Rare and Sweet Like Cherrywine
10-18-2023, 02:02 AM
Absinth had been out, seeking some form of entertainment in the vast expanse of the valley of boredom. Aresenn was nowhere to be found at the moment, very unfortunate- so she had very few options for amusement. At least lately it seemed that more and more souls were coming into the valley, so that was something to look forward to. Her snowy paws carried her onward to a place she hadn’t been before- one that immediately brought with it something new. A blood-scented creature Absinth just had to make contact with.
“Well. Don’t you look like crow food.” Absinth called out, her eyes alight with a morbid interest in the smaller girl propped up against stone. She approached with a slow saunter, her head swiveling to search for any others lying in wait as she drew closer to the injured girl. Nothing. Ha. Absinth was about to speak again when the scent of Sephiran assaulted her nares. Ah. This was that surprise she had overheard- the one he had wanted to show Aresenn back when she had first met the purple boy. What a pretty thing she was. Though- she looked half-dead. Not just her body, but her eyes. A yearning for demise, one Absinth knew well from her time among the street rats of her homeland. Ah, the monotony of life.
“Oh honey. You look dreadful.” The monochromatic fae cooed dryly. Emeralds scanning the filthy girl with apathy, taking notes on how awful it must have been to be one of Sephiran’s toys. It reminded her of a lot of childhood memories- ones she never had to experience firsthand…. exactly. “Sephiran doesn’t hold back one bit, does he? Yeah. My father was the fucking same.” She aimed for her words to be some sort of comforting, a sort of i-know-the-feeling. The girl looked so defeated. It was hardly bearable. “You look like you want to die.” Nothing new, she’d seen it a hundred times before- especially the aftermath.
10-18-2023, 09:17 PM
This girl looked properly toyed with. Quite the sight with all those wounds. Though, Absinth was beginning to understand just why Sephiran chose her. She had a fire in her eyes, and it was growing- a feisty one. So… that's how he liked them? The ones that had some good fight in them got made into toys, and the ones with not enough were killed on sight. Sounds absolutely right. “Mmm. But looks do still mean a lot- you learn from observations made. Which is- I think -useful.” Absinth shot back with a laugh, finding the other girl's charisma entertaining to say the least. And that voice!
Absinth took a moment to draw a touch closer, silent as the sapphire-eyed stranger giggled. She cocked her head to the side ever so slightly while attempting to get even more of a read on this poor thing grinning with such instability. Her own emerald gaze indifferently taking a moment to close and sigh. “You’ve taken all this from him and you still have spirit- it’s commendable. But it’s insanity.” Why continue to suffer? Probably the exact reason why she seemed so ghastly, and not just in appearance. But why not do something different if her current approach to Sephiran was not working? If there was no escape, did the only option seem to be rotting away? Absinth was trying to understand- but her assumptions were far too alien to fully empathize.
The question that came from the beaten girl took Absinth by some small bit of surprise, it was almost desperate- but in what way… the monochromatic female wasn’t sure yet. A simple answer would do for now. “A bloodthirsty maniac I chose to follow.”
wormwood
Absinth took a moment to draw a touch closer, silent as the sapphire-eyed stranger giggled. She cocked her head to the side ever so slightly while attempting to get even more of a read on this poor thing grinning with such instability. Her own emerald gaze indifferently taking a moment to close and sigh. “You’ve taken all this from him and you still have spirit- it’s commendable. But it’s insanity.” Why continue to suffer? Probably the exact reason why she seemed so ghastly, and not just in appearance. But why not do something different if her current approach to Sephiran was not working? If there was no escape, did the only option seem to be rotting away? Absinth was trying to understand- but her assumptions were far too alien to fully empathize.
The question that came from the beaten girl took Absinth by some small bit of surprise, it was almost desperate- but in what way… the monochromatic female wasn’t sure yet. A simple answer would do for now. “A bloodthirsty maniac I chose to follow.”
10-19-2023, 02:51 PM
For a creature so beaten and abused she sure did have a lot of time to come up with some cute nicknames for everyone. It was something the emerald-eyed girl was taking a liking to, in a funny, slightly irritating way.
