César Salazar (
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myicebox2016-06-09 03:09 pm
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Zaknafein Do'Urden and Caesar Salazar Meet. And are immediate bros!
When Caesar wasn't at work doing science, he was at home doing science. There were limits to how many of his ideas that he wanted to hand over to his workplace. Not only were there so many rules and procedures that simply got in the way, but he wanted to retain ownership of the more interesting ideas at his disposal. So that took them to the here and now.
Caesar wanted to play with viewing other universes, and he was pretty sure he wasn't going to get approval to do it from his boss. He also didn't want a corporation to take the technology and use it for financial gain. No, this was a purely scientific endeavor. It was important that it remained so. Mind you, he knew there was a risk of his company being angry enough to put him out of a job after he published the paper on this, but he'd be able to find another job easily, considering his skill set. They'd likely pay him even more.
Not that he wasn't paid well now--he was, judging by how his apartment was furnished fairly nicely. It was all mostly normal furniture, chosen for utility (how comfy, multipurpose) over design. It geared mostly towards the modern, but the couch was definitely a big green monstrosity of a thing with poofy seats, backs, and armrests.
Two bedrooms. One bedroom was his, and the other was being used as his lab. He'd at least covered the floor with a protective covering so that it wouldn't get ruined (too much). This was where he was now. Nice hardwoods and crown molding in a bedroom where a Murphy bed was up against the wall in case he had guests. (Mostly so he could sleep in this room instead.)
It was pretty high up, on the eighth floor of an apartment building overlooking a still somewhat busy street. It was Friday evening, and it meant Caesar could work out the bugs on his new toy all weekend instead of go out and be social like normal people. Which his therapist probably would have preferred, really. But Caesar was happy now. Maybe a little lonely, but he chatted with Rex regularly, and both visited at least a few times a year.
But that was an aside that Caesar was not even thinking about at the moment, and would probably be snippy with the narrator if he had any idea about her existence. Right now, he was focused on peering into other universes, mostly because he could, partially because he wanted to prove some of his theories, and a very slight, but more pressing than he would like, need to prove one of his coworkers wrong.
The system was fairly simple: a console hooked up to a server rack, both hooked up to the a metal doorway with various doohickeys on the inside of it to create and maintain the gateway to another world. I also had some more equipment in the front of the doorway to create a force field that would block anything trying to come through. It was all along one wall of the room, opposite the bed.
He was finally ready to switch it on. It was either going to work or cause their part of the universe to implode if he got his calculations wrong. Oh well, c'est la vie.
It was a simple boot sequence, all started by a big red button that Caesar had installed in the console because he found it funny. Everything hummed to life at once, and Caesar tried to keep a grin off his face. Each check and test passed one by one as the sequence went through all of them, and then the portal itself fired up, followed by the blue force field a second later.
Suddenly, Caesar was peering into darkness through the portal as it stabilized. He frowned a bit. It was theoretically working, but... It was pitch black. Nothing. No light at all.
And that's when his machine finally caused the power to dip for a moment, and the UPS for the force field failed, causing it to hum and fizzle out of existence. Caesar stared at the portal, dumbstruck.
"... That wasn't supposed to happen."
Caesar wanted to play with viewing other universes, and he was pretty sure he wasn't going to get approval to do it from his boss. He also didn't want a corporation to take the technology and use it for financial gain. No, this was a purely scientific endeavor. It was important that it remained so. Mind you, he knew there was a risk of his company being angry enough to put him out of a job after he published the paper on this, but he'd be able to find another job easily, considering his skill set. They'd likely pay him even more.
Not that he wasn't paid well now--he was, judging by how his apartment was furnished fairly nicely. It was all mostly normal furniture, chosen for utility (how comfy, multipurpose) over design. It geared mostly towards the modern, but the couch was definitely a big green monstrosity of a thing with poofy seats, backs, and armrests.
