[And now he looks up at her again, smiling Innocently (TM).]
Of course not. I wouldn’t ask you to do anything that makes you uncomfortable. It’s just… He was formative for you, whether or not the circumstances were ideal. I’m curious about what kind of tutor you had; if it was anything like how I was taught how to use my powers.
[She crosses her arms at him but her voice is gentle if somewhat grave.]
I don't know what happened to you in that laboratory. And... I don't think I could really talk about the decades I spent with him to compare and the aftermath of it all once he was tired of me. It's a difficult thing to explain.
[There's a gap between her learning under the Witch King and the person she is now. Something, no, someone far more significant and painful.]
But before you misunderstand, thank you. For asking me directly about my circumstances that is.
[He listens, hearing clearly what’s being said: it’s still too vulnerable to speak too casually on. It’s “difficult”, which means there are critical pieces of the story he’s missing.]
I won’t lie and say I’m not curious. But I’m not going to force you to talk about it either — that’s just about as bad as me digging around in your head.
[And he does mean that. Even if he puts on a show with this politeness he majority of the time, he knows there’s no benefit to repeating past mistakes. Not with her.
Her thanks, though… It’s strange. Gratitude for him being considerate? What does he do with that?]
…You’re welcome. But mostly, it’s just because I learned my lesson. And I’m glad I did.
[He turns the sketchbook over, to tap at the last spider she drew.]
I wouldn’t have gotten this one otherwise. It’s my favorite of the ones you did, I think.
[Oh? Henry tilts his head as though that might reveal whatever expression she’s making — it doesn’t, of course, but he can imagine she appreciates the compliment.
Good to know.]
I don’t see why not. A scorpion with oven mitts and an apron.
[She rolls her eyes at his jest and starts making her way back to the house.]
You know, I definitely have a spell or two in my repertoire to make sure that the heat doesn't bother you too much. I'll just re-review it before I try anything.
[Amelia's about to open the back door that leads to the kitchen but stops when on the pipe she spots a spider web, though it's semi-damaged and barely hanging on. There's also no spider.]
Oh. I think we missed one. [She glances around.] Has it gone off somewhere?
[Henry is far from naive enough to think that spiders don't fall to predators, too. But that doesn't mean he'll ignore the chance to find where one's gone missing, even if the chances are slim out here in the garden.
He takes to the idea almost immediately.]
Then let's look. [If a bird swooped it away, then it's a lost cause. But if it had fell... His eyes look down and track in the same direction as Amelia, into the grass. He wanders over in that direction with slow, purposeful steps.]
[They'll have to look carefully since its dark color may camouflage it if it's on the ground somewhere. As Amelia makes a careful half-circle around the patch of grass, she decides now's a good time as any to ask.]
Henry? Why do you like spiders? Or at least, when did it start?
[She'll think of a spell or one of her many runes that might make this search easier but wants to look manually first.]
[What a question. Henry's already crouched down, eyes scanning the grass for the telltale, minuscule movement of a spider. Even a trained eye like his own knows this will be a bit difficult.]
In my old home, when I was twelve, I found of nest of black widow spiders beneath the floorboards of a room we never really used.
[And while most children would have avoided it, Henry basically stuck his whole hand down in there.]
I found them fascinating. These creatures that so many people feared, but were really just so small, and misunderstood... Spiders in general are, you know. They're more helpful than anything else.
[A nest of black widows... Amelia doesn't mind spiders or even fear them, but even that sounds like it would give her a bit of a start. It goes to show how Henry is not of the norm since he was endeared to them so early on.]
You aren't wrong. Arachnophobia is a prominent condition even though its evolution of it remains unresolved. Hm.
[She decides to glance at her flowers where the red roses are since they're near the web.]
Let's see... Oh. Henry, over here.
[She waves him over to point to the spider she's found at the base of the rose plant. It's a black one a little smaller than the one's palm and it's limping. Three out of eight of its legs are bent most likely from a bird trying to snatch it away and then dropping its load at the last second.]
I think arachnophobia is silly. [Well, of course he does.] I think they're creatures to be admired. More so than most humans.