Absinth listened well to the girl. So much personality practically oozes out of her. But a strange topic arose as she explained her sanity and her practices. Ahhh. At the word vessel she was beginning to see a more accurate picture of Sephiran’s toy. A partisan of faith. Two souls with different beliefs- fighting for supremacy without either backing down. She understood now…. “Well, there’s your first problem. You’re not giving yourself enough value as a living thing, and you must be worth something to him if he’s ensured you couldn’t run away from him- or go off yourself. A man like that- so full of grandiosity- and you’re calling his favorite plaything disposable.” Hell, Absinth would be mad too. She was sure Sephiran found so much pleasure in this toy- and to get that much out of one living thing…. He had to cherish her in his own sick way. That was how her father was too. He loved his toys, and whether he knew it or not they gave him validation. How could Sephiran feel that without this girl caring about her life at all?
“Your death pact sounds an awful lot like marriage. Till death do us part. But you want it to end. And he doesn't.” Absinth was more so musing to herself, fitting pieces together in her mind as she went over the small details the other girl had given up- eyes moving to capture those pretty blue orbs. She moved even closer non-threateningly, making sure she was not going to be ignored. Then, she spoke- her tone compelling and brusque. “Insanity is repetition without change. Am I the crazy one for living how I fucking want to? Or are you for dying to get away from someone when you have so many other options? Play. The. Game. Death pact be damned, why die when you can live? You think you win that fucking game by dying? You think your gods want you to be snuffed so easily? What a fucking waste.” Absinth was ticked off at the lack of effort to live she was seeing. But she hardly knew this girl, so perhaps she was wrong. All she truly knew is that she had fought tooth and claw to get here herself, to make something of herself when she was meant to be nothing at all- and here is another strong woman only seeking death in the face of surmountable odds. Her bias having Setekh for a father blinding her slightly in the face of another girl who had probably never needed to learn the rules of the game. But there was always time to learn.
wormwood
Absinth listened well to the girl. So much personality practically oozes out of her. But a strange topic arose as she explained her sanity and her practices. Ahhh. At the word vessel she was beginning to see a more accurate picture of Sephiran’s toy. A partisan of faith. Two souls with different beliefs- fighting for supremacy without either backing down. She understood now…. “Well, there’s your first problem. You’re not giving yourself enough value as a living thing, and you must be worth something to him if he’s ensured you couldn’t run away from him- or go off yourself. A man like that- so full of grandiosity- and you’re calling his favorite plaything disposable.” Hell, Absinth would be mad too. She was sure Sephiran found so much pleasure in this toy- and to get that much out of one living thing…. He had to cherish her in his own sick way. That was how her father was too. He loved his toys, and whether he knew it or not they gave him validation. How could Sephiran feel that without this girl caring about her life at all?
“Your death pact sounds an awful lot like marriage. Till death do us part. But you want it to end. And he doesn't.” Absinth was more so musing to herself, fitting pieces together in her mind as she went over the small details the other girl had given up- eyes moving to capture those pretty blue orbs. She moved even closer non-threateningly, making sure she was not going to be ignored. Then, she spoke- her tone compelling and brusque. “Insanity is repetition without change. Am I the crazy one for living how I fucking want to? Or are you for dying to get away from someone when you have so many other options? Play. The. Game. Death pact be damned, why die when you can live? You think you win that fucking game by dying? You think your gods want you to be snuffed so easily? What a fucking waste.” Absinth was ticked off at the lack of effort to live she was seeing. But she hardly knew this girl, so perhaps she was wrong. All she truly knew is that she had fought tooth and claw to get here herself, to make something of herself when she was meant to be nothing at all- and here is another strong woman only seeking death in the face of surmountable odds. Her bias having Setekh for a father blinding her slightly in the face of another girl who had probably never needed to learn the rules of the game. But there was always time to learn.
