To Animate Life

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Alistair
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91st of Ashan, Arc 718

The day, this far, had been quiet... though he had done many busy, tedious tasks for the maintenance and continued growth of this clinic. Kaelserad was doing well - he had spoken to Kleine some, soothed many of his woes and worries with implications of a future after all. Though implications were not promises, they were often enough to appease Kleine... particularly if followed by the stroke of fingers, calming hands and a loving tone. This place, and this life - they were all filled with sorrow, weakness, and humility. This was the way humans could only live - in instability, and upheaval.

Jon and Doran had gone off together to properly acquaint themselves. Knowing that Jon would not flay Doran, Alistair allowed it, content in knowing that his two partners were getting along. Unfortunately, he had been unable to take part in that, but his work in Kaelserad did still please him. He had been examining poisons and how to be rid of them - and, even a particular poison that had been laid upon his doorstep. It appeared to be the excretion of a small yet lethal spider that was new and perhaps invasive to the Ne'haer region.

From where it came, he did not know... but he was a doctor of men, not of animals, regardless of what he'd claimed while wearing the skin of Kieran Riley.

Alistair and Damien had spent the last two breaks in study, researching the very theoretical links between poisons and their effects. Symptoms, which were in themselves caused by a plethora of different allergies, illnesses, pollutants, activities and birth-born proclivities, were apparently due to very specific types of poisons. Though he doubted this, and certainly doubted that it could ever be the full story, he indulged his books for a time... and then, stepped out from his dreary study room, walking down the steps leading out of Kaelserad, and viewing the sun falling in the sky.

All days, of late, had been beautiful. Alistair had truly been blessed.
Last edited by Alistair on Fri Jun 08, 2018 11:24 am, edited 1 time in total. word count: 341
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[PH] The Integration

By the time Doran returned to Kaelserad, the sun had risen, its beauty seeming pale and distant as his bare feet had pressed down into the earth with each of his steady steps. There had been some fear Jonathan would follow him - do more than the threats he'd hissed before Doran had turned away. His words still lingered in Doran's thoughts, mixing and mingling with all the rest in a seemingly endless cacophony of noise. His skin had since dried, only the damp small-clothes he still wore cold against his warming skin that drank in the morning's light like pale petals of a wilted flower. He seemed almost like a ghost, drifting towards the red-roofed healing house, and he made as much noise as one.

Alistair was necromancer - a practitioner of a magic forever vilified and for good reason. Though Jonathan had claimed Alistair no longer used the magic, Doran had found such sentiments weak - more reactionary than truthful. From what he understood, he had been worried how Alistair might react. His requests that Doran act "for him" seemed only to paint him all the more selfish. It wasn't something he necessarily held against the man. People needed selfishness in their lives, otherwise they'd never stop to think of themselves, to take care of themselves. Jonathan had simply been looking out for his own best interests after he'd realised the mistake he'd made, the secret he seemed to have assumed Alistair had told him. Everything after had been too mixed with his desire to fix what he'd done that Doran could put little stock in it - after all, the man had end in insults and threats like most who became desperate, when things didn't go the way they'd wanted. Though still, Doran found he couldn't keep himself from considering what he'd said.

The very idea that Alistair did not, to some extent, still use his necromancy - however much he would have preferred that to be the case - simply didn't seem plausible. Jonathan had known, Damien had known, everyone, it seemed, had known. Though not impossible, it was unlikely Alistair would have been so open about something he'd strived so hard to suppress; after all, they had come from the same homeland. Though magic had not necessarily been reviled, necromancy was by far a clear and ever present evil in fables of the past and cautionary tales of the present. That he might not share that same stigma - or at least the acknowledgement of it - did not lend well to him sharing such things with others. No, it was clear Alistair was a necromancer; that much was irrefutable.

What had struck him had not been the possibility that it were an empty title. It was what Jonathan had said before, that "maybe, just maybe, his past wasn't his present". He knew, without question, whatever Alistair did with his magic, with his life, was entirely up to him. Doran had no real sway over the other man, though the mage might have protested differently. If he were a necromancer, he was a necromancer out of some sense of duty, some greater pursuit of power in the name of justice. Of this, Doran had no doubt. Whatever his is past with the dark, dreadful magic, the present was clearly defined: it was a tool to him, like any other; and that was, perhaps, the most terrifying thought.

He'd seen Alistair at his most tender - most gentle and loving. So too had he seen him buckle under despair, hiding behind false masks and shedding tears like a frightened, weary child. He'd seen his hunger and desire - both of love and lust. He'd even seen glimpses of a darker, seething rage that churned just beneath the calm control of his words when he'd spoken of the king and his empress. The man was as faceted as any other human being; the only difference being he was incredibly powerful. And at some point, along the line, in that power, he had determined that it was acceptable to twist people's souls and rape their dead bodies with his ether. Though the magic itself was vile, Doran found that the action of rationalizing its use was far worse and far more corrosive of character, of spirit.

When he realised he'd stopped just at the door, he paused, eyes staring at the solid, wooden panels, his toes flexing and relaxing in place, gripping the cool stone of the path. Drawing a deep breath, Doran entered, quietly closing the door behind him. The front desk was empty - whoever was meant to tend it seemingly having stepped out for the moment, and he took the opportunity to pad quietly to his room, slipping inside and shutting it closed behind him. Leaning his back against the smooth wood of the door, he slowly slid down to the floor, wrapping his arms about his shins and reseting his forehead against his knees. He was so, incredibly tired.

