Syntra
Baba Yaga
Oh? Now that reaction was interesting, wasn't it? Because, in a split moment, Morgan witnessed the mask slip off her face, and beneath it, there was steel. Steel tempered by a different fire than Guinevere's, yes, but steel nonetheless-- just as sharp, just as dangerous. This woman was no crybaby, oh no. No, no, no. Every move, every gesture, everything about her served a purpose, and that purpose was reaching her goal. And if it meant leaving dead bodies in her wake? She would do it, Morgan knew. (Knew it very on a very intimate level, in fact, because for a second-- well, she saw a reflection of herself in that woman. A more twisted reflection, perhaps - one that had been marked by the life in wastes - but still. They were made of the same mold, she and her. Morgan's spiritual twin. Heh. What a delicious, delicious irony. Perhaps she would have been able to enjoy it more if she wasn't, you know, dying inside. Dying from worry, from not knowing whether Guinevere was at least remotely okay.)
The tears and what followed, though? Those antics told her more than Not-Guinevere planned to disclose, really. For one, she wasn't as great of an actress as she probably thought. Because, that performance? Yeah, it would only fool an alien who had never seen human behavior before. (Or Arthur, which wasn't really doing her any favors here. No, Not-Guinevere was dealing with the wrong fucking Pendragon sibling here, and she would know the difference very, very soon.) More importantly, however, it told her that Guinevere lived. She had to. Had her sister killed her, there would have been no reason to panic like that, right? Alright. Alright, so not all had been lost. What would be the best course of action here, though? Morgan sure as hell couldn't let her reach Arthur; the fool preferred the imposter, it turned out, and so it wouldn't surprise her in the slightest if he double crossed his real bride instead. Ugh. Her thoughts raced, stumbling over one another, and then-- then she decided to risk it all. (No risk, no gain. An ancient rule that was true in magic as well as other spheres of life, and Morgan had always lived by it. Why not now?)
"You mean the Arthur that orchestrated your kidnapping? Are you sure that is a good idea?" she raised her eyebrow. Her own mask slipped with that gesture, and suddenly her eyes were cold-- cold and calculating. The eyes of a she-wolf estimating whether the doe she had been hunting was exhausted enough, or whether she still had some fight in her left.
"Be so kind and stop fucking with me, will you?" Morgan asked, her tone still carefully controlled. (If anything, that actually made it more scary. Blind rage, after all, inevitably involved clouded judgment. In contrast, Morgan's mind was sharper than a knife, and twice as dangerous.) "I come to you as a friend, offering my help, and you reward that good will with deception? Tsk, tsk, tsk," Morgan shook her head. (She looked like a completely different person now, like someone much more imposing, and that was by design, too. Such a swift change between demeanors? Oh, that kept people on their toes, alright. Morgan may not have known how to wield a sword, but she did know how to wield fear.)
"I know you're not her, and I do not appreciate being lied to." Yes, that was the angle she had to go for here-- her wounded pride. Concerns about Guinevere? Those had to stay hidden, mostly because her sister could easily use her as a leverage in this scenario. No, Morgan had to pretend their parthership was just business, nothing more and nothing less. "Now, will you finally let me know what's going on?" she asked matter-of-factly, as if they were discussing weather. "I'd really enjoy that, thank you very much. Also, just so you know, one wrong move and I'll fry your brain. Wanna find out who's faster between the two of us?" 'Go on,' her eyes said. 'Try me.'
The tears and what followed, though? Those antics told her more than Not-Guinevere planned to disclose, really. For one, she wasn't as great of an actress as she probably thought. Because, that performance? Yeah, it would only fool an alien who had never seen human behavior before. (Or Arthur, which wasn't really doing her any favors here. No, Not-Guinevere was dealing with the wrong fucking Pendragon sibling here, and she would know the difference very, very soon.) More importantly, however, it told her that Guinevere lived. She had to. Had her sister killed her, there would have been no reason to panic like that, right? Alright. Alright, so not all had been lost. What would be the best course of action here, though? Morgan sure as hell couldn't let her reach Arthur; the fool preferred the imposter, it turned out, and so it wouldn't surprise her in the slightest if he double crossed his real bride instead. Ugh. Her thoughts raced, stumbling over one another, and then-- then she decided to risk it all. (No risk, no gain. An ancient rule that was true in magic as well as other spheres of life, and Morgan had always lived by it. Why not now?)
"You mean the Arthur that orchestrated your kidnapping? Are you sure that is a good idea?" she raised her eyebrow. Her own mask slipped with that gesture, and suddenly her eyes were cold-- cold and calculating. The eyes of a she-wolf estimating whether the doe she had been hunting was exhausted enough, or whether she still had some fight in her left.
"Be so kind and stop fucking with me, will you?" Morgan asked, her tone still carefully controlled. (If anything, that actually made it more scary. Blind rage, after all, inevitably involved clouded judgment. In contrast, Morgan's mind was sharper than a knife, and twice as dangerous.) "I come to you as a friend, offering my help, and you reward that good will with deception? Tsk, tsk, tsk," Morgan shook her head. (She looked like a completely different person now, like someone much more imposing, and that was by design, too. Such a swift change between demeanors? Oh, that kept people on their toes, alright. Morgan may not have known how to wield a sword, but she did know how to wield fear.)
"I know you're not her, and I do not appreciate being lied to." Yes, that was the angle she had to go for here-- her wounded pride. Concerns about Guinevere? Those had to stay hidden, mostly because her sister could easily use her as a leverage in this scenario. No, Morgan had to pretend their parthership was just business, nothing more and nothing less. "Now, will you finally let me know what's going on?" she asked matter-of-factly, as if they were discussing weather. "I'd really enjoy that, thank you very much. Also, just so you know, one wrong move and I'll fry your brain. Wanna find out who's faster between the two of us?" 'Go on,' her eyes said. 'Try me.'