10-20-2023, 02:52 PM
There had never been a long list of things that could make Absinth’s fuse begin to burn. Most of her life she had been pitted against other souls who weren’t black, or white- but simply gray. Everyone was gray. They did what they needed to to survive, and many went above and beyond that. Atrocities, corruption, all souls could turn pitch black. That wasn’t the issue. What was the problem was when someone started spewing bullshit about how her choices were crazy. Crazy in the face of what? What alternative lifestyle could she have led, growing up the way she did? Around the things she did? Clawing for survival, still clinging to the games that kept her alive. Yeah. Unsound mind. Absinth was not the first to throw stones about choices - she’d tried to offer a new perspective; a helping hand. “Yes. He would. But I am here because I like playing the game. It’s all I’ve ever known, and It’ll remain that way. That’s my belief. Better here in the company of devils I know than cursed by the angels whose intentions I can’t understand. You sin, you go to hell. You live your life good , and still end up in hell because you weren’t good enough. Not enough prayer, not enough benevolence. Not enough reverence in a higher power. You know what I believe? It doesn’t matter what you believe, you’re still worm food in the end- or one of many many souls whose existence didn’t mean a goddamn thing .” And this girl was making sure she wouldn’t mean a thing. It was difficult for Absinth to reign in her aggravated tone, her eyes flashing with disbelief and more so disdain.
“So. You, up there on your altar of worship, looking down on the rest of us for not understanding your Goddess or your beliefs. From my perspective, you’re a dead ringer of a crazy fanatical bitch- and oh. You already have a match! A maniacal murderous bastard. What a pair! That death pact was a fucking stroke of luck.” She was seething now, her limbs planted firmly to remind herself that this girl was untouchable. And why attack such a weak battered thing anyways? Absinth was not the type to have toys, and she wouldn’t start now.
With a snort she turned her entire body away, letting out a barking laugh that shook her ribcage fiercely. “I won’t waste mine, or your time with this pointless conversation any longer. But little miss sanity, you should either be more effective about meeting that Goddess of yours or stop shitting out of your mouth. If you really wanted to die you’d have bitten your own tongue off, bled out, and been done with it. So, figure out a way you can live with yourself after you acknowledge that.” Absinth spat, tail lashing as she began to leave. It was impossible to speak at the moment- especially with a girl so dead set on giving up her one and only life. Ridiculous. How many struggles of others did that invalidate? Absinth hated it. She acted like she was the first ever to endure a madman. But perhaps, Absinth hadn’t given much thought as to just how strong she herself was in the mental department that way. There were some things others couldn’t, wouldn’t endure.
As she departed Absinth left the girl- whose name she never bothered to ask- with a final sentence spoken over an ivory shoulder. “If you get over yourself, let’s chat again- if you die, send me a sign or whatever dead fuckers do.”
[Exit Absinth]
wormwood
“So. You, up there on your altar of worship, looking down on the rest of us for not understanding your Goddess or your beliefs. From my perspective, you’re a dead ringer of a crazy fanatical bitch- and oh. You already have a match! A maniacal murderous bastard. What a pair! That death pact was a fucking stroke of luck.” She was seething now, her limbs planted firmly to remind herself that this girl was untouchable. And why attack such a weak battered thing anyways? Absinth was not the type to have toys, and she wouldn’t start now.
With a snort she turned her entire body away, letting out a barking laugh that shook her ribcage fiercely. “I won’t waste mine, or your time with this pointless conversation any longer. But little miss sanity, you should either be more effective about meeting that Goddess of yours or stop shitting out of your mouth. If you really wanted to die you’d have bitten your own tongue off, bled out, and been done with it. So, figure out a way you can live with yourself after you acknowledge that.” Absinth spat, tail lashing as she began to leave. It was impossible to speak at the moment- especially with a girl so dead set on giving up her one and only life. Ridiculous. How many struggles of others did that invalidate? Absinth hated it. She acted like she was the first ever to endure a madman. But perhaps, Absinth hadn’t given much thought as to just how strong she herself was in the mental department that way. There were some things others couldn’t, wouldn’t endure.
As she departed Absinth left the girl- whose name she never bothered to ask- with a final sentence spoken over an ivory shoulder. “If you get over yourself, let’s chat again- if you die, send me a sign or whatever dead fuckers do.”
[Exit Absinth]
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