He didn't want to think about anything. He didn't want to talk to anyone or go anywhere or do anything. He wanted to find himself covered in sweat, blankets tangled about his legs and he was released from the waking nightmare he now found himself in. But what he wanted didn't matter - not to himself, not to Jonathan, and certainly not to Alistair. It wasn't a matter of direction action that had been taken against him, rather that, no matter how much he wished things were not as they were, the fact of the matter remained the same. A heavy sigh wracked his body as he ran both of his hands through his tangled, still damp head of wavy hair. His eyes were closed, the darkness a small, soothing comfort amid the chaos.

Necromancy.

Just the thought of bodies that had once held souls of those who had loved and lived and lost and wept and laughed bastardized into mindless servant made him feel sick. It was not so simple a nausea of the stomach as it was the very soul; it ached within him, brought sweat to his brow and flushed his body with a shivering chill. Fathers, mothers, brothers and sisters, lovers and warriors, friends and enemies... their lives nothing but tattered, empty shadows. Jonathan was right: Doran knew little the magic. Yet, what little he did know, he knew quite specifically - and none of it was justifiable, not in any way.

Slowly, he rose to his feet, letting his eyes flutter open, taking a moment to simply stand there. In the next, he removed his pants, leaving him as naked as the day he was born, before he padded over the dresser and pulled one of the drawers open. To his relief, there were a collection of clothes within, and he busied his hands with and forced his mind to pick out something to wear. He moved with a deliberate, focused flow of motion, pulling his thoughts away from anything but what was in front of him.

These are too big. That's too small. This is silk; that's leather; that's... something coarse. This will fit fine, this will fit better, this won't fit at all. This is nice, that's nicer; this one... or that one? A pair of socks. Another pair of socks. A mismatched pair. Here's a shirt - but the sleeves are too long. Oh, it's all too long. There's another, this will do and... trousers. These are nice. Those are nicer. These fit. These fit too.

Eventually, he found himself in front of the small mirror. His face was paler than usual, hair dried thanks to a towel that sat folded over the back of the single chair in the room. No longer did is pearly skin glow soft in the sunlight that poured in though the east facing window. He had found a far less form-fitting, beige shirt, though the sleeves were just slightly too long and had been rolled back at the cuffs. His trousers were a deep chestnut and of a more firm fabric than the silk he'd worn before. Finally, he'd chosen to wear a pair of worn socks that didn't rob him of any and all traction upon the smoothed wooden floors beneath. His boots were still drying in Jonathan's stone garden - a practical voice in his head made a note that he would need to ask to borrow some before he requested he be sent home.

Home.

It was an odd thought; made more so by the stark difference he now felt under the Kaelserad's roof. Though the trial before, he'd felt safe, secure, and at ease, there was now little else but tension in his tightened shoulders and forced, steady breath. A part of him had entertained the idea of Kaelserad becoming a home to him, in a sense, but that had long since withered away beneath the blaze of revelation. Now, all he really wanted, was to settle things with Alistair and return to Venora. He had no doubt the man wouldn't harm him, and neither had he desire to do the same to Alistair. Yet, he couldn't stay there, not any longer than was absolutely necessary. If Alistair wouldn't send him home, he'd find another way.

With his conviction settled, he turned and headed out of the room, the front desk still unmanned, and, without any idea of where he might go or if Alistair had returned or had even left in the first place, he called a surprisingly firm, "Alistair?" His voice, though airy, carried well through the building by volume alone. "If you're here, I'd like to speak with you." There was little else but a cordial politeness in his voice. It was somewhat strained, but something that could have easily been due to his unusually loud use of tone. "It's a bit urgent."
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Alistair
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Doran returned to Kaelserad. Though Alistair did not know it at first - not for some time - the ragged, barefooted man stepped through the doors of the clinic and home, unlocked as the very result of their own perpetual undead defenders. They scoured Kaelserad at all times when few people were present, ensuring no violence, burglary or otherwise. When Doran stepped through and moved towards his room, the peering eye of Andreas, laid within one of the covers of the open room like a patient, viewed him and silently watched his movements, his eyes following each step and broken breath.

Doran, however, returned to his room . . . and Andreas remained.

As time passed and he readied himself, attempting desperately to look more decently, Alistair continued to study. Before him was a spider, a small vial with perhaps an ounce at best of its poison, and a mortar and pestle with which he sought to ground and brew a cure to the blight of the creature's venom. Alistair, truly enthralled by his curiosity, did not notice the front door swinging open... or the man stepping through, or his rummaging through drawers to find clothes that fit - Kleine's clothes. The two of them were of a similar build, and they shared a height. Ultimately, the drawers that had been put in there for Doran's usage were outfits handed down by Kleine, who begrudged the tender man's existence - to a degree - but still found pleasure in assisting Alistair with making him feel at home.

When Doran had made himself more presentable, and called out to him, the sounds were much as small and distant yelps in Alistair's ears. The first made him perk up, his head rising, only to lower again as he suspiciously examined the sounds. ...I'd like to speak with you, he made out, laying the small vial upon the table as he concealed laid a sheet of cotton-cloth above the mortar to cover its contents from the exposure of prolonged air.

Alistair stepped out from his study, and onto the floor of the clinic. Doran called out on the opposite side of the building, but within trills he'd made it to him, viewing the solemn looking man with a tint of curiosity, his brow quirking into an arch before forcibly lowering itself. Doran appeared so . . . defeated, by something. And, he said it was urgent. Jonathan was not with him, which must have meant something, Alistair concluded. Fraught now with something akin to worry, the mage stepped closer to his lover and nodded his head.