[Ah, his misantrhopy is showing. But that's cut short, too, when Amelia finds the spider and he moves over closer to inspect it. Beneath the rose plant, a black spider is clinging to the plant's stem. Immediately, he can see that this is the look of one who was swept up by a bird and dropped soon after.
Henry frowns.]
Its legs are broken. It'll be hard for it to... [Well, survive, really. Like this. He frowns.] The most we can do is bring it back to its web for now.
[He's psychic, but he's not the healing kind of psychic.]
[ now we don't have time to unpack all of that dot gif
Amelia doesn't reply to Henry right away. They could proceed as he says and let nature do it's natural thing. It would be inconsequential whether it would live or not. There will be others after it.
("I think it's okay," said her dearest with a smile, "To do something to make someone else happy no matter how small it is.")
The witch moves closer to the roses.]
Let me try something.
[And unexpectedly, she reaches out with her outstretched palm to provide the limping spider a platform. It jerks back at first but she remains still enough that the spider cautiously pulls itself into her hand.]
[He watches as she eases the spider onto her palm with care enough so the arachnid doesn’t move away. Henry has no choice, really, but to see what she’ll do.]
[Amelia smiles even though she doesn't take her eyes off the spider in her palm. She draws it closer to her chest with a clandestine expression.]
Why not a bit of magic?
[This magic isn't one of healing. This magic is one of adding and changing to make something a little bit more out of this small living creature.
The air around Amelia changes. Her aura is buzzing softly as she uses her free hand to pluck a strand of her hair from her head. The strand glints in the sunlight and it snakes around the witch's palm. As if sensing this arcane process the injured spider stays still as the magical thread encircles its legs, its body, it's whole being.
Amelia doesn't need incantations to cast her spells but there is power in words. And so the words she speaks into life seals the spider's new fate.]
[It doesn't even look like a spider anymore as it glows like a colorful orb; red from hair and the green of her magic. Amelia is self-hypnotized by this ritual; the green in her eyes is shining.
Pure magic, pure phenomena, nothing more, nothing less.]
[He can't hope to guess what's happening; her magic is beyond him on a good day, and now? This is a display that proves, he thinks, the power and whimsy of her magic combined.
So all he can do is watch as the spider is enveloped in the orb, red from her hair and shimmering from the emerald of her magic. Amelia's eyes shine a hue that matches, incredibly bright.
He murmurs, a bit hypnotized from the process, too. A bit unsure as to what that incantation is supposed to mean for the little arachnid encased in magic-]
[The magical energy dies down and in her palm, the spider stops glowing. It's black again and all of its three damaged legs are repaired. The sunlight reveals a more iridescent green and gold sheen on its surface. The small creature dances in circles around Amelia's palm as if in celebration.
The witch turns to Henry, uncharacteristically grinning.]
I made it a little stronger that's all. Oh, and gave it some new legs.
[She uses both of her hands to cup the spider carefully and brings it over to Henry.]
[Oh. She’s healed it. She’s made it more than it was. He can see the life and excitement thrumming from it — and she’s smiling wide, in a way that he’s seen so rarely from her.
He doesn’t know what to do for a moment, other than hold out his palm and wait for the spider to skitter back to it. Henry doesn’t answer her question at first; there’s the distinct feeling that he’s just… confused, briefly.]
Why…?
[Why did she do it? He cannot know the reasoning, because she surely does not go about healing all the small, hurt things in her gardens.]
[The spider moves to Henry's palm and it waits patiently to be moved back to it's spot instead of crawling anywhere else. Amelia opens her mouth to answer him but closes it again when she hears the confusion in his voice.
Odd how the explanation sounded simple in her head but she's lost the words all of a sudden.]
Well. I thought it'd be something you like?
[She tries again and instead of overthinking it just says it.]
I wanted to do something that would make you feel happy.
[It's such a simple explanation, but it feels like being handed a too-many-faceted sentiment, and Henry doesn't know how to hold it. How to really process it. Kindness simply for the sake of it is not something he particularly cares to attribute or acknowledge about humanity in general.
Much less when it's directed at him.]
Happy...?
[So very foreign.]
