hasibe ozcelik | norea (
norea) wrote in
multiversallogs2011-11-26 10:22 am
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Entry tags:
004 | CLOSED. i made it to the other side.
Who: Hasibe Ozcelik & John Mitchell. Ivan, later on.
What: Hasi requests Mitchell's presence, and exploring Gallmarch.
Where: Gallmarch, possibly near Chimer.
When: Sukkardi, around three, probably.
Notes: N/A
Warnings: Sexuality with a D/s bent, discussion of Mitchell's vampirism, a little blood, violence.
Hasibe waits at the Chimer's End El station, legs crossed neatly (so the loops on her thigh-high stocking garters, curious little items that they are, stay on display), perched as she is on a bench just outside. She doesn't feel the cold in a pervasive, problematic way like other people who suffer things like 'hypothermia' and 'frostbite' might, but she does know when it's there, sometimes reacting to it like it bothers her anyway, and her sole concession to the weather is her long coat with its gold buttons, longer than her semi-sheer black skirt and semi-sheer white top. She wears it open, with no hat or gloves.
It's quiet out here today, but Chimer usually isn't a densely populated area, Gallmarch even less so. That's why she likes the idea of living there; it's in the city, but it's not in the absolute thick of things. Usually she stays tucked deeply into town, but more and more, she begins to think that it's better to have some of her own space.
For Huan, for guests, and for other things, too.
She smokes while she waits, ignoring any looks from the occasional passerby as though she doesn't see them at all; train stations are always full of strange men, but she's only waiting for one in particular today...and he's not strange in the sense of unfamiliarity.
It's quiet out here today, but Chimer usually isn't a densely populated area, Gallmarch even less so. That's why she likes the idea of living there; it's in the city, but it's not in the absolute thick of things. Usually she stays tucked deeply into town, but more and more, she begins to think that it's better to have some of her own space.
For Huan, for guests, and for other things, too.
She smokes while she waits, ignoring any looks from the occasional passerby as though she doesn't see them at all; train stations are always full of strange men, but she's only waiting for one in particular today...and he's not strange in the sense of unfamiliarity.
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The human pretense is the unnatural part. Or a memory of something he used to be that can become amplified. The calm he displays today is because you can't stay extreme all the time. Not if you want to survive (which he does).
"Oh, a leash..." There's an intrigued little smile as someone contemplates new possibilities. Then that violent fluidity surges in him for a moment, and he keeps her close to murmer in her ear, "To think I was going to do whatever I wanted to you right here, right now. It'll have to wait. But later on, I'm going to make you ache, beautiful. And you're going to like it." His lips press against her cheek, dragging slightly as he speaks. "I can tell."
He draws back, looking at her through his lashes for a long moment, before pulling away entirely. Hands are shoved in pockets and he turns to look around the foyer. "Although we should probably give this place a look over first."
Just like that, apparently.
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In a way, she supposes, there's a bit of fun masochism for both of them there in potential; the idea doesn't bother her. She doesn't blush because of embarrassment or shame, but there's a rush of blood to her cheeks, at her throat, a tinge of color. She meets his gaze with pale gold-green eyes, steady, but stripped, however temporarily, of the terrible poise she usually has, that sense of being perfectly in control of her behavior, of all interaction. It's necessary to be unflappable sometimes when you play as many social games as Hasi does, but with a word--ache--he's momentarily stripped away some of those defenses.
Especially when he steps away. That she's not used to, either. Her gaze slides to the floor, and she stays where she is against the wall for a moment longer, pressing fingertips briefly to her collarbones as though that will ease her heartbeat, and then fixing her hair a bit. Smoothing down the edges, pretending she wasn't rattled in a way she likes.
"You--" Are unpredictable, Mitchell, but she doesn't say that. She exhales, pleased to find it less ragged than she was anticipating, and pushes away from the wall. "--I never know what I'm going to get with you."
It's fun finding out, though. She puts her coat on a hook in the foyer, and moves past Mitchell, booted heels clicking on the wooden floors, short skirt swishing along with her walk. The house even feels abandoned, empty. Not even a spirit to haunt it, which strikes her as almost sad--an old place like this should have some kind of presence there.
"I want to look upstairs," she calls over her shoulder, "there's a tower, they always hide the good things in towers. I am fully expecting a torture chamber and maybe someplace to practice Satanism."
And the walk will give her time to reassemble her composure more completely.
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In a way that makes him want to tear away at those smooth edges, leaving both of them raw and reeling on the--
Later. In the meantime, he laughs at her specifications for prime real estate. "I should have known." He, for one, is glad the place feels empty. Anything else would remind him of home when he'd rather focus on now.
He follows after her a little lazily, still enjoying himself too much.