"What's wrong, my love?" he questioned. "Are you alright? You don't look very well. Is the foreign climate inciting a reaction?" That was, of course, far from the mark. Doran had said it was urgent - the climate and its allergies were... not quite on that par, and he was not truly one to overreact. Alistair wanted to think it was something lesser, but somewhere he already knew that the label Doran had given it was closer to an understatement than an exaggeration. The look in his eyes, the silent and restrained sadness... his fears had already begun to come to life.
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Doran Cooney
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Footsteps sounded in reply, and Doran had only a few moments to ready himself - though ready himself for what, he couldn't even begin to imagine. As it knew it would, the flutter in his chest was warmed the moment Alistair appear, moving with a quick but deliberate speed. Such feelings were heavily tempered by what he now knew - by what, he'd come to realise, he must have known on some level. When he looked at the face that he had, only a matter of breaks before, though of with such tender affection, there was a cold wound that ran deep through his heart, tainting the memories with the knowledge of the present.

Though he tried, his lips were only able to find a shadow of a crescent; his posture remained rigid and polite. "A reaction?" He was taken somewhat off guard at the completely unexpected question. While Alistair was a man of medicine, Doran knew next to nothing about such things - save that doses were to be carefully followed. His brow knit just slightly as he shook his head, voice airy but pensive. "No... no, it's... it's not anything like that." When he spoke, he didn't meet Alistair's eyes instead, he focused on the man's lips; his chest felt tight, and it seemed as though his heart might wring itself out into nothing should their gazes meet.

He didn't know how to say everything he needed to. Contrary to Jonathan's volatile suppositions, Doran didn't want to hurt Alistair. Even after knowing what the man was, what he did, it didn't change the fact that he care about him, that he still wanted for Alistair all that he'd wanted for him before. Yet, so too did he understand that that which Alistair most wanted from him was something he was afraid he'd never be able to give. Not without losing himself and - the Seven and all the Immortals and Fates and whoever and whatever else forbid - his Lily. "Why?"

It was the first word that slipped out of the tangle of thoughts in his head, and while alone it made little sense, there were more to follow. Slowly, his mind quieted, and as he began to speak in earnest, there was the slightest waver of emotion in his quiet, soft voice that - in spite of what he said - held little more than a somber sadness. "Why did you become a necromancer?" He left no room for explanation, not yet. "How did you- how can you live with that? How can I? How could you think it would be something I could live it? This secret of bone and rot..."

Though the strength of his voice faltered, he pressed on, eyes still set upon the man's lips, too afraid that should their eyes meet he wouldn't be able to continue. "Please don't... I don't want you to tell me anything but the truth." Here, there was a clear waver in his voice. "Don't tell me why it's acceptable. Why you need it. What... what purpose it serves." None of those things mattered either way, they were only avenues to a greater divide, and try as he might, he couldn't bring himself to wish for that - to further break the two of them apart. "I just... I want to know-"

What. He didn't even know what he wanted, and so he trailed off, not even able to look at the man's face at all, gaze falling to the floor as he gently shook his head, the corners of his eyes hot with tears that yet refused to fall. "Why, Alistair."
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Alistair
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Why?

When the first word was uttered, he already knew the severity of what was to follow. Alistair's mind went many places - why did he harbor an Aberrant? Why did he allow a Lich to live beneath his roof? Why had he not told Doran of his many, often authoritarian, political ambitions? Alistair still had many words to share, and stories to mutter. They had only scratched the surface of a surface - breaking through the skin of the very first layer, when in truth there were so many volumes of complexity between each of them. Of course, one of his worries was that Doran had - likely due to Jon's blathering mouth - learned of his Necromancy.

And, immediately after his following words, Alistair understood that he was correct.

He couldn't be mad. No . . . rage did not fill him. Instead, it was something different. A great, steep emptiness overwhelmed him. He faded between the man he was now, and the man he'd always been, before emotion and complexity filled his heart. A great part of him wanted only to shut it out, and to become that cold, sheer man he'd always been. His expression dropped as Doran asked . . . and so did his hopes. Crying within him was the irrational, wild anguish of what he could only feel was impending loss . . . which itself made his eyes water some, only inflamed by Doran's swelling emotions. Alistair felt... empathy, somehow, for him.

He must have felt so betrayed.

But he couldn't present that empathy. He wouldn't. This was not the time to grow emotional, to cry, to beg. He wanted to know... and so he would tell him. There were so many questions, and so many answers. How can you live with that? How can I? How could you think it would be something I could live with?

He truly did know, then. And he hurt from it, perhaps more than the mage expected. This... was it, then. His final appeal to the final person he'd ever make it to.

"I was alone," he responded, eyes looking beyond Doran - moving past him as the handsome, smaller man blurred into his teary-eyed peripheral. "My father hurt me. Much in the way that your mother was hurt by your father, except . . . for arcs. As a child. My mother hurt me more; she knew, and ignored it, and perhaps even encouraged it. Everyone around me knew, and they observed. I..." he trailed off, the emotion beginning to set in. This was, in truth, the first time he had ever confronted this more than on the surface - in his whole life. But Doran wanted to know... so he told him.

"I wanted to die, but to still live, too. I just... wanted my body to be unreachable, untouchable, a mere cover for something else; me, whatever that meant. I wanted to preserve my own, deathless image, into that of a Lich. And so... Damien found me, in the crypt of the Languedocs, begging Cyrene to give me the gift of freedom. Begging her to save her heir from his suffering." He frowned, thinking back to that crypt, and the statue of their Goddess - their Virtue - beneath. How beautiful and adorned all of her statues were - a reflection of the vanity of his people, and the impossible, inhuman perfection they sought.

"Damien knew from the very beginning what I had suffered. He saw it in me, and he knew. And he offered me a life after life, deathless, incapable of harm or hunger or worry. Lichdom, a gift he knew. He knew... so little sorrow, Doran. He had made himself... above reproach. That - Lichdom - was all I had ever wanted, from the beginning. I sought to animate no corpses, and to twist no life. I wanted only for my own form to be changed - to escape the rebounding, aching, squealing agony of being a child betrayed by his family, his Gods, and all of everyone he had ever known. If magic had not found me... then death would have."

