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treasuretooth) wrote in
tampered2013-12-15 07:13 pm
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CLOSED;
When; After this post
Rating; PG (to be safe)
Characters; Pitch Black and Toothiana
Summary; An unfortunate encounter in the dark and wintry woods.
Log; There was something distinctly unsettling about being the sole Guardian in the City now that Pitch Black had arrived. Prior to his making himself known, Tooth had thought her greatest concern was weathering the curses or the thing called the ticking, but with the Boogeyman in town, all of that was changed. Her greatest threat was the one that he posed, not only to her or the kind people she'd met since arriving, but to any and all of the children in this world.
Of course, knowing what the threat was didn't make it any easier to eliminate. Pitch Black was stronger than any one Guardian by themselves, which was why they'd always done better in the past when they'd worked together to stop the Boogeyman. More than that, though...this strange place, it did much to breed fear on its own, and it did more to fester shadows. The number of places Pitch could hide were too numerous to count.
Tooth was at a loss for where to go, where to look...so she did the only thing she could: she kept vigil.
At first she and her fairies flew about the innermost parts of the city, checking on children tucked away in their beds. If there was no sign of trouble, they moved on to the next window, and then the next after that. Eventually, Tooth's search led her to the City's fringes. She'd run out of bedrooms to visit and windows to peek through, and was now fluttering slowly between burly tree trunks bare with winter, her eyes upon the low-hanging moon in the sky. It was not her moon at all. It was faceless and unfriendly and as cold as the snow that powdered the ground.
From it, Tooth would receive no wise counsel. She had only her own judgment to guide her...and only her fairies' sudden chirping to alert her to another presence in the woods around her.
Feathers raising along her shoulders and neck, she spun in midair, eyes searching the penetrating darkness. "Who's there! Show yourself!" She hated being caught off guard almost more than anything else.
Rating; PG (to be safe)
Characters; Pitch Black and Toothiana
Summary; An unfortunate encounter in the dark and wintry woods.
Log; There was something distinctly unsettling about being the sole Guardian in the City now that Pitch Black had arrived. Prior to his making himself known, Tooth had thought her greatest concern was weathering the curses or the thing called the ticking, but with the Boogeyman in town, all of that was changed. Her greatest threat was the one that he posed, not only to her or the kind people she'd met since arriving, but to any and all of the children in this world.
Of course, knowing what the threat was didn't make it any easier to eliminate. Pitch Black was stronger than any one Guardian by themselves, which was why they'd always done better in the past when they'd worked together to stop the Boogeyman. More than that, though...this strange place, it did much to breed fear on its own, and it did more to fester shadows. The number of places Pitch could hide were too numerous to count.
Tooth was at a loss for where to go, where to look...so she did the only thing she could: she kept vigil.
At first she and her fairies flew about the innermost parts of the city, checking on children tucked away in their beds. If there was no sign of trouble, they moved on to the next window, and then the next after that. Eventually, Tooth's search led her to the City's fringes. She'd run out of bedrooms to visit and windows to peek through, and was now fluttering slowly between burly tree trunks bare with winter, her eyes upon the low-hanging moon in the sky. It was not her moon at all. It was faceless and unfriendly and as cold as the snow that powdered the ground.
From it, Tooth would receive no wise counsel. She had only her own judgment to guide her...and only her fairies' sudden chirping to alert her to another presence in the woods around her.
Feathers raising along her shoulders and neck, she spun in midair, eyes searching the penetrating darkness. "Who's there! Show yourself!" She hated being caught off guard almost more than anything else.
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"It looks like you don't know much at all," Tooth responded. Sensing her thoughts, her fairies assembled close by, wings up and ready to cut through shadows if need be.
But if Pitch attacked, which direction would he come from? Would he be alone or would he have new Nightmares under his control? These were questions Tooth needed answers to, but for the moment, there were no answers to be found.
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He'd tried to summon Nightmares of course, as one of the first things he'd done after extricating himself from that damned fountain he'd arrived via. Yet none had materialized at his beckoning; he still controlled a large amount of nightmare sand, but without the solidifying presence of fresh fear and bad dreams, his creations remained inanimate.
The Fearlings on the other hand... for now they were quiet, held to bear under his control.
He ghosted past her quickly, a disturbance in the dark before she could orient on him. "And what should I know?"
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"You should know," began Tooth, head cocking first in one direction and then another, following the ambiance of Pitch's voice. "You should know that I'm not lost." And I'm not afraid.
She didn't want her fairies to be affected by her own uncertainty, and thus had to control her fear. This man...this creature that was Pitch Black...was undeserving of her fear, besides. And that...that made it a little bit easier.
