Ariadne (
demonicbeauty) wrote in
deercountry2021-12-06 02:15 pm
Entry tags:
Witches can be right, giants can be good... [CLOSED]
Who: Ariadne and Varian
What: Some unfortunate memory sharing
When: Forward dated to December 8
Where: Casa Disaster #25 Raccoon Alley - Cassandra District
Content Warnings: Backstory trauma, but will update as needed.
Ariadne's exploration of holidays in the multiverse had led her to an inevitable conclusion: People loved Christmas. And while she might forever call it the "fat-man holiday," in her head, she figured it was best to start following cultural norms and expectations. It was similar enough to the way the Elves celebrated New Years that she understood the basics, anyway: Singing, eating, offerings, family, and presents.
The 'presents' part was the easiest. After all, people loved getting presents. And she loved giving them.
Maybe she wasn't the best at making them. As they said, though, it was the thought that counted.
A cliche she actually understood.
Varian and Fern inevitably ended up on the list of people she wanted to visit. She decided there was nothing more important for the two of them than some of the soil around her orchard, soil which might hold scientific answers (which would please Varian) and keep Fern alive through the winter (which would please both of them). She found a large, hollowed-out antler that seemed festive--a bright blue ribbon around it helped--and filled it up with soil from her trees, before heading out to Cassandra to pay them a visit. There was a slight bounce in her step, despite the cold. And when she arrived at their front door, she gave a jaunty, little knock.
What: Some unfortunate memory sharing
When: Forward dated to December 8
Where: Casa Disaster #25 Raccoon Alley - Cassandra District
Content Warnings: Backstory trauma, but will update as needed.
Ariadne's exploration of holidays in the multiverse had led her to an inevitable conclusion: People loved Christmas. And while she might forever call it the "fat-man holiday," in her head, she figured it was best to start following cultural norms and expectations. It was similar enough to the way the Elves celebrated New Years that she understood the basics, anyway: Singing, eating, offerings, family, and presents.
The 'presents' part was the easiest. After all, people loved getting presents. And she loved giving them.
Maybe she wasn't the best at making them. As they said, though, it was the thought that counted.
A cliche she actually understood.
Varian and Fern inevitably ended up on the list of people she wanted to visit. She decided there was nothing more important for the two of them than some of the soil around her orchard, soil which might hold scientific answers (which would please Varian) and keep Fern alive through the winter (which would please both of them). She found a large, hollowed-out antler that seemed festive--a bright blue ribbon around it helped--and filled it up with soil from her trees, before heading out to Cassandra to pay them a visit. There was a slight bounce in her step, despite the cold. And when she arrived at their front door, she gave a jaunty, little knock.

no subject
Just a guess. But it was the one she'd settled upon.
Fortunately, she had enough training among humanoids to understand how they spoke. Even if it made no sense to her. And if Varian wanted to start out with that nasty thing they called 'smalltalk,' she supposed it was only polite to oblige him with it.
For now.
"They're strong. I think it's the same sort of magic that allowed them to survive everything in Deerington. To look at them, you wouldn't even think they knew it was snowing."
no subject
"I guess that makes sense. I'm glad. That's... that's probably gonna come in really handy if this snow gets any worse. Especially if food shortages get real bad."
no subject
Words that summed up pretty much everything about Ariadne. Hope. That was her.
Sadly, hope did not mix well with smalltalk.
“Although my primary hope is helping to sustain Fern, at least.”
no subject
"Yeah, me too," he smiles, genuine behind the worry because he really is glad to have someone else so solidly in Fern's corner. "I really don't want him struggling in the winter- it doesn't help we don't know how bad it'll get here. If...if it'll be about the same as the dream or different."
no subject
Just a matter of time.
She moved off to one side, awkwardly holding the antler, unsure what to do with herself or it. All she really wanted to do was ask Varian what was going on with his skin.
...did he know?
Surely, he must have noticed.
That seemed like a hard thing to miss. But Fern did say he sometimes got very distracted, buried in his work.
no subject
"I think it's corruption," he answers the unspoken question. "I...I'm not sure how to fix it. I'm trying to figure it out."
That's a lie. He knows how to fix it, he's read plenty of books on it. But taking care of himself seems near impossible right now.
no subject
She breathed an odd sigh of relief when he told her. Now the problem had a name. And any problem with a name could be solved.
That's how she figured, anyway.
"Oh, Varian," she said, surging forward and wrapping her arms around him, to give him the biggest hug that her tiny body could possibly produce. Which was surprisingly enormous. Ariadne was a serious hugger.
no subject
"Uh...thanks," he clears his throat, a little awkwardly. "I'll...I'll be okay. I...I think."
No guarantee on that one. He doesn't know if he can, but he's trying to be reassuring, trying to ease her worry.
no subject
It made her want to hug the stuffing out of him.
But she didn't. Humans were strange about their personal space, and after a moment, she backed away. Although not without getting the antler she was holding caught up in his hair.
