behind her ear, the backs of his talons resting against her cheek.
"I know this isn't how you wanted to have this conversation." Perhaps not so soon after she'd addressed her feelings to him. Certainly not on a spaceship following the destruction of their world. "It isn't how I wanted to have it, either."
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Even before their world had been destroyed and they found themselves fighting an intergalactic war to restore it, there had been complications. There would always be complications. The question was whether or not they let them matter.
"Normalcy is overrated."
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Goliath brushed her hair back again, smiling with contentment he had thought he had given up on having. Love was complicated - theirs more so than others, but they were complications he wanted to meet and overcome with her.
"There is much I cannot give you that you could still have on this ship," he reminded her, growing serious again for the moment. "And if we can return to Manhattan, we won't have the same freedoms we can have here."
Like, for example, him having rights as a sentient being, which was something he'd come to enjoy.
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"I know. But it's you - this - that I want."
It was strange to think that it had taken the encounter with the hunters (and with Jason in particular) to help her realise that.
"If we get back to Manhattan, we'll deal with it, together."
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He still remembered the kiss she'd given him that morning, so long ago, but pleasant as the memory was, it was a human gesture. Instead, he drew her into his arms again, and the way he held her close and stroked her hair conveyed the same feeling.
Not so long ago, this would have been the point where he would have spoken his heart to her clearly, informed her that he had given up on happiness, that her return had woken him from a sleep of a different kind.
If so much of what he felt for her required great sacrifice on her part in returning those feelings, perhaps those would still have been the right things to say. If he had still been the same person who had never known the loss of a world, of a family, and had not yet known by experience that he could, that he must survive it, perhaps he would have said it anyway.
What he settled on after stroking her hair in silence, his voice soft with gratitude, was - "Just to see you again would have given me joy enough."
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She leaned into his touch, then, after a moment or two, raised her own hand to mirror the gesture.
"Then I guess you're just going to have to get used to having more than that," she teased, though the look in her eyes - a promise that made it clear that she really did mean what she said - was somewhat more serious.
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He returned her seriousness with the sincerity that she knew him well enough to expect.
"There's a lot about this ship that has kept my time here tolerable." Civil rights, for example. "I do not forsee myself tiring of more reasons to be happy."
He didn't mind the idea of putting that to the test, either.
"Elisa, I -"
It might have been the right time to speak his heart plainly, or that moment might still have been a little ways off. He paused to consider this, and to give her time to field his confession if the moment was not right.
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Before she could think of what to say, they were interrupted by the enormous shape winging overhead.
"What the ..?" she exclaimed, turning her gaze upwards instinctively. "What was that?"
She knew what it looked like, of course, but that wasn't necessarily the same thing. Not on a ship like this.
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Instinctively, Goliath pulled Elisa close to him, ready to defend her if he had to. The dragon flew over without giving them notice.
" - that did not emerge from the pods with you, did it?"
Podpops are riots, but even a riot couldn't conceal a dragon of that size.
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"I'd definitely have noticed a dragon," she assured him. "Is there anywhere in the ship that it could have been hiding?"
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The one he knew was a bit smaller, of course.
"Perhaps we should investigate."
That was, of course, the precise moment that a noise elsewhere on the grounds of the castle caught Goliath's attention. He frowned in the direction of the rear wall, where motion had most definitely just caught his eye.
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Maybe the dragon - or whatever it actually was - had been persecuted in the same way that the gargoyles had been persecuted in their world. Which made Elisa wonder why the creature had finally emerged. Had it realised the truth or was something else responsible?
She followed his gaze towards the rear wall, returning her hand to the handle of her hand gun.
"Have we got company?"
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The intruder was closer. Much as he didn't want to leave Elisa and in spite of his thoughts of opening the castle, it was still his territory to secure.
"I'm going to find out. Will you stay, or go with me?"
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And it no longer had the tactical advantage at being at the top of a skyscraper.
"Why don't you investigate the intruder and I'll start looking into the dragon?"
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"No. I don't want you to be alone with the dragon if it turns out to be dangerous."
Nevermind that she'd been alone when she first went to investigate him, and he was most certainly dangerous.
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