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The stairway partitions off, here, to the rest of the house, and a smaller, snugger staircase that leads up to the top of the tower. That's the one she chooses, noticing the mural that goes along the ceiling of the staircase, done in a renaissance style. She stops (rather suddenly) halfway up the stairs to look at it, head tipped back, openly admiring. While she was only being half-serious about finding something interesting in this house, there are little signs scattered about that suggest to her maybe there actually is something secret here.
And Hasibe can never resist a good secret.
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He leans one arm out against the wall (in a way that's subconsciously reminiscent of stopping someone getting past him on the staircase, hideous creature, etc) wih a cocky smile. It's not completely unlike when he used to wind-up or joke around with George and Annie. "I was thinking more along the lines of you have an enjoyment of the darker things in life. Blood bars, vampires, you know."
He's a little oblivious of any secrets. As long as there's no immediate danger or threat, he's perfectly fine with keeping his attentions on Hasi.
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"You are my very first vampire, as a matter of fact." Because the other vampires at home studiously avoided witches. "But I can see your point with the other things...and if there's any dancing naked by the moonlight, it's purely for recreational purposes, thank you."
And with that little remark, she heads back up for the tower.
"I do have something I need to tell you about, though. When it comes to my extracurricular activities. You know that anti-Xenian political journalist, Sandor Zendak? He's a little infamous, lately."
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He follows after her, searching his mind for any memory of the name. It rings a bell. "Yeah, I think I've seen him mentioned in the papers. What about him?"
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"He's affiliated with the Candlelighters. They're the people who poisoned the blood supply." She hesitates. "I'm sorry I didn't tell you sooner...I would have, but--it was important to be circumspect. Deacon knows, although I don't know if he knows about Sandor specifically."
Hasibe isn't sure how he'll take this next bit; he's responded to her intimations of history with sex work okay, but she's sleeping with someone who tried to help kill his kind in Baedal. Not out of desire, but she can understand how that might be viewed as something really unsettling.
And she doesn't want Mitchell to be upset with her.
"This is obviously not something we want spread around, but I trust you to be discreet with the information." Because it pertains to vampires like him, after all, and the slow, dismantling, thorough kind of revenge she prefers to take. "The group of people who've been investigating the Candlelighters were doing okay, but they needed someone on the inside...someone who could pass for human. And Sandor has very particular tastes when it comes to women, which I meet, so I've started seeing him--I seduced him, I suppose, although I let him think the opposite. So I want you to know that if you see things or hear things about me being with him, I'm only doing this to take him and his people down. Not because I'm overlooking anything they've done--just the opposite."
So...that's a lot of information. And now she has to hold her breath and wait to see how he responds.
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There are circles in this city he doesn't understand yet. He remembers what Ivan told him about the Candlelighters; it bears a striking similarity to what led to his death, and afterwards when Mitchell had lost control and wreaked a bloody path through Bristol. Knowing that there's a similar threat here angers him.
And then there's a nag, a surge of something else at the thought of Hasibe sleeping with one of them. Continually. They've only known each other a short amount of time, they haven't put into words whatever this is yet, but God the thought infuriates him.
Finally, he settles on one thought: I will kill him. Which he promptly vocalises. "I'll fucking kill him." It's enunciated clearly, in a voice that tries to be calm but still trembles.
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She does it anyway, crossing the room to put her hands on his shoulders, looking him in the eyes. "Mitchell--listen, I understand that, believe me, you aren't the only one." Not her, judging by her tone, because she lacks that killing instinct (especially one like Mitchell's, which is fairly inimitable), but certainly others in the know. "But I need to get everything I can from him. Information, whatever elset hey might be planning or hiding."
You know, first.
"What I'm going to do to him will help wreck not just his life, but their entire group." That he's bothered specifically by her liaison with Sandor doesn't occur to her; she's focused on the bigotry, which obviously does play a large component in things. "I promise he'll get his."
...and after she's done, whatever happens to Sandor Zendak happens.
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Instead his hands clasp around her wrists, bringing them down from his shoulders. His grip is a little firmer than it should be.
But he drops them. "Fine." It comes out in a rushed, sigh of an exclamation. Although it bears noting he'll still hold to his previous statement if he gets a chance. Hasibe may be planning on wrecking Sandor's life but Mitchell is going to make sure he goes out with a whimper.
"Fine." The second time it's more steady. The anger is still there, though. It's always there but right now it's more present than ever.
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'Upset him', she thinks to herself. Like that's really the phrase for the tidal wave of brutal rage she feels radiating from Mitchell even now.
