[ one of dutch's legs is drawn up, curled underneath her on the chair. for a moment, there's no indication that she knows that he's there, standing in her doorway, than a slight tightening of her shoulders, then she nudges the chair nearest to her at the table with the foot of the other leg. ]
Sit.
[ there's a bottle of whiskey in front of her, opened, still more than half full. there's a glass in front of dutch that isn't more than half full anymore, and an empty one within reach. ]
[ He doesn't say anything, just nods and makes his way over. He doesn't sit in the chair, because then he'd be almost two heads taller than her. Instead, he sits on the ground beside her, so they can meet eye to eye. ]
[ he's still tall and broad, but those things have never impressed dutch. oh, she finds them attractive, but she's not intimidated by anyone's size. she's taken down men randel's size before and she knows she can do it again. so even sitting on the ground, he might be nearly as tall as she is on a chair, but it's still a submissive gesture.
same as the way he'd waited at the door, if dutch thinks about it. she reaches for her glass, taking a large swallow of the whiskey. despite her earlier intentions, she doesn't offer him any.
he looks like he's seen a ghost. he looks like he's in danger of becoming a ghost. there's anger making dutch's stomach clench tight, but she's not sure if it's directed at himself, whoever made him look like that, or at her own helplessness in dealing with shit like that. johnny would know what to say, what to do to make it better.
dutch isn't anything like johnny. instead, she's a weapon. she's accepted that. she's learned how to make it work for her because these days, she's the one pulling the trigger and she's the one pointing the gun. it's made all the difference for her own sense of agency, of personhood.
(not all the difference, no, but a big one.) ]
So you're a weapon.
[ she leans forward a little, glass still in hand. ] I know what that's like.
[ A weapon has no agency, a weapon has someone using them. He hasn't had that for years, since he first got out of the army. Maybe he could have excused those deaths, if that was who he was. He doesn't. He'd always had the choice to die, after the day that Ursula had gotten her medicine. He'd always had the chance to die instead of breaking his promise to his father. He'd always had a choice, to kill or be killed, and he'd taken the cowards way out. Like he always will.
He'd rather kill than die. And he's too stupid to figure out a better solution, too unskilled to know a better way.
He'd thought, back in District Zero, that maybe he'd fine another way. Now, he knows he won't. ]
[ for the longest time, those had been dutch's choices, too: kill or be killed. she'd always made the same choice he has, to kill. she doesn't want to die. even when she was sobbing and begging khlyen not to make her do it, eight years old and already with blood on her hands, even when she'd had literal blood on her hands, her own and that of others, she'd never wanted to die.
what she'd wanted was to escape. to be free.
(she doesn't hate khlyen anymore, and that makes everything more complicated, but those issues have no relevance here, no relation to randel looking up at her like maybe she has answers.
or like he'd let her kill him. she's not sure which one she's less comfortable with.) ]
Sure. You turn it on and then what? You can't control it. That's what you said. Still true?
[ it's a killswitch, like in d'avin's brain. whether he made the choice to flip it or someone else did — well, it makes a difference, but why he'd flipped it on matters, too. ]
[ His fingers clench tight, his hands will be sore later; he's still sore from his injuries on the beach. After all, the pirates had gotten a few shots in. He's stitched himself up, well used to the practice, and the pain is a dull ache. He won't bleed through the bandages; he knows how to make them thick enough. She probably won't even know unless she gets close enough to smell it past everything else. ]
I turn it on. I know what I can do when it's on. I know the danger.
I used to-
[ He'd saved Maches, once upon a time. Pulled him away from the death that had barrelled right at him, held him and ensured that only the lightest scratch had even touched him as a tank-like truck had skewered through his legs. He'd been able to direct it then. Now- ]
[ that's the alternative, isn't it? to stop. but somehow, she thinks he'll argue against that, too, and she lifts a hand to preempt that, brows pulled together and jaw working. she doesn't understand this, whatever the lantern is. she doesn't know how it works. ]
[ dutch takes another sip of her whiskey, mostly because it gives her an excuse to look away from him, too. from the fear in the slope of his shoulders, from the way his head is bowed just so, how he's looking away. ]
So it was kill or let someone be killed.