His voice had dried out within the flow of his words. Perhaps there was nothing at all he could say. Doran's beliefs were already decided, as it appeared so clearly from the way he was now. The man, who had even accepted Alistair's sexual predation, who had so intelligently debated the ethics of magic with him, free of extraneous emotion... was incapable of regaining himself upon hearing of Alistair's indulgence into the magic of death. How could he change anything? Sob stories? Maybe. He didn't want to do that, though.

If Doran trusted him, and cared about him... and intended to keep his promise, well - perhaps they could stay together. He hoped they would. But hopes and dreams so scarcely stuck upon reality. When had his prayers ever been answered? When had the things that brought him happiness ever stuck with him? By now... this was nothing but a procedure, even though it pained him so greatly. He really... loved Doran. More than was right.
Last edited by Alistair on Sat Jun 09, 2018 4:08 pm, edited 1 time in total. word count: 848
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Doran Cooney
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The moment Alistair spoke, Doran found himself acutely aware of the fact he didn't want to listen. He'd asked all his questions, he'd wanted answers, but when Alistair began, all he wanted to be anywhere but there, in lobby of Kaelserad, together with Alistair but feeling nothing but alone. He forced himself to listen, out of the feelings he still held, tattered and tired, for the other man and for himself. If he left, if he dropped everything and ran, he knew he would regret it until the day he died. Lily would not forgive him that, nor should she.

He couldn't bring himself to look at Alistair as he recounted the history of how he'd come into contact with the magic, why he'd sought it out. There was emotion in the man's voice, a slight quiver, but he knew if he were to see the expression - that same broken man he'd seen in the meadow of sunflowers and sunshine - he'd lose his resolve. He'd run, and he wouldn't be able to come back.

What he heard, weighty as it was, rang true in what had become the stillness of his mind: an excuse; an explanation. Perhaps that was truly all Alistair could offer. Perhaps it was the only thing he really know - how to excuse himself, how to hide from the world as he had hid behind that cold, false veneer in the moments he'd tried to escape from Doran's quiet inability to return his love.

The tale of Reyard gently floated to the forefront of his mind as he mutely listened to unspoken horror of Alistair's past. It was no easy thing - far beyond what Doran could imagine. The pain of betrayal, of shame, of humiliation and fear... there was no doubt in his mind that call Alistair's childhood "life" was a cruel, sneering jeer. It was not something he would wish upon anyone for any reason. Yet, Reyard had been much the same - beaten, bloodied, humiliated and chained. Where Alistair's shackles had been those of the mind, Reyard's had been reinforced in iron - yet it seemed the differences between them were far, far greater than the nature of their binds alone.

Lichdom - a state beyond both life and death; a merging of the necrotic spark with one's soul. It became clearer why Jonathan had begged him to speak with Damien, to have the man explain. He, too, was a practitioner of the dark magic. Not only had he known, he was the one responsible for Alistair's corruption. Perhaps it would have been better if no one had ever heard Alistair's pleas as he'd wept in the crypt. Perhaps his life might have ended, but it would have ended unstained - unsullied. Virtuous as the woman his house was mean to to embody.

But that had not been the case. Alistair had sought lichdom - even before he'd known of Damien or he of him. That fact alone was chilling. It spoke more about Alistair than perhaps intended. It spoke of research, of paths found and discarded, of a knowledge beyond simply grasping at power. Alistair had wanted to infect himself with necromancy; whether he had intended to use the magic to its full extent or not, he had been willing to accept it - all of it - into himself. It was, by far, the more horrifying thing Doran had ever heard. And finally, he realised it.

Alistair was child.

He was a mewling, pitiable creature that had surrounded himself with wall upon wall of defenses until he'd crated himself so intricate a maze, even he had become lost within it. He truly believed he would have died without necromancy; that the magic had been not the creeping disease that it was, but his savior. It was so juvenile that Doran could only stare blankly down at the smooth floor. He didn't know what he had expected, what he had wanted, but for the moment as Alistair's voice faded, his past's ultimatum settling with a somber stillness into the open air between them, Doran had no words.

How very disappointed Reyard might have been had he heard the tale. Alistair had spoken of the man with such praise, such unadulterated adoration, and perhaps, in large, it was because even he understood - in spite of all the twisted turns of his endless rationalizations and self-absolving practices - Reyard was him and he was Reyard. Only, where Reyard had ascended, had freed himself, Alistair had fallen into the muck and mire, drifting down through the writing cesspool, his eyes clouding with each sicking, sucking moment. He was Reyard fallen - it was tragic enough that Doran felt the hot trail of his tears betray him; in the silence, the gentle patter of his sadness seemed to fill the room, impossibly loud.

When he did finally speak, Doran's eyes remained downcast. "I see." There was nothing more he could say. His heart broke for the repulsive, stunted thing that was Alistair's childhood. His soul wept for the path Alistair had not only chosen but sought willingly, cravingly. His tears fell for the man's blindness, for the lies he had so wrapped around him that even had he wanted to, he could not see the truth of the matter.

Damien was a lich, a creature who had grown so powerful, so connected with the twisted magic of necromancy, he had transcended himself into something both more and less. He finally understood the words Alistair had uttered only just the trail before, and perhaps it had been a bit of joke to him. He'd known what Damien was. What he had done. Though Doran wished death upon no man nor creature, he found what he had said to Damien all the more ironic. How many lives had the man twisted to his will? How many bodies had the cannibalised into grotesque creatures of no mind nor soul? That he sought peace at all seemed an insult to all the darkness he'd wrought, yet Doran could wish for nothing else but the same for him.