Two bedrooms. One bedroom was his, and the other was being used as his lab. He'd at least covered the floor with a protective covering so that it wouldn't get ruined (too much). This was where he was now. Nice hardwoods and crown molding in a bedroom where a Murphy bed was up against the wall in case he had guests. (Mostly so he could sleep in this room instead.)
It was pretty high up, on the eighth floor of an apartment building overlooking a still somewhat busy street. It was Friday evening, and it meant Caesar could work out the bugs on his new toy all weekend instead of go out and be social like normal people. Which his therapist probably would have preferred, really. But Caesar was happy now. Maybe a little lonely, but he chatted with Rex regularly, and both visited at least a few times a year.
But that was an aside that Caesar was not even thinking about at the moment, and would probably be snippy with the narrator if he had any idea about her existence. Right now, he was focused on peering into other universes, mostly because he could, partially because he wanted to prove some of his theories, and a very slight, but more pressing than he would like, need to prove one of his coworkers wrong.
The system was fairly simple: a console hooked up to a server rack, both hooked up to the a metal doorway with various doohickeys on the inside of it to create and maintain the gateway to another world. I also had some more equipment in the front of the doorway to create a force field that would block anything trying to come through. It was all along one wall of the room, opposite the bed.
He was finally ready to switch it on. It was either going to work or cause their part of the universe to implode if he got his calculations wrong. Oh well, c'est la vie.
It was a simple boot sequence, all started by a big red button that Caesar had installed in the console because he found it funny. Everything hummed to life at once, and Caesar tried to keep a grin off his face. Each check and test passed one by one as the sequence went through all of them, and then the portal itself fired up, followed by the blue force field a second later.
Suddenly, Caesar was peering into darkness through the portal as it stabilized. He frowned a bit. It was theoretically working, but... It was pitch black. Nothing. No light at all.
And that's when his machine finally caused the power to dip for a moment, and the UPS for the force field failed, causing it to hum and fizzle out of existence. Caesar stared at the portal, dumbstruck.
"... That wasn't supposed to happen."
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His eyes remain on the device for a long moment before looking back up to Caesar's face, red eyes tight with frustration at their lack of being able to communicate. The other man is trying, that much is at least certain. The wait is what stands out to him, the care to get permission is such a seldom thing that he nearly misses it.
Then he finally nods, though he still doesn't seem capable of relaxing as he half expects the thing to need to take some of his blood for the spell to work. That, at least, would make some sense to him.
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Good thing he's scanning himself first, regardless. Caesar quietly does the same sweeping motion he did with Zak, turning it on with a little beep about at his chest area and then moving it downwards. Then back up and down once more. Caesar smiles a bit as the scan is complete and some information is shown on the screen.
He turns the brightness down after a moment of thought and turns the screen to show Zaknafein. "See? That's it. Now your turn, Zak?"
A question, asking permission with his voice even if the other man does not understand his words. Look, he's not dangerous, okay? Caesar even thinks he can show the elf how to hold it, just to be sure.
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Still, the motion seemed innocent enough. No blood, no pain, not much of anything that he can discern. Not even the telltale flash of light that accompanies most magic. There's part of him that can't help but feel a faint bit of curiosity about what's happening before him.
Looking at the screen as it's offered does not assuage the confusion permeating the drow's expression, or the feeling of helplessness as the moments tick by, leaving his son alone to fight a hopeless battle alone. He'd never be able to forgive himself if...
He shakes the nagging fear from the forefront of his mind, letting it fall back to simmer as he tries to focus on the task at hand. Zak makes no effort to touch the thing, but he looks back up to Caesar. "Do what you must."
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He shifts the scanner in his hands so that he's holding onto it properly to scan Zaknafein. The movements are the same, once again done slowly, scanning from his chest to his stomach. Caesar grins a bit after he sees the screen upon finishing the scan.
"It worked!" Caesar uses the tone of his voice, slightly exaggerated, to convey a good result. "It's not perfect, but I'm going to try to open the portal a bit away from that area you were fighting in if you don't mind."