"Oh! Oops!"
no subject
"Oh um! Lemmie get that."
He doesn't know what the antlers do yet- so he thinks nothing about reaching out to hold it the same time as her- to try and get the thing out of his hair. The second he does though, the room pitches and changes. Suddenly, they're not in the Disaster House, they're in a dark, stone-walled building. Alchemical apparatus line the room, as do strange, black rocks jutting into the building at various angles. Varian blinks around, confused, before where he is settles in.
"Oh no. Oh no, not this again."
It's not a case of where, really, but when. A much younger Varian can be seen, mixing some yellow concoction into a flask- he's talking to Ruddiger, perched on his workbench watching him quietly.
"Never give up, Ruddiger. So, our last formula didn't deliver quite the reaction we hoped. So what? The important thing is that we got a reaction."
He grabs his flask, moving towards the black rocks. The present Varian looking like his whole world is about to come crashing down around him. He doesn't even look at his friend- his eyes are laser-focused on the door to the lab- like he's waiting for something. Someone.
Seconds later, a giant, stocky man opens the door, and while his entrance spooks the younger Varian into dumping the contents of his flask onto the rocks, the older one is staring, rapt. Like this is the most important person who could ever exist. Which, to Varian, he kind of is.
"...Dad."
no subject
Immediately, she turned to Ariadne, the first of many questions on her lips. But then he said it.
Not this again.
And she knew. Somehow, she just understood. Blame it on Deerington. It was probably safe to say that her experiences there had actually taught her a thing or two. So it was little bewildering and more curious, when she turned to the other side of the room and saw the younger Varian there. "Are these...something you created?" she asked, taking a few cautious steps toward the nearest black rock, only to retreat when the younger man walked over to do...something to it.
Then Varian's father burst into the scene and Ariadne whipped around, unaccustomed to someone arriving without a tell-tale scent to alert her.
no subject
The bear of a man steps into the room, looking tired, stressed.
"Son, I just want to..." he trails off as he sees the chemical mess the younger Varian is trying to hide behind his back- the yellow stuff bubbling away on the sheer face of the rock spike. "Varian, I told you to stay away from those rocks."
Anger is slipping into his tone immediately, and the younger Varian stammers an explanation as the older one doesn't rip his eyes off from the man, not for an instant.
"Y-yeah, yeah, okay I-I know what you said but Da-"
"But then there should be no misunderstanding!" the man leads the younger Varian away from the rocks, his voice rising frustration, anger and a hint of fear prevalent in his voice. "Now listen to me-"
The older Varian tenses, like he's sensing something bad coming- the younger one shoves at the man, angry himself now.
"No! No, you listen to me, Dad," he points towards the one window in the place. "Our village is DYING. You think running away from the problem is gonna fix it? No! These rocks aren't going away."
Finally, the older Varian turns his attention back to the rock- the chemical on it is bubbling away more and more. Finally, he glances in Airadne's direction, his brow furrowed.
"...I thought I was doing something good, something that could make a difference. I...I was wrong."
no subject
Small gestures could say more than words. With this one, she tried to convey a lot, though:
I'm sure it wasn't so bad.
I know your intentions are always good.
Nothing I see here is going to change my mind about you.
Also...
Parents are hard to deal with.
That last point, at least, Ariadne was absolutely sure about. Something in the dynamic between the two immediately reminded her of the way that she and her mother used to fight. Like cats.
"It's just the forces of Trench messing with our memories," she said softly. "Don't be afraid."
no subject
"...I hate it when this happens. I'm not-" he sucks in a breath. "Things are gonna get really bad."
And right on cue- there are Quirin and the younger Varian fighting, like cats. Two stubborn people who love each other but have lost the ability to communicate that. Quirin exhales sharply, pinching the bridge of his nose.
"I know, Varian, but there is more to them than you can possibly imagine."
He moves away, removing his glove- staring at a strange mark on his hand- a moon with three diagonal lines coming off it. The younger Varian doesn't see this, but the older one does, his hand moving onto his own hand- where his Deerington tattoo used to be. The younger Varian keeps arguing. He doesn't see the crystal behind him growing bigger and bigger.
"Then why won't you tell me? Dad? I- I just- I deserve to know."
"I'm sorry, Son. You are not ready."
He turns to speak to his son and notices the crystals. With a loud "Varian, watch out!" he surges forward, pushing the younger Varian to the ground. He rolls on the ground, coming to a stop- looking up to watch his father getting captured in the crystal solution. It slowly starts to encase him, bit by bit. The older Varian watches, his face grim.
"...This was the start of my whole life being ruined."
no subject
But she didn't say it.
She just squeezed his shoulder a little tighter.
And ducked her head a little, but not enough to tear her eyes off of Varian's father, as the strange solution seemed to hold him, like quicksand.
"What is that stuff?"
no subject
"...Amber. It's unbreakable. I- I didn't realise how impossible it was at the time."
His younger is moving close to his father, panic and pain evident on his face.