Redemption, by its very nature, required that atrocities must first be committed; salvation that there be something to be saved from. But such things had to be sought, they had to be wanted, desired. What Alistair said - those poisoned words - claimed none of those things. He had become a necromancer to cast away his humanity, and, perhaps, in that moment, he had been successful. By placing his soul above all else, affording himself no liberty untaken that he might carve his path of destruction and sorrow, damned be all who got in his way, to place his heart in a cold and unfeeling cage where he could neither feel the pain of his past nor the regret of his actions... he was already a shadow of a man.

And, maybe, that was the true mask he wore. Not the cold, empty expression... but the warmth and the laughter; the devotion and love; the jealousy and the fierce longing desire. Maybe, even, there was no true Alistair; just a child casting shadow puppets upon the blank canvas of a wall, crying whenever his candles wavered from the wind cast by the opening and closing of the doors.
Last edited by Doran Cooney on Sat Jun 09, 2018 5:10 pm, edited 1 time in total. word count: 1234
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I see was all Doran had to say. Alistair looked at him somewhat sadly. It appeared that he did not allow such torment to pardon even that of a young boy, not yet a man, from indulging in arts he knew little about. The mage knew his expression. It was... pitying, perhaps even mourning, but ultimately not truly compassionate, nor understanding. He already knew what he thought. That . . . it would have been better for him to die. How did he know that? Because Doran believed, perversely in his own right, that magic was truly the answer to nothing. That was what it had always felt like, anyhow. He'd allowed himself to use it as a tool, and for Alistair to rationalize it as such, but ultimately it was never the 'right' or 'correct' way - just a shortcut that defied nature.

Perhaps he was wrong, and perhaps Doran had begun to see it in a better light . . . but he didn't know. And he was sad, and perhaps unwilling to see things optimistically, because they so rarely ever could be optimistic.

"As for the rest..." he attempted to bring things back together, shifting his gaze to fall upon the smaller man. Their irises met, and locked, for a moment. He did not know the power that he still held, despite it all, over Doran. So bitterly did defeat taste in his mouth, that he had forgotten all of his prior victories. All of the affection he'd managed to garner. It was so easily replaced with sadness, and melancholy.

He felt himself becoming alone again, right before his eyes . . . and he did not know how to process it.

Alistair would just . . . keep answering. Doran had taught him not to lie, to truly not lie - so he wouldn't. He would go on. "Those were my reasonings as a young one. I was emotionally scattered, and distraught. I wanted to take my own life, but instead, I was taken in by a cult: the Coven of Ellasin. I delved deep into Necromancy, at first . . . I thought it had the potential for greater things. I wanted to be able to commune with the dead, to learn of their ailments, perhaps even to return them to life - if they so wished. I'd always wanted to be able to speak to the lost souls. But as I delved further, I realized that Necromancy - in truth - had very little to do with life and death, and a lot more to do with corpses." This was, perhaps, a great misconception by the plentiful men and women who lashed out against Necromancy.

They did not consume the energy of souls, or command the hunger and rage of dead minds, or force brothers to turn on their living kin. There was . . . nothing about Necromancy that followed those worries, not even the Revenants. Even they were merely a soul trapped in a stone, with no emotion, no hunger, and no willingness or awareness of their own: they operated only on instinct. When Alistair finally mastered the creation of Revenants, only to discover that they were truly hollow . . . his love of Necromancy faded.

"Necromancy was, and is, little more than the weaponizing of dead bodies. It is no magic followed by lingering souls, or the wrathful memories of corpses still clinging to their spirits. So, knowing that, I can answer your question as to how I live with it. The truth is, I don't. I barely live with it at all, only utilizing the ether to harden my bones, and other menial things. I haven't animated a corpse in arcs. I haven't wanted to. I feel utterly repulsed by my spark, but I do not know how to be rid of it. It was a mistake I made thirteen arcs ago, that I live with to this trial, and regret. So what can I say? What could I even do to make you forgive me? Loathe myself? I already do. Beg, trial after trial, for redemption? I do. The Immortals themselves have witnessed my desire for redemption, and even those most averse to Necromancy have known my devotion to change. Ralaith, Ashan -- they both saw a future that the Chronologer showed me. That I could rule a great, prosperous Kingdom . . . that I could change the world, and undo the evils wrought by women like Ellasin. Doesn't that mean something to you, Doran? Couldn't it mean something for this world?"

He frowned. This all felt like castigation. How many arcs did he have to suffer for his mistakes? How many people would break from him, and toss aside their affections? What could he do that he had not already done?

Alistair was so tired of it. He was tired of hating himself, and everyone wanting him to hate himself. That was all they sought for him - loathing, weeping, regret.

And then, the rest. All the rest. It didn't demand much explanation.

"As for how you could, and how I thought you could? You don't understand me, Doran. I wish you did. I never expected you to live with it . . . because I never wanted it to be a part of our lives. I wanted it to stay repressed inside of me where it belongs. I've been trying to move past it, Doran. I've been trying to make it a distant regret. But everyone keeps trying to remind me - to punish me. I just... don't get it. What do you want from me? What do I have to do? I can't..." he grimaced, the tears flowing quietly down his cheeks, glossed by their cool texture. "...I can't cut it out of my chest, and throw it away, or bleed it out from my heart - or I would. I would love to. But I can't."