Then with another grin and knowing he wouldn't get a full answer, Caesar turned around and walked over to connect the scanner to his machine. Work began soon after that, with Caesar bringing sub systems online as he waited for the calibration to finish.
"I should have you home soon!"
Caesar would have liked to learn more about the strange being now standing in his guest bedroom, but the drow was too anxious to get back home. He would have to survive with observing that world now that he had managed to locate one that was interesting. That would take some alterations, but Caesar was excited to think of all the papers he'd be writing about this soon enough! Aliens! Aliens from another universe! The entire scientific community was going to collectively soil their pants.
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Zaknafein's anxiety continues, if only because he's standing around doing nothing while his son could very well be fighting for his life. The most he can do is try to take heart in the fact that Drizzt is strong, that he trained him well and can hold his own.
"It will not be much longer, my son." He murmurs under his breathe staring at the scorched wall as though he could make the portal open through the force of his will alone. He will save his son, or die trying.
Looking down at the burned, bisected body on the floor and gets an idea. Taking it by the arm, he shifts it around to make it easier to grab and throw through the portal as a distraction should he need it.
I know there's a joke here about the dead drow but I'm not feeling witty today.
He gives Zaknafein a thumbs up before pointing at the still closed portal. "Ready?"
... Okay, he's holding the dead elf by the arm. Caesar's pretty sure he means to throw the body if there's something on the other side when the portal opens, but that doesn't stop it from being creepy.
XD
Zaknafein looks back over his shoulder at the human when he speaks, following the gesture to the wall and nodding. Already he can feel the anticipation for battle burning through his veins and he shifts his stance, grasping the dead drow warrior's arm more firmly as he waits for the portal to open.
I guess my dark sense of humor is just rusty. Also 1/2
Caesar observes the drow prepare himself for a moment; good, he understood what Caesar meant to do. He breathes a small sigh of relief. Now, he hasto hope that whatever is waiting for them on the other side doesn't decide to come through and kill them both.
It is too bad, really. Caesar wishes he could have asked Zaknafein some questions. He looks to the camera he has set up in the corner of the room. There's at least recordings of what happened, he now remembers vaguely. It's still only going to give him so much to work with.
He's really trying not to think about the dead elf. Really trying not to. Can he really talk to his therapist about this? He'd already talked to her about some of the other nonsense that had happened in his life. This is pretty much believable since it's him.
"Okay," Caesar breathes in and out slowly, going back to his work on the console. "Okay. Let's get this started."
Components come to life in a succession of humming noises, fans spinning up and processors computing away. The lights flicker a bit again as the power draw increases, and then it happens.
Where there was only a view of a scorched wall a moment before, now stands what is clearly a doorway into another world. Pitch blackness, save for the feeble light from the monitors streaming into the portal and some other lights far off in the distance.
I guess I don't need many icons if he immediately falls unconscious, huh?
"Zaknafein...?"
The figure is clothed similarly to Zaknafein, twin blades in his hands, similar to the other drow. The swords clatter to the stone floor of the cave.
"Zak, I--"
The reason why the swords slipped from his hands becomes apparent after a moment, as Drizzt follows their path and collapses to the ground between them.
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His expression melts away from determination to absolute relief to see his son, standing slowly in shock and letting the body's arm drop to the floor. "Drizzt?"
Then his heart feels like it drops right out of his chest as he watches him fall, everything slowing down for a fraction of a second before he bursts into action.
"Drizzt!" The body forgotten, Zaknafein leaps through the portal and rushes to his son's side, skidding along the stone floor and landing hard on his knees. "No no no no no..." He's bordering on frantic, but he keeps his wits about him enough as he gathers him close, trying to look for injury while constantly looking up and around every few second for any other assailants.
He sees the dead bodies immediately. So it finally happened as he said it would. Drizzt has killed other drow. But there is no time for him to lament that loss of innocence. They need to get out of here. Fast. Before anyone else comes after them.
Then he looks back over to the portal, through the portal, right at Caesar. Help me. Please.
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Yup. He just did.