"Oh! Dad, DAD! H-hold on Dad, I- I'll get you out-"
He reaches out but Quirin stops him sharply and gruffly.
"NO! Stay back!"
The younger Varian does as he's told, wide-eyed, terrified. Quirin slumps, seemingly defeated as the amber grows more and more, swallowing more of him. The younger Varian can't take any more, turning and bolting to the door.
"I- I'm gonna go get help!" he races out despite Quirin's pleading of "No, Son- don't!"
The memory fades as soon as the younger Varian leaves the space. The older one staring at the place his father had been.
"I was stupid and stubborn. I should have listened and not messed with them."
no subject
But she wanted to stay close.
"I'm so sorry, Varian," she said. The probabilities that the scene ended well for his father seemed, slim. There were perfect possible futures, of course. There always were. But the memory had decided to stop there and she wasn't going to pry into how things turned out.
That was up to Varian.
"But," she said, her tone brightening a little. "I get that it's a sad memory. But it's also kind of a happy one. I mean...your dad was clearly trying to protect you. Loved you enough to put your safety first. He told you to stay back."
no subject
"I know, but that made it worse. He- he risked his life for me."
He closes his eyes, sucking in a breath as the memory fades and they return to the Disaster House hallway.
"He...he got out. But a lot happened between this and...him finally getting out. It took a year."
no subject
The perfect possible future! Even when the odds were against it! Ariadne wanted to shake Varian. To loop her elbow through his and spin around the room in delight. To dance!
He got out!
But Varian wasn't celebrating that. He seemed to be lost in...that year? She supposed so.
She tried to temper her enthusiasm. But she put both hands on his shoulder. "It's okay, Varian. A memory can't hurt you. It can only give you strength."
no subject
"I don't know. They usually hurt me pretty good here," he exhales. "Usually just as I'm starting to find a way to move on from them, Deerington and now here just pulls them back up again."
no subject
Well, only kind of. Somehow, she'd been lucky, when it came to all of the returns to memory. It had only happened to her once, and the memory itself hadn't really been a bad one. Ariadne had plenty of horrible, awful, haunting memories. But the one she'd shared?
...had been one of the better moments in her life.
"Moving on doesn't mean forgetting, though," she offered, trying as ever to put a positive spin on things. "I think it just means...learning from it."
no subject
Because that memory, oh that was only the starting domino- the one that caused the cascade.
"I did redeem myself, I was forgiven for all the hurt I caused. But- but forgiving myself is a lot...harder. I've never really worked that one out."
no subject
So she didn't offer to help. She didn't tell him he was a good person. She didn't nag him to let go of the past.
She hugged him instead.
And whispered to him. "If you need to talk about it, I'm happy to listen."
no subject
When the hug comes, he does return it, a little awkwardly as always, but it ishappy about my past."
no subject
She gives it a quick, momentary glance. The fact that antlers could be involved is...not beyond the scope of believability. But it doesn't matter how it happened. Not really. More that it happened.
And that Varian hasn't headed for shelter, yet.
Ariadne gives him a smile. "Happy Christmas, I guess?"
wow DW completely garbled and ate my tag -just gonna add it in here
"Hah, happy Christmas to you, too," he doesn't touch the antler again, noooo thanks. "But yeah, I mean, there's little happy about my past, but I'm willing to talk about it...sometime."
Not cool, DW
She set the antler down on the nearest table, backing away from it. Just to be overly cautious. It was probably something to do with them both touching it at the same time. Varian would figure it out.
He was good at that sort of thing.
so very rude
"Um...are you okay, anyway? In...general. I mean. Not counting awful memories."
no subject
But then there was Sam...
"I don't know," she admitted. "I want to be. But I am a little worried about a situation involving another Sleeper."
no subject
It's not the oh of someone curious for gossip, but the oh of someone genuinely concerned for a friend. He shifts his feet awkwardly for a moment, not sure if he should pry or not.
"Do- do you wanna talk about it?"
no subject
The whole thing was really weighing on her mind. Especially in light of the necklace that mysteriously turned up in her orchard.
She shook her head. "It's some sort of magical. Thing. I don't really understand. But he may or may not be missing his...soul?"
no subject
Which clearly, she does. So he does his best to listen. This is...not really in his wheelhouse, but he'll try anyway.
"Oh, that's...not good. Did he lose it here or...home?"
no subject
Anyway, she didn't entirely know which answer was better.
Which held out much hope. Hope that he would be...made whole.
She shook her head. "I shouldn't be bothering you with this."
no subject
"Hey, it's okay. You're my friend, and if it's bothering you, I'm more than happy to listen and...and see if I can help any."
no subject
Honestly, the fact that Ariadne now had friends she could hug was more of a balm than anything else. They were rare back home. But their numbers were beginning to get impressive here in Trench.
She pulled back, giving him a little smile. "Thank you, Varian."
no subject
"Hey, you're welcome," he returns the smile. "Anytime."