This...
[Quietly, he turns and moves to return the spider back to its web, looking down at it the whole while.]
... I should hope so. I have to keep everyone, not just you on their toes.
[Kindness for the sake of it is something that Amelia ironically learned from someone inhuman, someone who was able to draw out that inherent quality in her. She would be the first to admit that she was selfish and closed off, more willing to care about herself than others. With power such as hers, didn't she have the right? Didn't she have the privilege to lord herself above all other humans?
No, she would say. That isn't happiness. It was not about being greater, not when she had felt so tiny and helpless in her circumstances and not when her heart was so cut up.
(The world is such a dark place, but Briar loved it so.)
There was nothing wrong with doing something small to make someone else's day a little better, a little brighter.
Amelia says nothing as Henry returns the spider back to its web. The small creature, recognizing its home skitters back, delicately clinging to the thin threads. She's running her fingers through her hair as she watches it settle back in.]
It'll last longer. The spider and any webs it makes I mean.
[Said spider is actually starting to repair the damaged area of its web. The webbing it produces shimmers ever so slightly in the sun. Amelia mumbles the last part of her explanation as if suddenly shy about how much effort she put into the magic.]
My hair has a lot of magic so... The webs it makes should be better...
[Amelia has grown so much more as a person than Henry. Henry, who is always so angry at the world, who feels like he was dealt an unfair hand, who feels he fits in so badly with the rest of society that something else must be wrong with it, not him. Never him. His parents were wrong about him, just another pair of of individuals acting out their role in a silly, terrible play.
Little gestures like this, little kindnesses for the sake of it—when they aren’t used to tell lies, or manipulate—are little facets of proof going against the grain. He should reject them, but Amelia’s propensity to use her power to aid something he holds close to his heart, spiders, makes that difficult to do.
He swallows, his throat bobbing up and down. The spider shines; it already tries to make a new web with more vigor than he’s seen most spiders possess. Finally, Henry looks at Amelia.]
Thank you.
[Really, that’s all he can manage for now. All he can say in regards to processing this action. But— Well. It’s sincere, a rarity from him. She really did put some effort into this little gesture for him, didn’t she?
Her hair…]
Your hair… Is it that useful?
[Without thinking, he just reaches out to… touch a lock of her hair, curious. Either oblivious or unremarking to her shyness.]
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Does that include knowing you're harboring a man from another world in your home? I'd at least expect a hello.
[Yes, he will manifest this reality.]
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[Amelia is making a face at Henry's expectations regarding the Witch King. She seriously does not want her teacher around.]
I am not inviting him directly. If he turns up so be it, if not, that's that.
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Of course not. I wouldn’t ask you to do anything that makes you uncomfortable. It’s just… He was formative for you, whether or not the circumstances were ideal. I’m curious about what kind of tutor you had; if it was anything like how I was taught how to use my powers.
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[She crosses her arms at him but her voice is gentle if somewhat grave.]
I don't know what happened to you in that laboratory. And... I don't think I could really talk about the decades I spent with him to compare and the aftermath of it all once he was tired of me. It's a difficult thing to explain.
[There's a gap between her learning under the Witch King and the person she is now. Something, no, someone far more significant and painful.]
But before you misunderstand, thank you. For asking me directly about my circumstances that is.
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I won’t lie and say I’m not curious. But I’m not going to force you to talk about it either — that’s just about as bad as me digging around in your head.
[And he does mean that. Even if he puts on a show with this politeness he majority of the time, he knows there’s no benefit to repeating past mistakes. Not with her.
Her thanks, though… It’s strange. Gratitude for him being considerate? What does he do with that?]
…You’re welcome. But mostly, it’s just because I learned my lesson. And I’m glad I did.
[He turns the sketchbook over, to tap at the last spider she drew.]
I wouldn’t have gotten this one otherwise. It’s my favorite of the ones you did, I think.
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If I keep drawing with you maybe you'll get something better than that. Hopefully.
[... Things to look forward to. Someone to do them with. This was not something the Witch King could have ever taught her.
As soon as she's absolutely sure that her expression is neutral again she looks up at Henry and gestures one shoulder back to the house.]