Caesar looks vaguely annoyed by that, but he's curious about the relief on Zaknafein's face. So it was a person after all--it was clearly been another male elf's voice saying Zaknafein's name. The reason why he wanted to return home so resolutely.
Then something goes clearly wrong, there's the sound of metal against stone followed by a thump of a body, and Zaknafein is through the portal before Caesar can even react. He takes one more look at his instruments, to make sure they're stable enough, and then rushes over next to the portal. Caesar leans over, peering in.
Indeed, it's another dark elf that Zaknafein must have been worried about. Caesar sees no enemies, and he steps fully into view of the portal as he takes the scene in, gingerly stepping over the corpse. The other elf--this Drizzt--is collapsed, which Caesar can see clearly enough in the almost pitch blackness.
Zaknafein turns to stare at him, begging. Caesar can see the reflection in his eyes. The way he holds Drizzt. Not good, not good....
Caesar starts forward and almost trips over the arm. He frowns, and trying not to be sick, bends down to grab the body and throw it through the portal, out of the way. He starts to step inside then pauses, looking worried.
He has to trust in the stability of his machines.
Caesar's running through the next moment, over to Zaknafein, and ignoring the new dead bodies. There was a fight, and now this was the result. And they were vulnerable if they remained.
He crouches and puts an arm behind Drizzt's back and another under his knees, looking to Zaknafein with determination. "We can carry him through. Come on, we have to hurry!"
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Yet that may be exactly what he's doing. He can only view his own plea for help as a clear act of weakness, a frail and tattered hope.
Then Caesar was there, and despite being the one to ask for help, Zak instinctively tightens his hold protectively around Drizzt's body. He forces himself to relax again a moment later, understanding well enough what the wizard is trying to say and immediately hoists the smaller drow's body. Elves weigh little in comparison to humans, so he ends up shifting the boy into his own arms and gestures with his head for Caesar to lead the way.
Back again in the other room with the strange smelling air, he spins in a frustrated circle as he looks with more purpose, finally rushing over to rest him down on the nearby bed. It's obvious that Zaknafein holds a great deal of love for the other drow, eyes glassy with unshed tears.
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He has no idea that it is, truthfully, three. Caesar has no knowledge of the statue that Drizzt now possesses, stored safely away in a pocket.
The human lets Zaknafein take the younger(?) drow when he shows that he can carry him; his protectiveness that won't let Caesar get close isn't surprising, and Caesar doesn't argue against it. Instead, he leads the way, rushing through the portal, knowing that Zaknafein will follow him.
He wants to close the portal, but the body in Zak's arms is too limp. Drizzt's form calls for him to help, and when Zak puts him down on the bed, Caesar rushes over to join him, trying to see if he can take stock of his wounds.
Armor. ... He's going to need to take that off. But for now, he checks for breath, and he finds it, seeing the rise and fall of the smaller elf's body. Younger, likely. Maybe late teens, early twenties? He can't be too much younger than Zaknafein, Caesar decides on physical inspection. Brothers or lovers, maybe close friends.
"He's still breathing," Caesar says gently, looking over to Zaknafein--and seeing just how distressed the drow is, he raises his voice to become more passionate, stronger. "I'll do everything I can to make sure that he stays that way."
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He just prays to whatever god who can hear him that he hasn't sealed his son's death by bringing him here.
The weapon's master turns his glowing, crimson eyes back towards the portal, expression hard. "If he dies. You die." He says to Caesar without looking at him, then moves to head back towards the portal, drawing his blades.
Zaknafein still for just a moment once he's back through, eyes darting around and listening carefully for any sign of possible approaching threats. Luckily, the battle had just occurred, so if anything had been noticed it was likely ignored while it was going on, giving him time before the curious come poking around.
One of the bodies is charred beyond reason and very clearly dead. The other he recognizes, and while appearing as dead as the other, it's assured when the Hun'ett's head goes rolling from it's shoulders. Then he quickly wiped the blood from the blade on the wizard's robes before sliding them back in his sheath. As an afterthought, he stops and picks up Drizzt's scimitars before rushing back through the portal.