And that was it: the only appeal he could make. Ultimately, it came down to this: Alistair could not lose Necromancy, and so all of his dreams of redemption meant nothing to one who believed it to be an ultimate, pervasive blight.
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Again he spoke, and again Doran listened. More atrocities: the desire to tamper with life and death, to do what most certainly should not be done. Another excuse: youth and ignorance. It seemed, even if the desire existed, the magic was unable to bring life back to the dead, twisted or not. That, at least, was a comfort. Though he had spent many arcs wishing for Lily's return, never once would he have ever wanted her to be brought back through such methods - his had been a wish for an erasure of the past, but a weak patch for the present.

The manner in which Alistair seemed to think that the manipulation of corpses was a triviality at all was darkly telling. Though he professed he no longer wanted, no longer wished for it to be a part of him, it was clear he'd already been changed by it. A body was a body. To turn what had once been living into an abomination - a weapon - was horrific. That Alistiar could speak so casually about it, listing it as a "little more" thinking to hide it behind the enslaving of souls, as if the fact that it was unable to do so excused the prior, was chilling. From what it seemed, he'd grown bored of the magic, and in that boredness realised its repugnance.

There was some vague relief in knowing that Alistair had not raised a corpse for some time, though it did little still the churn or Doran's stomach at the thought of the man's past actions. It was clear Alistair understood - there was a sense of remorse in his voice but... more so, there was frustration. Aggravation. It seemed it was not the first time he had had such a conversation, though wether the others had been with another like Doran or confined within the walls of his own head, he knew not. Again the child reared his head, and again he wailed.

Greatness was foreseen for him, by Time and Freedom both, but greatness never came without a price. Change, by its very nature, invited struggle and strife. Evil could never truly be undone, merely overcome. These, even god given as they were, were loft sights he allowed himself to set upon, staring upward, wishing to forget the blood and rot that his soul had been tainted with - that which he'd chosen to taint himself with.

Yet, it had all been a mistake, a choice he'd made and come to loathe and abhor.

He'd never claimed to have understood Alistair, and even before he'd known he never could. Not really. But Alistair made one thing quite clear as he concluded, something that had spun its way through his words since Doran had asked his questions: the world was against him.

It had been that way since his childhood. Every thing, everyone, was out to get him and, if not, to allow those that did their pleasures with him. The Coven had used him. The gods offered him grand visions and sat back to wait and see, a simple pawn to move the pieces into place. The spark itself, twisted and abhorrent, was his constant companion, one he'd asked for to escape from the never ending antipathy of the world only to find it all the more vicious, all the more voracious for his blood. He had spent his entire life fighting back against the very nature of what he'd come to expect of his reality.

Why then, might he expect anything different from Doran?

Quietly, Doran's airy voice filled the silence between them. "You're an idiot."

Necromancy was disgusting. Whether it dealt in souls or corpses, it was a perversion, a plague. There was no doubt in his mind that there was no rationalising the magic. It was rotten, through and through. But, as Alistair had shown him - perhaps even in hopes that Doran might consider such things when the time came to reveal the dark spark to him - magic was a tool. It was a part of a mage, but it was not the mage entirely. Even Damien, who had merged with his own spark, had retained some semblance of decency.

Alistair wanted to change; he'd made it apparent in the meadow, and before him, tears streaking down his face, he reiterated the same intentions. He had done horrible things, horrific things that, certainly, were well worth the suffering he had inflicted upon himself with his own hatred. That he sought redemption, the he longed for salvation... Doran was no god. He was a simple man with no great prophecies foretold of him. In his simplicity, there was kindness - but kindness alone was little more than small candle in endless, starless night.

"I don't want any of... that." He spoke slowly, weariness in his tone. "I want- I want you to be happy, Alistair. I want you to be free to-" His voice caught in his throat. "To love more than the people around you; to love yourself." He sighed, his heart beating steady and painfully in his chest, swollen and tired. "I just want..." Both hands ran through his hair as he looked up towards the ceiling, letting his eyes close for trill. "I don't know. I don't... know what I want, Alistair."

There were many things he could say. He wanted Alistair to have never sought out necromancy in the first place. He wanted the spark and its taint removed. He wanted to never have known. He wanted to have known all along. He wanted Alistair to be happy. He wanted himself to be happy. But it didn't matter what he wanted, because they were all impossible things; empty things.

The fear and dread he'd felt before had settled into a dull emptiness. He felt heavy and, most of all, sad. Though Alistair seemed to seek redemption, there was a path he had tread that couldn't be ignored. It was the burden of those who strove to better themselves. That which they carried, they could never discard, not truly, and the weight upon Alistair's back, cumbrous and ungainly as it was, had been gathered up entirely by his own hands. It was his to bear.

Doran could not do it for him. He could not absolve Alistair of his past; he could not forgive him, for forgiveness was not his to dole out like some healing salve. It only showed him how little he could do for him, no matter how much he may have wanted to. Jonathan had not been wrong. Doran knew little of magic; he knew little of Alistair; in truth, he knew little of anything. He didn't even know what he felt about everything - about Alistair being a necromancy, about Jonathan being something... worse, about Damien, about the Coven, about Alistair's past...

There was one thing he did know.

Slowly he took a step forward, his muddy green eyes staring into Alistair's. "The good and the bad." His hands reached up, fingers trailing over the bristle of the man's jaw. "The pain and the joy." His voice had become little more than a murmur as he repeated the promises they had had made one another in field that felt lifetimes away. "You promised. To try." There was a light in his eyes, a small ember that burned steady and searching. "I'm no mage, Alistair. I don't understand magic, I don't understand you and..." He paused, letting his eyes close as his hands slipped from Alistair's face to his shoulders, his own forehead pressed into the warm rise of his chest. He couldn't tell what he felt. "And I don't know anything. I don't understand anything. I don't- I don't hate you, Alistair."