"I have as much right to fly here as...I suppose you have right to skulk." She raised her hands and gestured for her fairies to fall back. They were reluctant at first, exchanging glances, but each obeyed. "You can stop hiding anytime."
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"... then it appears I am not the only one not in the know," he finished, taking a slightly more solid form.
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"Maybe," she said cautiously. Her fairies glared at the Nightmare King, but not a single one budged from formation. Tooth was proud of their restraint. "What were you doing out here, in that case? Looking for another hole to fall into?"
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"Familiarizing myself with our new realm," he answered, though of course not specifying his real intent. It was not a lie; only the fraction of a truth. "As you no doubt did."
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Fists balling at her sides, Tooth zipped around the golden-eyed figure. Being still too long under that gaze was not something she wanted to be doing, not when the darkness was so prominent around her and her fairies.
"There's only one way this can work," Tooth said narrowly. She didn't like this and suspected he would like it less. Maybe that was her decision's only saving grace? "We need to lay down some ground rules..."
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The other Guardians wouldn't like it. Tooth didn't like it. But on her own, what choice did she have? It wasn't as though she could knock a few more teeth out of the Boogieman's skull and expect him to fall in line. Come to think of it, the fact she'd knocked loose one at all probably wasn't doing much for his disposition.
"I meant it when I said I don't want to fight." Although, it was really more that she didn't want to have to.
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And he did consider it, very seriously for several moments. But he didn't know the full extent of his abilities just yet, beyond the ability to still summon the nightmare sand while Fearlings hissed and slathered in the back of his mind, hungry and seething at being restrained.
"I find that doubtful but I am listening."
No promises either way, but he would at least not interrupt. Probably.
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"First of all, neither one of us belongs here," Tooth began, showing the flats of her hands in a nonthreatening gesture as she circled around in front of him. Still, she kept her distance. "Some people have been here five years! There's no way to know how long each of us will be kept here...so we need personal boundaries. There needs to be an area that is mine and an area that is yours, a space that is uniquely our own and off limits to the other...agreed?"
If Tooth was to do here what she did back home, she would need a place to keep any teeth collected, and with Pitch present...she wanted some assurance that the teeth would be okay. The best way to have that promise (even if Tooth would never fully trust it) was to offer a quid pro quo: her home free from his trespassing, and his home free from hers.
Expectantly, she looked at him and waited for his answer.
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He made a show of thinking about the offer, so that she would consider it her victory when he agreed-- though it wasn't so different from what he would have started with, if he was the one leading this negotiation. Let her have every step hard won.
"Very well."
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Tooth was suspicious, but ultimately, she was also without proof. Whatever Pitch was thinking, whatever he was planning, she could do nothing about. Not right now. She had to work with what she had available to her...
Shelter now taken care of and off the list of negotiating material, there was really only one other thing that Guardians needed...that Pitch needed, too. It was the one thing Tooth didn't want to compromise on, and it was the one thing there would be no way around.
She struggled with how to put into words the next decision. Worded just right, and she could have Pitch's hands tied. Worded too loosely, and he would find all the holes to crawl through.
"Secondly," said Tooth, her mind racing, a labyrinth of actions and reactions, "no one gets hurt."
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He was likewise unsurprised by this demand but again, it was a relatively minor capitulation in the scheme of things. Plenty of fear could be caused and cultivated without a single scratch.
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"No one injured." The words tasted sour on the tip of her tongue, but she wasn't finished. If he could amend, then so could she. In order for there to be a truce, the rules needed to be clearly defined and tending to the best interest of the people, the children most importantly of all. "Where do we draw the line with that? We both know what you can do with nightmares alone, and I won't have a repeat of Burgess here in the City."
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That didn't prevent a faint sneer from curling his lip as he recalled it. Burgess would forever be linked with Jack Frost in his mind and that was not a sting that had lessened so soon.
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Her feathers raised and her eyes narrowed, Tooth flew nearer.
"What will I have, then, Pitch?" Her wings beat furiously at the air and her fairies joined her, looming overhead, a chorus of discontent. "The Boogeyman on the loose, free to spread fear as he pleases without anyone to tell him when enough is enough? NO!"
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"What an unladylike tone. But let's get to the root of the issue, shall we? You want their security and I want to be able to have a conversation without you barging into them with your warnings. So a hundred little minute details aside, that is what we're trading: my restraint for your silence. And if you decide to break yours, you can be assured I will most definitely return the favour."
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There was one other thing troubling Tooth, however. If she agreed, there was a good chance people would stop trusting her if they learned she was deliberately not warning them about the one person who could discern all their deepest, darkest fears. And if they stopped trusting, they might also stop...believing.
"On one final condition," Tooth said. "This arrangement stays between you and I. These terms aren't to be spoken of with anyone else. That includes telling others I'm...keeping things about you from them. Understood?"