Then he looks over to his son, lying limp and unconscious. Clenching his teeth, he swings out with one of the adamantine blades and slices through the frame of the portal, breaking what he thinks is the magic circle keeping it open.
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--No, he'd definitely kill him, if only because he'd be in a state of shock. Maybe. Caesar paled a bit as he got to work to try to get Drizzt's equipment off.
He's removed Drizzt's belt and piwafwi by the time Zak returns, and he's starting to take off his shirt and armor when there's a noise behind him that sounds like metal against metal, almost--
Caesar jerks his head up, eyes going wide as he takes in what Zaknafein has just started to do. "Get away! It's going to overload!"
While he's put in some safeguards in case it broke, Caesar would rather not take a chance. He rushes around to the other side of the bed, the one against the far wall, and grabs the uncoscious Drizzt to pull him down onto the floor with him. Better safe than dead!
Electricity starts to arc for a moment as the portal fails, almost escaping its doorway before the interruption of the power flow catches up with it. Without anything more to sustain it, the portal collapses, too quickly, with a flash and rush of air that knocks things over all throughout the room. So much for that really cool lamp that he found while walking home one day....
He's just glad that he protected the windows. Last thing he needed to explain was why they all exploded.
And that's when the room's breaker decides it's had enough of this crazy interdimensional nonsense, and it flips, leaving them in completely darkness.
Caesar's voice floats from the protected side of the bed, incredibly sarcastic. "... Great."
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With a hard yank, he wrenches the scimitar free from where it had been buried in the wall amidst metal and sparking wires. His attention turns sharply when he hears Caesar yelling, unsurprised at all by the others anger but he can't find it in him to care all that much.
There isn't anywhere he can see that'll protect him, but he drops the swords and runs towards the side of the bed where Drizzt had been dropped and holds himself over the two other males, putting himself between them and the blast.
Thankfully, it's not as bad as it could be, but it's still a rough hit of power against his back.
When it's over, Zaknafein's muscles are tense where he's braced over the Drizzt and the wizard and his breath is coming fast and shallow. He can feel his heart thundering in his chest, and when he finally opens his eyes to look down at them, the red glow casts odd shadows against his dark skin.
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It was better to own than rent if you were Caesar Salazar. (Or Rex Salazar for that matter.) Which is why it's more frustration than anger, because people always seem to be breaking his things. But he also knows that Zaknafein is just trying to protect Drizzt. He knows the intensity of protecting someone, having felt that way to Rex when he was first reunited with him so many years ago....
The explosion is big enough to break a hole in the wall the portal was against, and Caesar can hear the splintering wood. He also feels Zak fall on top of him and Drizzt, an extra layer of protection against it.
Caesar opens his eyes when it is over, looking up at the elf above him. He gives a bit of a smile, but only for a moment, because then Drizzt groans weakly. The scientist turns back to look at him in worry. Zaknafein's likely injured, too.
Shit.
"Help me with him."
Caesar is doing his best to process everything at once, but it's too much. He'll have to check to make sure the place isn't burning down in a moment. First, he needs to stand in order to do that. That's the first step--having Zaknafein no longer crouching over him.
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Shoving the bed aside to give them more room to maneuver, he concedes at least for the moment to allow the human to help him lift his son back up on to the bed. From there he started to feel more than a little helpless. He'd spent his life ending lives, not saving them. No matter how desperately he may want to, he knows that he can't help Drizzt with force of will alone.
He remains close, hovering, but at least having the presence of mind to keep to the side of the bed Caesar isn't trying to work from. All he can do is watch and hope. Zaknafein doesn't pray. He doesn't have anyone he'd be willing to pray to, but he has faith in Drizzt, knowing that his son is strong. It'll take more than this to bring him down, surely.
As time goes on he can feel a throbbing in his side start to become more persistent, but he says nothing. He doesn't even look at the could be wound for fear of distracting the other man from doing his job.
