Jul 10 2020, 06:52 PM
This was his command. To be the architect of an ender-of-worlds; one creature that resembled the other, but with his stone, his magic, and perfection.
To this end, he had sent Alpha (whose blood had stained the sands, and Vargas tried not to look at that because he could not take it back; and even if he could have, he should not have, better wounded than dead, better punished than made an example of)-... He had sent Alpha to retrieve the rest. He waited for them, now; he could not risk the dragons turning up unchallenged, and killing the human and the hybrid before he had gotten a chance to work. He had, as an afterthought, realized that it would be best if other Masters were present to defend Lord Dhracia's plans, but he had not thought to ask Orthoclase-Alpha for that (a failing, perhaps; or would Astraea try to sabotage his work? He did not know--he doubted it, but the politics between the others were as yet beyond him). He could only hope that nothing interrupted his plans. Her plans.
He began by ensuring both of them were healthy, and would not die: Doctor's doing, that. The vulture had checked them over, and suggested dehydration; water had been provided. Now he'd commanded the child to sit, somewhere near the vulture, a little out of the way--but certainly not out of sight, no; he couldn't risk that--whilst he paraded the human woman up and down.
At times he watched her move, studying the fluidity of her limbs, the joints; at other times he paced alongside her, observing the way her weight distributed, the way she moved her head, her eyes, how her vision functioned as she walked. Studious, with sharp attention to every detail and the flawless Overseer's memory he had been designed with, he watched. He took her limbs in hand, gently, carefully, and moved them: flexing them, pressing them to see how far they would bend--not painful, no; but he required some idea of their range of movement. The human woman--her designation, apparently, was the name 'Beatris'--had proven reticent, reluctant to speak, though her protectiveness toward the girl was clear. The nameless hybrid Vargas had declared Subject Two, and ensured that her health would be Doctor's top priority, for the time being. (After he had looked over Alpha, of course.)
He questioned Beatris. He tested her intelligence, her method of speech, her tone, the patterns of the movement of her tongue. He memorized the little gestures; the lift of a hand here, the aversion of her eyes there, the sweeping back of a strand of hair that had fallen into her face. His attention was rapt on her, solemn and sharp, as he asked her questions.
"Tell me of the surface above."
She spoke, haltingly, reluctantly, afraid and perhaps resentful: she spoke of the soft earth and the open air, of trees, of sunlight, of settlements. But she did not go into detail and, when he pressed, told him with trembling fear that "she" had told her "not to say too much, or she'll know and come kill me..." Vargas wondered, at this; why would Lord Dhracia defend knowledge of the world above, against him? That was... puzzling.
"Do you know why you? Why she selected you, of all of them? Hm? Speak up," he had added, when she did not immediately respond.
The truth, it seemed, was that she did not know. His Lord had simply appeared to her, predatory and sleek and full of sparking, evil grace, and swept her from her home, her world.
He had her, now, running: racing the length of the tunnel, or part of it, at least; and then back. She was gasping for breath, near to sobbing--he would not kill her, but he wanted an idea of her endurance, the way she ran, how she steadied herself every time she stumbled, how the stumbles were growing more and more frequent...
Vargas watched.
Thoughts were simple enough: he was taking notes.
Emotions were another matter.
The dull regret, the pain, that had come from striking Alpha still rocked him. He would not gain that one back; he could not regain its loyalty, its faith, which it had always granted him. He had to push past that and focus on his work.
Lord Dhracia would kill them all, if he failed. Every wretched beast within this cave. All of his creations children and he had only one chance, at this. Or, at least, he assumed that was all he'd be allowed.
But he could not think about this. He had to focus on his work.
And he had to kill this one--this one racing past him again, a sob catching in her throat as she fell, her breaths too fast to count. He had to kill it; it would not see its home again. That was not so unusual--there were many, he had killed. Too many to count--a number beyond numbers, and he had often enjoyed it. No, not the kill. That was but a satisfying conclusion: a knowledge I had done my job properly. Smoothly. With grace, efficiency. No; the joy was in the hunt, and this is no hunt. There is no sport in this. Six eyes narrowed slightly, and the Overseer--no, the Master, the Leviathan--stepped forward, one arm snapping up, the human landing in the crook of it.
He had to focus-...
She looked to him, but there was nothing to see: only the lifeless stare, six toxic eyes and too many nostrils, as he set her back onto his feet.
"Sit down," he told her, his voice quietly rough, and then he looked back up the tunnel; then to the hybrid, Subject Two.
Was this the world he had helped built-? A question that had already struck him several times, since his Lord's departure. It was... what he had wanted; what he had always wanted, what he had taken joy in.
He had everything he had ever wished for, and yet it was beginning to feel hollow, now.
I will make it sleek. Tall and slender, ethereal--or I will try to; long and golden hair, and golden eyes to match. Perhaps too like Tamulus, but that is what she wanted, I presume-? She will want it with my thirsts, the appetites with which they created me-...
Vargas paused in his thoughts, eyeing Two. Only a child, alone, afraid, destined for death at his hands.
This was the world they would build.
He was to make her an ender-of-worlds. A creature of destruction, of entropic madness. She would have a hunger for destruction, subterfuge, decimation, and betrayal...
...But perhaps a tiny spark of something else would not be so bad.
Inspiration struck him, and his eyes narrowed slightly as he studied the girl, a new fire igniting in his chest. A decision was made, in that moment: one that Vargas hesitated on only briefly, wondering if he would have the strength to push through with it, the courage to face what might come. To turn against everything he had fought for, every dutiful slash of claws through flesh, every obedient tightening of jaws on throat. To step down from the altar upon which he could settle himself. To look away from those terrible, wonderful chartreuse eyes that had approved of him. To give up all that he had, and all that he had achieved, and risk it all on a single gamble.
Perhaps it was against his design--or perhaps not. Vargas was a creature of survival, above all else--and the strength to ensure it. He had been created, after all, to test. If he would do this, he would do it right; if they were as powerful as they claimed to be, then they would win. If not--well, they would not.
They would see which world was left, then.
"Subject Two," Vargas began, tone measured, gaze steady: "I would like to ask you some questions, now."
Though marked PRV, this thread is open to any SoS that would like to join.
@Orthoclase-Alpha @Two @Garnet-Delta @One