[ the answer he is looking for is clearly not "he probably had it coming", but it's on the tip of dutch's tongue regardless. not helpful. she swallows it down with the whiskey. ]
[ Another question he wants to answer with 'yes'. Another question he isn't sure he can say 'yes' to. ]
I'm a coward. Without it, I don't-
I-
I've never hurt anyone. Without-
[ Without the voice. Not without the lantern, because back at home, there'd been no lantern. He hadn't turned it on. But the voice had taken over at one point, had told him to kill and he'd nearly done it. He'd almost killed that man just trying to knock him out. And then Ursula-]
I don't know. I'm useless without it.
I tried to do it by myself once. But it took over anyway.
So you can't control it, and you don't know how to fight without it.
[ doomed if he does and doomed if he doesn't. but for a moment, at least, dutch feels like she's on solid ground. like she knows what she's talking about. ]
[ there's a part of dutch — a part that sounds a great deal like khlyen — that thinks him weaker for the tears. that claims this isn't her problem and there's no reason for her to try and help. that if he cannot handle this, he deserves to lose himself or die, whichever comes first.
there's a part that sounds like johnny more than khlyen that knows all of that is bullshit. she still looks away from his tears. she's not johnny who can find the right words to make it better. ]
Hearing it's not the same, is it? If you know how to fight without it, you won't need it anymore.
[ He's quiet for a moment, longer than a moment, his head drooping down until it almost seems like he's just shut down like a machine turned off. Finally, though- ]
I'm a coward. Do you know how to teach me not to be a coward?
[ dutch stands. shrugs. takes some steps away from him and then back, not quite pacing but doing a good impression of it. ]
So am I. [ of never being good enough for khlyen. of disappointing him even though he's dead. of losing johnny and d'avin and pree. of being too cold to feel the pain that should come with killing or with loss. of not being cold enough.
of all that and a million more things. ] I fight anyway.
[ The idea isn't revolutionary to him, of course. He watches the Lieutenant all the time, and he knows that she's afraid more often than not, because she's told him. Afraid of all sorts of things. But she still does it, just like Dutch does. But he doesn't know how. ]
That's why I end up putting the lantern on. Because of that.
[ Because he'd rather kill a train full of people than let the whole city perish. He'd rather take the pain on himself, the suffering, the torment, than let anyone else suffer.]
[ She's not the only one. He looks up, startled, and blinks a few times before the words actually come. ]
Why?
[ It's not that he doesn't believe that she's a good enough person, a kind enough person, to offer. It's that he doesn't understand why he'd deserve that. Why she would trust those kind of lessons in his hands, after everything he's said. ]
[ He nods in answer to that. He can understand that. To be fair, a lot of the things he'd done since waking up were because the Lieutenant wasn't there to do them. And he'd told people who thanked him the same thing. ]
[ dutch is almost always in it for her own gratification. she's already noticed that he's utterly selfless in bed, but she's not quite willing or able to return that selflessness to the same or even a similar degree.
so she just shrugs. ]
You could eat me out. [ casual as all that. it'd make her feel good. ] C'mere.
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Sit.
[ there's a bottle of whiskey in front of her, opened, still more than half full. there's a glass in front of dutch that isn't more than half full anymore, and an empty one within reach. ]
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same as the way he'd waited at the door, if dutch thinks about it. she reaches for her glass, taking a large swallow of the whiskey. despite her earlier intentions, she doesn't offer him any.
he looks like he's seen a ghost. he looks like he's in danger of becoming a ghost. there's anger making dutch's stomach clench tight, but she's not sure if it's directed at himself, whoever made him look like that, or at her own helplessness in dealing with shit like that. johnny would know what to say, what to do to make it better.
dutch isn't anything like johnny. instead, she's a weapon. she's accepted that. she's learned how to make it work for her because these days, she's the one pulling the trigger and she's the one pointing the gun. it's made all the difference for her own sense of agency, of personhood.
(not all the difference, no, but a big one.) ]
So you're a weapon.
[ she leans forward a little, glass still in hand. ] I know what that's like.
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[ A weapon has no agency, a weapon has someone using them. He hasn't had that for years, since he first got out of the army. Maybe he could have excused those deaths, if that was who he was. He doesn't. He'd always had the choice to die, after the day that Ursula had gotten her medicine. He'd always had the chance to die instead of breaking his promise to his father. He'd always had a choice, to kill or be killed, and he'd taken the cowards way out. Like he always will.
He'd rather kill than die. And he's too stupid to figure out a better solution, too unskilled to know a better way.
He'd thought, back in District Zero, that maybe he'd fine another way. Now, he knows he won't. ]
No one made me turn on the lantern. I did it.