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He tries to take off the armor again, only to wince and jerk his hands back as he touches a hot spot. Caesar stares for a moment, then tries to get the armor off as quickly as possible, trying to avoid spots that feel too warm. He hadn't noticed sooner, but now that he has--
"This needs to be off, now!" Caesar raises his voice to Zaknafein, hoping that his actions are alone enough to indicate the type of help that Caesar needs.
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The weapon's master has never known a fear to run so deep that it makes everything feel hot and raw. He'd never known it possible to be so affected by another person until his boy came into his life. In this moment it makes him feel terribly weak. If he lost Drizzt, he didn't know how he could go on, or what worth his life could possibly have.
He's pulled out of his thoughts when Caesar reacts as though he's been injured. At first he seems taken aback by it, but then moves swiftly when he figures out what needs to be done. Zak knows how the armor is worn, so he makes quick work of the clasps so it can be easily pulled away. The throbbing in his side is starting to become hot, and his winces harshly himself when he turns to quickly, but he ignores it in favor of the task at hand.
AFTER DISCUSSION, we are going a different route lmao.
The shirt is next, and Caesar breathes a bit of a sigh of relief when it lifts off Drizzt's skin without sticking. Maybe it won't be so bad. Maybe he's not horribly burned. He takes it off quickly, exposing the young drow's heavily muscled physique--surprising himself when he lets out a deep sigh of relief.
Whatever had caused the heat on the outside of Drizzt's armor had not spread to inside of it. Besides the erratic pulse, which seems to be better when Caesar checks it again, the younger elf seems to not be too worse for wear.
"His armor seems to have protected him from something worse," Caesar offered Zaknafein a tentative smile.
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He doesn't understand what Caeser is trying to say, but they way he says it offers him a measure of hope. Hope for the now, and lement the offences of his past cowardice. He'd wanted to kill Drizzt those years ago. To save him. To free him. Had he been a stronger drow he'd have stolen his son away then. They could have run together then as they are now.
He can't help but carry the weight of guilt for all the pain Drizzt has been through since then.
"What more can we do?"
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Of course, he doesn't know anything about their genetics. And it's quite possible for older and younger men to be in love with each other. So really, assuming they're related outright is kind of ageist. Oh, well. Caesar will eventually figure out which it is eventually.
Caesar pauses, not sure what to do next. Ah. There's. Really. Nothing he can do except wait at this point. He could try scanning him with the portable scanner, but who knows if that would even work. At a loss, Caesar scratches his head.
"Ah!" Well, it's stupid, but it's a thing. "Hold on."
The scientist reached up to the top of the bed, grabbed a pillow, and gently eased Drizzt's head up to stick it under the back of it.
"... I'm afraid he's sitting on the blanket."
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"Zak?" The name comes out as a moan, Drizzt not quite capable of forming his full name, still more unconscious than conscious.
While Zak might feel guilt that he hadn't of taken Drizzt away sooner, Drizzt now has Guenhwyvar's statuette. That's what matters more than being away from that place sooner. He loves her as he loves Zak, not that he knows the word for that emotion yet.
Drizzt tries to speak again after a moment, a little clearer, "Father...?"
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(adren-elf-in?)starts to ebb away. But then Drizzt is groaning, barely speaking, and his attention moves immediately back to the boy in the bed."Drizzt?" He moves in closer again, heart thudding hard in his chest but swelling with emotion when he hears those small, soft words. Whatever pain he's feeling is easily brushed aside as he reaches out hesitantly, pausing as though not exactly sure what to do or even if he should, but then he touches Drizzt's face with his fingertips, brushing pale, white hair away from his eyes.
"I am here." Zak's voice is tight, relief finally washing over him. "You are safe now, my son."
And no one will ever hurt him again if Zaknafein gets his way.
That was an awful pun, and I am so proud of you.
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Keywords sorry
you are not even remotely sorry
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/quietly destroys you
quietly destroys own character as well
cruel and unusual you are
:] I take pride in my cruelity.
*cruelty, because I'm too lazy to log back into his journal to fix it