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He inclined his head at her last stipulation, which also worked to his favour. "Agreed," he smirked. "I give you my word that I will say nothing of our accord."
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She nodded once, sharply, and then put some distance between her and the Boogeyman. "You will say nothing and write nothing, Pitch. There will be no telling at all." As if sensing that Tooth wanted very much to wipe the smirk off the dark-clad man's face, one of her fairies nestled itself into the palms of her hands. Though she held the little fairy close, she glared at Pitch all the while.
She was unsure of whether this arrangement would work or not, if these rules were enough for them both to live peacefully by, but it would have to do. For now, at least.
"If there's nothing else..."
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"I have no other qualms for the moment," he added. "Though meet me back here in one week's time, and give me the location of your chosen sanctuary. I'm sure it will be nothing in comparison to Punjam Hy Loo, but we must all make sacrifices in difficult times."
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But if there truly was nothing else to discuss, then there was also nothing demanding she stay and further tolerate Pitch's presence. "One week," Tooth agreed, and already she was beginning to wonder if staying at the Welcome Center was wise. She needed to find a place of her own, and fast. That way, if Pitch ever did feel inclined to start a war with her, others wouldn't be in his direct line of attack.
Saying nothing more, she spun and took to the sky, weaving through the tangled canopy of bare limbs overhead, fairies in toe.
It would take time and distance for his final jab to wear off. One week had been just barely enough, though Tooth hadn't forgotten the remark and never would. The truth in it was painful. This place would never be the world she belonged to, and any home found here would not compare to Punjam Hy Loo. Though, hopefully, the home she finally settled upon would be just as safe.
By the time seven days had come and gone, Tooth made her way to the spot in the forest where she'd met Pitch a week prior. This time, her fairies were not with her. She came alone, but alert.
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The Boogeyman noted the absence of her faeries immediately, casting a glance around.
"Good evening."
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"Shall we get this over with?" Tooth prompted, her tone about as civil as she could muster. She didn't want to be near him any longer than necessary.
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"Ladies first."
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Besides, one of them had to go first.
She didn't take her eyes off him when she replied, "The block nearest the gardens, not far from the Turnabout Café. There's a small cottage there...stay away from it." It was enough of a distance from the Welcome Center so as not to pose a problem, but still near enough that, on a day-to-day basis, Tooth would be able to continue to help Penny clean without leaving her new home dangerously unattended.
"Where have you decided to hole up?"
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Golden eyes gleamed against the shaded backdrop. "Have you been settling in well?"
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"I'll be sure to keep my distance," she murmured.
The truth was, it wouldn't be hard. As for his question...well, things weren't as bad as they could have been. She'd met numerous people, many who seemed nice, and had even gotten to speaking with Dewey, the child everyone seemed to know. She was fond of him already, and with that in mind, finding a purpose here wouldn't be difficult, and it would tide her over until she could find her way back to their world.
It would be nice to rub it in, to tell Pitch she was probably having an easier time of it than him, but knowing the Boogeyman, he'd turn that jab right around on her and make her feel guilty for it. Not that it would be hard. She did feel a little guilty.
"You don't care, so don't ask," Tooth said instead, her fists gripping at the branch beneath her. "What will you do if people decide to reclaim that station?"
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She pushed away from the tree limb now, fluttering in the air, arms folding over her chest. It was colder all the way out there, although it might have had something to do with being put on the spot like she was, too.
"...can you tell me that you sincerely cared about my answer, Pitch? I may be guilty of being angry, but if I am, it's because I feel like...like you're deliberately trying to make me feel that way."
It wouldn't offend her if they didn't get along. What was more offensive was the false niceties and how he seemed to expect her to swallow them with a smile and a thank you.
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"If I wanted to be deliberate you would not have to make a guess at whether it were happening," the Boogeyman shot back. "No, I do not care whether you have settled in a new nest or a garbage heap. What I do care about is that you expect me to be some sort of slathering beast incapable of holding a conversation in your presence. Should I gnash my teeth and snarl at you? Would that make you feel more at ease?"
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It took every bit of resolve she possessed not to lunge, but if this kept up, Tooth knew what it would come to. She didn't want that, she reminded herself. If it came to that, to the pair of them fighting, this entire week would have been for nothing. Not only would she need to relocate, but she would need to make sure Pitch didn't retaliate against her by targeting other people.
Her chest was rising and falling rapidly, but when Tooth spoke, it was clear, slow, and very, very precise.
