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Time passed in a nebulous haze, holding nothing but grey darkness, the sound of rustling pages and the occasional flash of a book's colored spine. When his vision fully returned to him, the tattered papyrus page was fluttering in front of him. Karl stared blankly at it for several moments, before memories began to flash through his mind as the books in the lobby settled onto various surfaces.

Red brick buildings lining a dark asphalt road, heavy curved cars moving slowly up and down the street. An old, heavy ship with a giant smokestack, floating on rough waves. A snakeskin totem pole, shaped vaguely like a cross. A young woman. A ruined old wood cube.

'Maybe getting the first piece would… make it hurt a little less.'

A book flew in from the depths of the library, but was caught by a small, dust colored light. It struggled for a moment, before a single page ripped free and flew into the circular lobby room. A moment later, the light directed the rest of the book back into the library's depths.

Karl took a slow, deep breath, eyes coming into focus, the flood of memories slowly sorting out into more familiar, easily accessed patterns. For a moment, the echoing tick of a projector filled his mind.

His conversation with Hana slowly percolated back through his mind, like a drop of water sliding down a hill. He was able to review their short debate, and the emotional upheaval that had followed it, much more calmly.

The lone page, torn from its book, fluttered faintly before falling still once more.

Soul pain. It had never been a subject he discussed willingly. But in the realm of his own memory, protected by the papyrus page, he could review it more calmly.

The memory stored on that one page wasn't even directly related. Instead it was a conversation. A conversation where he sat down with a close, trusted friend, and slowly walked him through some of his earliest experiences.

Experiences after he had first become immortal. Experiences that were nothing but a vague haze of starvation, loss, injury, and that deep, all consuming pain born from the essence of one's being transforming against its will. Decades that had been so deeply branded into his body that no time could wash away their trace upon him.

No matter how deeply he buried the memories to try and spare himself the pain, no matter how long he went without thinking about them, even a faint stimulus was enough for that echoing cry of ancient suffering to overpower his own wishes, and bring those memories to the surface once again.

For now, though, the refreshed restrictions on soul pain would hold.

Another book fluttered in from the depths of the library.

War. The ceaseless, ever building cruelties of humanity that had finally driven him underground were also carefully filtered, leaving him with nothing but the vaguest impressions of why he'd spent the last half a century underground.

The period of time after Karl adjusted his memories was always like this. Strange blanks that would slowly fill themselves in until his own history felt understandable again. For now, though, he didn't mind. The distance from his own experiences allowed him to think rationally, like he was a viewer watching a movie of someone else's life.

And with that kind of perspective the answer was obvious.

He needed to help Hana. Not just with finding this one piece, but with fixing her soul all the way around. And that was simply because it was fate.

Fate, destiny, they were all ephemeral concepts. But compared to the more abstract perspective most people had on it, Karl's views were much more concrete. Destiny was the influence the outer realms exerted upon earth, the way their eternal pressure against each other created an exchange of influence with earth.

It wasn't a coincidence that a saint had found her way to his doorstep, when he'd gone so far out of his way to hide from the world. And fate always found a way to have its final say.

It was only a question of how long he'd retain that resolution as this clear, elevated view on life faded. Nothing was ever so simple in the moment.

"You're done?" Karl asked.

The papyrus scroll waved in empty air for a moment, before rolling up and vanishing.

Karl's eyes opened, staring into the darkness of his own murky reflection in the obsidian disk.

It was time to go find Hana.



Karl had no way of telling how long he had been away, but the mess Hana had created of the library was a pretty good clue. Staring at the messy stacks of papers scattered all over the room, Karl's lips momentarily pressed into a thin line, before he shook his head slightly to himself.

It wasn't as though he had to clean it up. So long as she hadn't damaged anything, the house would handle the rest.

"Learn anything?" he finally asked, the faint biting tone in his words making it clear he expected no such thing from her. If drumming something into her head was as simple as reading complex research papers, they wouldn't need to have such frustrating conversations.
 
Hana looked down at the papers in her lap and shook her head, laughing a little. "No, I actually think you need a PhD in magical artifacts to be able to understand this stuff." Her tone was lighthearted, but her eyes remained carefully trained on Karl's features, apprehensive as she thought about what she wanted to say to him. The things she revealed to him in the course of her outburst, and the things he had said to her in its wake… she felt that something about the nature of their relationship had been irreversibly changed somehow, and she wasn't sure what he was to her, or what she was to him. Surely, they were no longer perfect strangers, forced to live under the same roof by a series of misfortunes?

She brushed away the scattered papers from her lap and rose, leaned slightly against the back of one of the sofas. While her outburst seemed to have resolved somewhat during their conversation, somewhere in the middle of it all, something else seemed to have horribly affected Karl in a way that she didn't understand.

"Karl, before you say anything," Hana's gaze flickered away for a moment, still unsure. Perhaps a small part of her wanted to delay hearing what she inevitably knew he was going to tell her—that he couldn't let her leave or leave with her, for a laundry list of reasons—but another part of her simply wanted to understand. She didn't know exactly what was wrong or what happened in that moment, but she knew for certain that, if she could help it, she didn't want to see him that way again. She hated how it shook him, how his hands trembled, how his voice stopped in his throat—and she wanted nothing more than to wrench this awful thing out of him and bury it away forever.

"Did I… say something wrong, earlier? If I did, I'm sorry. You don't have to go into detail, but tell me, please." Her voice was soft and uncertain, but she didn't break away from looking at him.

Whatever had happened, she didn't want to inadvertently bring it out of him again by asking about it, but more than that, she wanted to understand, if only a little bit, what was going through his mind. Karl was right in that they were going to have to find a way to live together, at least for some time, regardless of what would eventually come out of this cube conversation. If she could understand him, at least a little, then they might get along better, and then perhaps these next six months might not be so bad.
 
  • Sweet
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