He spoke into the man, eyes still closed, breath soft and gentle. "I just... I don't know what I'm supposed to do. I don't how to feel about this, about all the other countless things you surely haven't told me." For good reason. He'd reacted quite strongly to the man's necromancy, but neither did he feel it unwarranted. While Alistair had had to deal with the repeated revelations of others until his own heart was raw and sore, it was his first time - and his second great heartbreak. "I can't help you if you don't share your life with me. If you- if you continue to put me in a little box and... and hope that I'll stay put, never wandering out where I might get hurt or scared or confused."

His hand moved to wrap about Alistair's waist, and he turned his head, eyes still shut as he pressed his ear against him to heart the beat of his heart. Somewhere, within him, the spark of necromancy was alive and well... but he was still Alistair. "I don't know, Alistair. I hate that you have that spark. I hate it. But..." He drew back, his eyes glistening and earnest as he finally stared up at him, tears shivering their way down his cheeks. "I don't want to- I can't... I can't hate you."

What am I supposed to do?

"Fek magic."
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You're an idiot, Doran told him.

"Okay," he quickly replied. Alistair was . . . alright with that response. It was less produced by the seething rage of a man confounded by stupidity, and more... Doran feeling distraught, and uncertain. And of course, disagreeing with him. Alistair knew that he saw things in a way that was . . . impossibly utilitarian, whereas Doran had always seen things from the lens of individual morality, between individuals. There was a strong divide to breach between the two of them . . . and possibly stronger now, with Necromancy added into the mix of their relationship. He knew that he would likely never truly accept that part of him, but Alistair did not intend to be a Necromancer forever.

One day, if he could, he would seek the spark's removal. Perhaps then, this would all become a distant memory, or even a fond one: the first step towards reconstructing Alistair's life, and being rid of the vileness of the spark of death. Of course, Alistair had relied on eschewing the full truth. He hadn't animated a corpse in arcs, but he still stood by three powerful Revenants, who were actively used for a variety of different purposes - from the trivial task of cleaning to momentous feats of combat and killing.

He hoped, one day, that he would not need them. But Doran would never understand his continual wielding of the undead, even if it was for righteous purposes. Alistair could save a million with only the three corpses that clung to him, and to Doran . . . it would probably not be enough to justify their use. Once more, it was naught but a gap in their ethics. Necromancy, to him, was nothing but a vulgar extension of what still remained the righteous arm of justice.

But right now, none of that mattered. Perhaps they would have their debate - perhaps Doran would find out, somehow, about the Revenants. Alistair knew he could not be wholly truthful right now, and certainly not all at once. What held much of their relationship intact was unspoken truths, though not lies.

And he would keep things that way, if it meant . . . more of this. Doran was a kind and gentle soul - even now, he wanted Alistair to love himself. Despite the fact that he was a Necromancer. He had, in his own way, accepted him . . . even though it was with stipulations, knowing that the mage had lost his interest some arcs ago, and had integrated the spark into his soul at a young age. Alistair knew it all belied upon his regret - but he was graced by Doran's forgiveness, which mattered a great deal to him.

The smaller man drew close, and pressed into the bristles of his beard, and laid into his chest. Alistair wrapped his arms around him, his hands meeting at the small of Doran's back, as the Venoran man whispered his promise in that soft, airy voice. "I haven't forgotten our promise," he whispered, kissing softly at the man's forehead. Doran . . . felt so right in his arms, even confused as he was. He had always felt that he belonged within his grasp, as the two contentedly melted into one another, the gentleness of their embrace obscuring their many hardships.

"I don't hate you either, Doran," he said, rather obviously and with a small grin attached. "Because I love you." Those words were, of course, unsurprising. More and more, each trial, he felt that he loved him. Even now, those emotions only grew.

"I'm . . . sorry that I haven't told you more. But," he began, with a queerness to his eyes and lips as he restrained a teasing grin, "we've only known one another for thirteen trials. We need time between us before we can say we know everything." It was easy to forget that. But neither of them had fully had the time to share it all. Of course, he acknowledged that Necromancy was a secret one did not simply slowly let out over the arcs, as one did with other things. But both of them knew what it had meant. Alistair felt it was better to simply never let him know - and perhaps he was right. Even though it was uncovered in this way, he had been given time. Doran cared about him, now. And they'd made such promises to one another.

Even Necromancy appeared incapable of breaking away at their affections. That . . . meant a great deal to him. "I don't want to keep you in a box," he whispered. "I just don't want to lose you, Doran. I'm sorry." The mage looked down, staring at the smaller man, with his soft wisps of hair and his smooth face, that sought a place to rest in Alistair's chest. The mage stroked at his back, doing what he could to soothe him.

"Come back to me, Doran," he whispered, between an ask and a command. "I'll take you back to Rynmere whenever you want. But . . . come back. I'll tell you all of the things that you want to know. But I want to stay with you. I want to continue what we have. You mean the world to me, Doran. And I know that I matter a lot to you, too," he said, tightening his grip, as his eyes lowered and then shut closed. "So come back. Please. You make me better. You make me happy. I need you."
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There was no clear answer - no real way for him to know anything, aside from the fact that it seemed Alistair had relaxed. Though it was not quite envy, Doran wondered what it was like to move from emotion to emotion so quickly; to be upset one trill and soothing and calm the next. He certainly didn't understand it. He didn't understand Alistair and, it seemed, he didn't understand himself either. So much was his turmoil and so little Alistair offered him - because, in truth, what more could he? - that Doran only found himself nodding quietly as the man professed his love once again.

He'd known Alistair would confuse him. Just by his very presence alone, Doran wanted to be near him. Seeking redemption was all well and good, but was it enough? What Alistair had said about hating himself, about wishing he could do anything to amend his mistakes... Doran still didn't know what to make of such things. When Alistair made his soft jest, Doran didn't smile. Instead, his eyes took on a thoughtful glimmer and he nodded again, quietly mulling over how very short indeed were the trials they could claim to have known one another.

