MAGICKA LEVEL 100%
RESTORED TO 100%
AND THE CROWD GOES WIIIIIIIIIIIILD!!!!!!!
I assume it is due to the same sadistic pleasure that people imbibe upon seeing the target get hit with the ball, sending the man (or the rabbit) crashing into the Redfang-infested waters. At least there were no Redfangs to eat him up within Draconua's belly, but that was hardly a comfort because what remained was arguably worse.
Indeed, he had gotten on a train to nowhere, not realizing that the world had not left him behind nearly as much as he had left the world. I mean, he can be as sad and pitiful as he likes or dislikes, but the truth remains: he ran as soon as things didn't go his way. He didn't change. He didn't try. And maybe he couldn't have. That's not the kind of story I would tell though, I don't want to believe in the hopelessness of people. So I won't blame him or call him the c word or anything, but Aethril by all means can and should. It's funny as heck! He's the clown of the show!
Maybe this train would take him to another chance, although... his other chances lived on in two others he'd scarcely met before, if ever. Maybe they were waiting in the stands, his daughter and grandchild. It was mercy not to know. The last thing he would have wanted to see in his final moments was a batcat. And besides that, Draconua's words, although he didn't understand them and he wouldn't have even if they had been in the common cave language, were true. He had done nothing to deserve anything, and he just barely scraped by in terms of eligibility for death. "Death" as in transmutation.
The last line... he was barely awake enough internally to hear or comprehend it, but somehow it struck a chord in him. Held on high C or some other uncomfortable note. Because that's where she was wrong. That's where, in his eyes, which would quickly be swamped and digested into oil- that's where she failed to impress. She did not know him. She was not there for his beginning, only his end. She had not watched him rise like a fledgeling bird only to fall to the earth and wound the wings. She did not know the life of that bird; she was the predator, the prowling cat outside. She did not understand that the bird, in the eyes of fate, had served only to feed her. She only understood the taste of that entitlement. This was the bird. This was his worth.
To be made a corpse, eaten by another corpse, because it's all some form of cannibalism when everything is oil in the end. The carnage of piñatas devouring each other, the shredded candy wrappers gushing over the floor... or that silly painting of the one guy and his son. It's one of my favorite kinds of tragedy -- the humorous kind.
Maybe he should have told her that, for all it was worth. But he didn't have the chance, and now it wouldn't haunt him.
- Exit via Clown Train (die). -