I always have. I always do.
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what she'd wanted was to escape. to be free.
(she doesn't hate khlyen anymore, and that makes everything more complicated, but those issues have no relevance here, no relation to randel looking up at her like maybe she has answers.
or like he'd let her kill him. she's not sure which one she's less comfortable with.) ]
Sure. You turn it on and then what? You can't control it. That's what you said. Still true?
[ it's a killswitch, like in d'avin's brain. whether he made the choice to flip it or someone else did — well, it makes a difference, but why he'd flipped it on matters, too. ]
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I turn it on. I know what I can do when it's on. I know the danger.
I used to-
[ He'd saved Maches, once upon a time. Pulled him away from the death that had barrelled right at him, held him and ensured that only the lightest scratch had even touched him as a tank-like truck had skewered through his legs. He'd been able to direct it then. Now- ]
It's getting worse.
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[ that's the alternative, isn't it? to stop. but somehow, she thinks he'll argue against that, too, and she lifts a hand to preempt that, brows pulled together and jaw working. she doesn't understand this, whatever the lantern is. she doesn't know how it works. ]
Why do you need it?
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They were going to kill him. There was so much blood. I had to do something.
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So it was kill or let someone be killed.
[ the answer he is looking for is clearly not "he probably had it coming", but it's on the tip of dutch's tongue regardless. not helpful. she swallows it down with the whiskey. ]
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I'm a coward. Without it, I don't-
I-
I've never hurt anyone. Without-
[ Without the voice. Not without the lantern, because back at home, there'd been no lantern. He hadn't turned it on. But the voice had taken over at one point, had told him to kill and he'd nearly done it. He'd almost killed that man just trying to knock him out. And then Ursula-]
I don't know. I'm useless without it.
I tried to do it by myself once. But it took over anyway.
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[ doomed if he does and doomed if he doesn't. but for a moment, at least, dutch feels like she's on solid ground. like she knows what she's talking about. ]
You know, you can do something about that.
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How? Even when I tried to do without it, I still-
It's getting louder. sometimes I still hear it, even after the lantern's off.
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there's a part that sounds like johnny more than khlyen that knows all of that is bullshit. she still looks away from his tears. she's not johnny who can find the right words to make it better. ]
Hearing it's not the same, is it? If you know how to fight without it, you won't need it anymore.
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I'm a coward. Do you know how to teach me not to be a coward?
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[ dutch stands. shrugs. takes some steps away from him and then back, not quite pacing but doing a good impression of it. ]
So am I. [ of never being good enough for khlyen. of disappointing him even though he's dead. of losing johnny and d'avin and pree. of being too cold to feel the pain that should come with killing or with loss. of not being cold enough.
of all that and a million more things. ] I fight anyway.
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[ The idea isn't revolutionary to him, of course. He watches the Lieutenant all the time, and he knows that she's afraid more often than not, because she's told him. Afraid of all sorts of things. But she still does it, just like Dutch does. But he doesn't know how. ]
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[ but even dutch knows that's not an answer, so she tries again. ]
You put the fear aside and do it because you know the alternative's worse.
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That's why I end up putting the lantern on. Because of that.
[ Because he'd rather kill a train full of people than let the whole city perish. He'd rather take the pain on himself, the suffering, the torment, than let anyone else suffer.]
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[ if it was just him suffering, well. but he obviously hates the thought of killing others and the lantern is making him do that. ]
I'll teach you how.
[ if dutch looks surprised at her own offer, that's because she is. ]
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Why?
[ It's not that he doesn't believe that she's a good enough person, a kind enough person, to offer. It's that he doesn't understand why he'd deserve that. Why she would trust those kind of lessons in his hands, after everything he's said. ]
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[ but that's not entirely true, is it? and after everything, maybe randel deserves an actual answer. ]
There's someone I know. He's in stasis now. He'd help you, no questions asked. So you have him to thank, I guess.
[ johnny, with his stupid big heart. ]
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Then I'll thank them when I can.
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[ abruptly, dutch is done talking about this. done talking at all, maybe. she takes another long sip of whiskey. ]
Fancy a shag?
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I want to make you feel good.
[ Is the truth. He's rarely in the mood for sex for his own gratification. But if he can make her feel good, he'd enjoy that. ]
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so she just shrugs. ]
You could eat me out. [ casual as all that. it'd make her feel good. ] C'mere.
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