Perhaps that was what leant itself so heavily to his own bewilderment. Alistair didn't feel like a stranger. He didn't seem like someone he'd only just met; he felt warmer, softer... more. To think it had been fewer trials than a childhood cold he'd spent with him... There was merely too much Doran didn't know about the mage, and yet also a wild jumble of things he did know. Among them, of course, the man's necromancy, but there was much, much more. His childhood abuse, his manipulation under the heel of the coven, his magic in its entirety, murder and attempt of such of the king, Damien, Jonathan, Kleine...

And his love. Where did it come from? Why did he think so?

Once Alistair's arms had stopped their gentle embrace, professing his affection in both spoken desire and necessity, Doran gently pushed away. "Thirteen trials..." Though the sadness in his voice had yet to fade, the initial dread filled shock of Alistair's secret spark had settled. He didn't know what to think, not yet, but he was better aware that he'd never know as long as Alistair was there beside him. It was near impossible for him to look at his face and not see the warmth and tender affection he held for him. Alistair was trying, and the least Doran owed him was a mind unclouded.

"We're barely even acquaintances, aren't we?" Shaking his head, he pulled a breath in through his nose, hands lingering on the man's firm hips. "Perhaps- No, I do. I need time. Time to... I don't know, really." A sigh slipped through his lips, and he finally released Alistair. Fingers running through his wavy, slightly tangled locks, he considered what it was he wanted to say and how he might say it.

"As long as we both live, I will keep the promise I made to you no matter how my heart might break." He stared earnestly up at the other man. "For as long as you have need of me, I will return. Again and again, but for now..." For a moment, he trailed off, chewing on his lower lips, looking for all the world a lost child with only a few copper nels left in his pockets. "For now I need time... to think."

Even as he spoke, he could feel the warm flutter in his chest reject such things. It wanted to remain with Alistair - it had been the driving force that had pushed him to excitedly only trials before to rejoin him in Na'Haer, to cast himself without thought through the swirling rend in space. His affections for Alistair were more than a simple quickening of the heart; they were a challenge to who he was.

He knew, without a doubt, had anyone brought up the subject of necromancy, he would have been the first to disparage it. While Alistair claimed he little more than housed the spark itself, that alone was something Doran knew he wouldn't have been able to accommodate - not before meeting Alistair. Magic, too, he had held firm opinions upon: dangerous and unnecessary. He'd never once considered it useful - even as the Seekers had patrolled the streets of Andaris, he'd always found them less trustworthy than the other Knights.

Yet, there he stood, having just finished embracing a necromancer who had once belonged to the Coven itself... He could only imagine what the Doran before Alistair might have thought of him. Lily, he knew, would have been accommodating, but she was largely the reason he struggled with the twisted, dark magic of corpse manipulation at all. Just the very thought that her body might be raised was horrific - to face it even more so. Every man and woman who died touched the lives of others in some way - it was part of what made life so wondrous. Whether by intent or no, necromancy corrupted that - made monsters out of the bodies of those who had once been friends, family, lovers.

He hated it. But when it was a part of Alistair, he didn't know where it ended and the man began. He couldn't hate Alistair, even though their history was so short, but he neither could he accept necromancy. It left him at an impasse that, whenever he looked at Alistair, he could feel the flutter in his chest shouting at him to choose Alistair over his own ideologies. To change to suit the man who claimed he loved him, who spoke so softly and so genuinely when he said he needed him. There was no longer a person alive who had those same feelings, and though he was terrified of the secrets Alistair no doubt still held, unspoken, he was just as afraid of losing him.

And so he needed time.

"I would like to- to return to Rynmere. In the morning." He didn't look at Alistair as he spoke, the resolve in his voice gained only from the floor he stared at, it seemed. "On the fifteenth of Ymiden, I'll be at the grotto... awaiting your portal. Then - I hope - my thoughts will be... clearer." Again he shook his head. "I don't want to- to punish you, Alistair. This isn't about... reprimands and apologies. This is about who you are. Who I am. What we mean together." Finally, his gaze rose once more, his hazel eyes mixed with so many different feelings and emotions, it was anyone's guess what might have been there - Doran certainly didn't know. "You are not the boy you were, nor are you the man I thought you to be... and I don't know how or what I'm supposed to- to reconcile? To... accept?"

Using the cuff of his borrowed shirt to wipe what remained of his tears from the corners of his eyes and streaked cheeks, Doran cleared his throat. He hadn't forgotten about Jonathon, and there was nothing more he could ask of Alistair in that moment. He needed time away from the mage. "Such are the things I will... consider while I'm away. I... ask you do the same of me as well. Beyond 'need' and 'love'." There was a tender wistfulness in his voice as he requested his favor of Alistair in return. "But for now, I think it best you find Jonathan. We- we exchanged... words." In the quiet, regretful tone of his voice, no explanation was required as to the quality of such words shared. "Please go to him. I would like to rest and keep to myself for the remainder of morning. ...if you don't mind."

The sun had only just risen. The trial had barely begun and yet Doran wanted very little to do with it. He was exhausted, in the way that one's raw emotions could only weigh upon the body so. While it would be welcome time to think, before he left for Rynmere, he was well aware he'd need to speak with Jonathan as well. It was a conversation he did not want to have - not without the answers he still sought over what it was Alistair meant to him and what he was willing to overlook, to accept and accommodate - but it was necessary. He'd use the time left in Kaelserad to prepare, but his time with Alistair, at least for the season, had come to a poignant close.
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