"If I thought so little of you, do you really think I would have proposed the truce?" If he were anything like the maharaja had been, for example, Tooth didn't think she would have been able to bring herself to cooperate with him. But Pitch was different. He'd once been a noble man. A hero. The maharaja had never been those things, had always been greedy and selfish. There was nothing redeeming about that creature. And she couldn't say if Pitch could be redeemed or not, she didn't know, especially with all the loathsome things he'd done in his lifetime as the Nightmare King...but it was still easier to believe possible. "The only thing I expect of you is honor."
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And she knew baiting when she saw it. Most of her life she'd spent trying to avoid traps of all kinds, but there were two men who knew very well how to get beneath her skin: the maharaja and the Nightmare King. She was no fool; Tooth didn't believe for a second that Pitch wasn't taking advantage of that.
But she had to let it go. She had to. And with a deep breath, she did.
"I'll let your actions from here on dictate for you." Tooth's fists found her hips. "You never did answer my question about the station, though. If they decide to put it to use, what will you do? Have you thought about where you'll go?"
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Pitch had inhabited many places over the long centuries since being released from Nightlight's pinned prison; the underground lair was the latest and the one he'd thought would have been the most secure, locked away from any moonbeams, Lunar's messengers and spies.
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Smoothing her feathers, she said simply, "I hope it doesn't come to that."
Then, because Tooth had forced herself to not scour the network for signs of Pitch interacting with others, afraid that she might see something she didn't like and speak before she thought better of the fact, Tooth asked, "...how have you been settling in otherwise?"
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At her question, he finally unclasped his hands from behind him, posture changing to something less militantly bearing and he turned to glance at the lights of the City.
"It has been... strange," he said thoughtfully. "There are some here who are industriously searching for a way to leave and others... seem rather content to be here. I am not sure what to make of these 'curses'," he said, a momentary frown puckering his mouth at the term. He hadn't been affected by anything yet but he'd been advised that would probably not last.
"It is not like magic I've known."
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"You've heard of the Anonymous Movement, then?" she prompted. Some said they were trustworthy and some said they were not, but in all recounts, the Movement consisted of individuals who kept busy and, at the very least, appeared to be aiming toward the betterment of the people here, perhaps even the safe return of outsiders to the worlds they came from. So far, however, they'd met with little success.
Not sure what to make of that story herself, Tooth sought Pitch's opinion on the matter. After all, it was a point of common interest between them, and one of the only ones they had to hold onto.
"I've heard very little about them myself, beyond what appears to be common knowledge, but of the curses...I've asked and heard a lot." Her eyes narrowed, not at Pitch but in reflection of something she was told, a very troubling something indeed. "Most of the time, the curses are things that people seem to recover from rather easily, but there are some curses that are dangerous. And no one seems to know if they happen naturally and because of the City, or if there is someone...casting them, like a magic spell."
Ombric and North would have disliked this troublesome magic very much. It was unpredictable and unchecked, harming and inconveniencing at random.
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"If they were powerful enough to make an impact on a place like this, they are powerful enough to not fear retribution from those trapped here... rendering moot their need to be anonymous. If they are not capable of doing so on their own, which appears more likely, then remaining anonymous prevents anyone from assisting them, which seems as though they don't helping as a genuine motive."
Oddly, he was also thinking of North and Ombric when it came to likening the curses to spells gone awry. He had a rudimentary knowledge of magic -- enough to have been able to test the spells in the books from Ombric's library and know they were fakes when they did not work -- but he was not a magician on the level of either of them.
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"In any case, they're not completely anonymous, and they might know something," Tooth said in conclusion. Whether that something was big or little, whether what they planned to do with the knowledge was good or bad, in the right hands it would almost certainly be worth knowing. Or so she hoped. It wasn't very likely that any of them would see home again without help from the inside, after all. Even with some foreigners being present in the City for five years (maybe more?), they couldn't possibly know everything there was to know...
Shoulders relaxing, Tooth glanced in the direction of the town. She'd found work, shelter, and friends...and there were even some leads to follow, though where they would take her she didn't yet know. She thought it probable that she would investigate them with time, though. But what were Pitch's goals for their uncertain future here?
"Have you decided what you'll do now?"
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Meaning of course that he would continue to sow fear where he went, just as she had automatically begun protecting children in this City. Yet aside from that, and from having time to properly reassess his strength, he didn't know. Pitch was loathe to make any sort of long-term plan with so little information at his disposal.
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It would make things difficult for her, especially being unable to warn people about him, but so long as no lines were crossed, so long as things didn't venture out of hand...she would have to learn to live with this compromise.
"There's nothing you're curious about?" she asked, probing a little. Whether he would volunteer the information or not, she wanted some idea of where and with what he might be spending his time in the days to come.
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"Well...alright, then." She exhaled heavily, cocking her head skyward. "I need to be going. Don't...don't cause too much trouble. Please."
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