It's getting warmer now so let's get that late breakfast underway, shall we?
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Good to know.]
I don’t see why not. A scorpion with oven mitts and an apron.
[He jokes.]
Breakfast sounds good. Let’s get out of this sun.
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You know, I definitely have a spell or two in my repertoire to make sure that the heat doesn't bother you too much. I'll just re-review it before I try anything.
[Amelia's about to open the back door that leads to the kitchen but stops when on the pipe she spots a spider web, though it's semi-damaged and barely hanging on. There's also no spider.]
Oh. I think we missed one. [She glances around.] Has it gone off somewhere?
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[Be taken with him back home, SO KIDS DON'T SET HIM ON FIRE ANYMORE--
The thought is severed when he notes the same pipe with the same torn spider web. No spider. His brows pinch together.]
Leaving its web like that? Something could have happened. It's not windy enough for the weather to have done it on its own.
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[Or the cats but they haven't visited her house lately. Amelia leaves the door and takes a few steps back to scan the ground leading to the grass.]
We can check to see if it's around.
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He takes to the idea almost immediately.]
Then let's look. [If a bird swooped it away, then it's a lost cause. But if it had fell... His eyes look down and track in the same direction as Amelia, into the grass. He wanders over in that direction with slow, purposeful steps.]
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Henry? Why do you like spiders? Or at least, when did it start?
[She'll think of a spell or one of her many runes that might make this search easier but wants to look manually first.]
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In my old home, when I was twelve, I found of nest of black widow spiders beneath the floorboards of a room we never really used.
[And while most children would have avoided it, Henry basically stuck his whole hand down in there.]
I found them fascinating. These creatures that so many people feared, but were really just so small, and misunderstood... Spiders in general are, you know. They're more helpful than anything else.
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You aren't wrong. Arachnophobia is a prominent condition even though its evolution of it remains unresolved. Hm.
[She decides to glance at her flowers where the red roses are since they're near the web.]
Let's see... Oh. Henry, over here.
[She waves him over to point to the spider she's found at the base of the rose plant. It's a black one a little smaller than the one's palm and it's limping. Three out of eight of its legs are bent most likely from a bird trying to snatch it away and then dropping its load at the last second.]
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[Ah, his misantrhopy is showing. But that's cut short, too, when Amelia finds the spider and he moves over closer to inspect it. Beneath the rose plant, a black spider is clinging to the plant's stem. Immediately, he can see that this is the look of one who was swept up by a bird and dropped soon after.
Henry frowns.]
Its legs are broken. It'll be hard for it to... [Well, survive, really. Like this. He frowns.] The most we can do is bring it back to its web for now.
[He's psychic, but he's not the healing kind of psychic.]
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Amelia doesn't reply to Henry right away. They could proceed as he says and let nature do it's natural thing. It would be inconsequential whether it would live or not. There will be others after it.
("I think it's okay," said her dearest with a smile, "To do something to make someone else happy no matter how small it is.")
The witch moves closer to the roses.]
Let me try something.
[And unexpectedly, she reaches out with her outstretched palm to provide the limping spider a platform. It jerks back at first but she remains still enough that the spider cautiously pulls itself into her hand.]
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…Try what?
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[Amelia smiles even though she doesn't take her eyes off the spider in her palm. She draws it closer to her chest with a clandestine expression.]
Why not a bit of magic?
[This magic isn't one of healing. This magic is one of adding and changing to make something a little bit more out of this small living creature.
The air around Amelia changes. Her aura is buzzing softly as she uses her free hand to pluck a strand of her hair from her head. The strand glints in the sunlight and it snakes around the witch's palm. As if sensing this arcane process the injured spider stays still as the magical thread encircles its legs, its body, it's whole being.
Amelia doesn't need incantations to cast her spells but there is power in words. And so the words she speaks into life seals the spider's new fate.]