"Come here," she says, tipping her face up to kiss him. It might seem like a strange gesture, but her manner is coaxing, as soothing as before, and offering, too: this is the dangerous part of the game, where she implicitly offers to take some of that rage onto herself, that he can work out some of that energy with her, even if it hurts her (especially then, since, as noted, she likes that). At least enough to take the edge off before they go back to hers. "I keep my promises, okay?"
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And then there's pushing going on, directing her back towards the first hard surface he can find. He is not gentle.
"'Better." It breaks from the end of a kiss and sounds like something between appeasement and a threat. He's trying to temper himself (not quite winning, not quite losing) but looks at her as intensely as one could imagine with all that rage behind him.
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"Let's go look at the other place I had in mind," she suggests, "I don't want to waste time--and to be perfectly honest, I think we're just going to make each other insane if we stay here."
And she doesn't always trust her self-control with him, not like this.
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Things will no doubt get interesting later on. For now he runs a hand through his hair, trying to calm himself back to usual.
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To Mitchell, she says, idly: "You know I'll never say no to you--or maybe you don't know that, but for the record, I won't. So if you decide you really want something from me, just tell me how you want it and that you mean it, otherwise I'll brat at you. But there's a certain amount of fun to be had in heightening the tension. In denial."
He makes it into an art form, so it's probably not a foreign concept at all, but this is a different application.
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In the meantime, he vaguely admires her second, more realistic choice in apartment. After a some five minutes or so of introspection, he says, "I've never really had to think about it, to be honest. Most of the time I go with the, ah, heat of the moment." Like she hadn't guessed.
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"There's nothing wrong with that," she says, a little impish, "I haven't minded."
The second house is still pretty big, but nowhere near a manor--three or four bedrooms, not including the upstairs studio, high ceilings in the main parlor. When they're inside, she hears a couple of other voices upstairs, and assumes those are other visitors.
"Patience has its virtues, though...for example, I've gotten really good at begging. It'd the kind of thing you have to explore, you know. There's always something new out there you might like. That's why I never stop looking for more." She says this while meandering, terribly innocently, around the living room, idly examining the spiral staircase. "Do you see which way the kitchen is?"
Totally not incongruous at all.
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Mostly he trails after Hasibe, if somewhat absently. This is for her, not him, and the process was putting him in mind of flat hunts gone by. There's something a little wistful in the way he looks around the place. But it's gone as easily as it comes and in the next room, he breaks out of it and rests against the door-frame with a lazy smile.
"Sounds a little contradictory --practicing virtues, I mean. But I get the appeal." Of course he does. "I realise it doesn't seem like it..." Considering he's jumped her about five minutes into their past two interactions. Although don't let him give you the impression he's feeling sheepish about that, because he's not.
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(Hasibe has a gift for looking at people, particularly men, like they're the only person in the world she sees. It's intended to be a heady experience.)
"You like to get what you want. Everyone does, of course, but--I bet you're capable of being better at it than most." Even if those methods may sometimes be questionable. "So am I."
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"So I can see." He's not giving in. Not now, not yet. He wants to see what happens when he doesn't.
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"Now we have to move onto the fun parts of house-exploring," she says, close enough to, "the personal rooms. Thus far, I'm feeling pretty good about this place."
She hears the voices of the other couple present (humans, professional, early thirties), but her eye contact doesn't break.
"We have company, sounds like. I promise not to be terrible in front of the innocents."
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Not that it seems like a great idea to put the onus on Hasi.
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Not at all, as he will see; her eyes flash, mischievous, and she closes in on that inch not to kiss him, but to bite. It's not deep enough to really hurt, but there's definitely a bit of a sting--she plays rough, as he has undoubtedly noticed, with a bit of a joyfulness to it (as with all things where she's concerned), like with him she finally has permission to.
She knows he can take it without saying she's too much, too rough, or at least she's hoping so. That's not always the case. And then she spirals away in a twirling arc that sends her short skirt flaring outward, laughing a little, altogether too pleased with herself, in order to confront their fellow visitors.
Shortly thereafter, Mitchell will hear her declare, brightly, to the other couple, accent a thick drawl: "And you would never even know they had that human sacrifice incident in the basement, would you?"
...so much for behaving. But she wants this damn house, and there are plenty of others in the area these two smart, clean-cut individuals in front of her can have--surely, she thinks, eying them critically, there are places closer to town.
She should probably not be allowed to speak to them. And should go upstairs already, like she said she would.
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When he catches up, he makes a mental what but deadpans and follows her lead in the conversation. "Ah, that sad tale," he says, with a small affected sigh and sad, dark eyes (he's good at this). "I even heard they might have gotten away with it if the Sheriff's people hadn't found that hook. Poor souls."
He puts a hand on Hasibe's shoulder, as if they were any other couple looking for a place. They are respectable people (no).
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