ꜱᴘɪᴅᴇʀ, ꜱᴘɪᴅᴇʀ ᴏɴ ᴍʏ ᴡᴀʟʟ,
ɪɴ ᴍʏ ɢᴀʀᴅᴇɴ ʏᴏᴜ ʜᴀᴅ ᴀ ɢʀᴇᴀᴛ ꜰᴀʟʟ
ꜱᴏ ɴᴏᴡ ʏᴏᴜ ᴀʀᴇ ᴍʏ ʜᴏɴᴏʀᴇᴅ ɢᴜᴇꜱᴛ
ɪ ɢɪᴠᴇ ʙᴀᴄᴋ ᴡᴀʀᴍᴛʜ ᴀɴᴅ ʟɪꜰᴇ
ɴᴏᴛʜɪɴɢ ᴍᴏʀᴇ ᴀɴᴅ ɴᴏᴛʜɪɴɢ ʟᴇꜱꜱ.
[It doesn't even look like a spider anymore as it glows like a colorful orb; red from hair and the green of her magic. Amelia is self-hypnotized by this ritual; the green in her eyes is shining.
Pure magic, pure phenomena, nothing more, nothing less.]
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So all he can do is watch as the spider is enveloped in the orb, red from her hair and shimmering from the emerald of her magic. Amelia's eyes shine a hue that matches, incredibly bright.
He murmurs, a bit hypnotized from the process, too. A bit unsure as to what that incantation is supposed to mean for the little arachnid encased in magic-]
What are you doing...?
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The witch turns to Henry, uncharacteristically grinning.]
I made it a little stronger that's all. Oh, and gave it some new legs.
[She uses both of her hands to cup the spider carefully and brings it over to Henry.]
Want to put it back on its web?
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He doesn’t know what to do for a moment, other than hold out his palm and wait for the spider to skitter back to it. Henry doesn’t answer her question at first; there’s the distinct feeling that he’s just… confused, briefly.]
Why…?
[Why did she do it? He cannot know the reasoning, because she surely does not go about healing all the small, hurt things in her gardens.]
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Odd how the explanation sounded simple in her head but she's lost the words all of a sudden.]
Well. I thought it'd be something you like?
[She tries again and instead of overthinking it just says it.]
I wanted to do something that would make you feel happy.
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Much less when it's directed at him.]
Happy...?
[So very foreign.]
This...
[Quietly, he turns and moves to return the spider back to its web, looking down at it the whole while.]
You'll full of surprises, Amelia.
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[Kindness for the sake of it is something that Amelia ironically learned from someone inhuman, someone who was able to draw out that inherent quality in her. She would be the first to admit that she was selfish and closed off, more willing to care about herself than others. With power such as hers, didn't she have the right? Didn't she have the privilege to lord herself above all other humans?
No, she would say. That isn't happiness. It was not about being greater, not when she had felt so tiny and helpless in her circumstances and not when her heart was so cut up.
(The world is such a dark place, but Briar loved it so.)
There was nothing wrong with doing something small to make someone else's day a little better, a little brighter.
Amelia says nothing as Henry returns the spider back to its web. The small creature, recognizing its home skitters back, delicately clinging to the thin threads. She's running her fingers through her hair as she watches it settle back in.]
It'll last longer. The spider and any webs it makes I mean.
[Said spider is actually starting to repair the damaged area of its web. The webbing it produces shimmers ever so slightly in the sun. Amelia mumbles the last part of her explanation as if suddenly shy about how much effort she put into the magic.]
My hair has a lot of magic so... The webs it makes should be better...
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Little gestures like this, little kindnesses for the sake of it—when they aren’t used to tell lies, or manipulate—are little facets of proof going against the grain. He should reject them, but Amelia’s propensity to use her power to aid something he holds close to his heart, spiders, makes that difficult to do.
He swallows, his throat bobbing up and down. The spider shines; it already tries to make a new web with more vigor than he’s seen most spiders possess. Finally, Henry looks at Amelia.]
Thank you.
[Really, that’s all he can manage for now. All he can say in regards to processing this action. But— Well. It’s sincere, a rarity from him. She really did put some effort into this little gesture for him, didn’t she?
Her hair…]
Your hair… Is it that useful?
[Without thinking, he just reaches out to… touch a lock of her hair, curious. Either oblivious or unremarking to her shyness.]
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