OverconfidentMagi
Laugh Like You've Won Always
Mars had been watching the woman intently. Not listening, watching. What is spoken with words is much easier a tool to use for deception than what if spoken in silences and subtle motion. It wasn't that the woman before him lied, in fact to him it seemed that she spoke honestly from start to end, but there was more that she refused to say, or perhaps it was something she herself wasn't consciously aware of maybe? It all his years of interacting with and studying people, he'd never truly managed to understand how the human mind worked. Each example seemed to tick to a slightly different tune than the others. It was both a source of infinite entertainment for him and constant irritation when he needed to get work done. But there was no fix for it, so he had to simply pick what scraps he was able from the conversation and trust his own experience that he wasn't completely off the path.
What that experience told him now was thus: Those weren't the healing tears of someone who had just had their dead daughter returned to them. They were the fearful tears of someone who clung to that notion while a more subtle voice told them they had not. More than the the heartbreak of losing everything already, the woman was afraid that what had been returned to her would be taken away again, or that what had been returned wasn't real at all.
Mars pitied her. But if his job required taking more from this woman, he would do so. Hopefully it wouldn't come to that.
Lionel dragged Mars into his charade, and he willingly played the fool. "Ah, you're right! I swear I'd never remember the stuff if you didn't remind me. If you don't mind madam, where might I find your washroom?" Upon being told the way, Mars stepped around the corner and truthfully followed the direction into the bathroom, a better place than most to start a search. He took from an inner pocked of his coat a small spyglass and raised it to his eye, seeing himself and it in the mirror. Then he slowly turned the band around the far end, and he saw himself put away the item and walk backwards out of the room, plunging it into the darkness of a closed-off unlit space. He turned the band more, going back quickly until light returned. He'd gone back a bit too far, and made no comment as he turned the band the opposite direction until a young girl reached up to turn on the water to wash her hands. He leaned down to inspect her through the spyglass, and again got the impression that she was nothing inhuman. Physically she had none of the signs of demonic possession, though he did look away from the spyglass to scatter some green dust onto the faucet handle where he'd watched her touch. There was no reaction. Likely not a demon then. That was a good sign, though he still didn't know what it was he was actually dealing with here. He raised the glass again and looked closer. No visible signs of necromantic reanimation either, and she certainly wasn't any kind of zombie he'd ever encountered. He didn't rule out a more exotic form of undead, but something told him that wasn't the right tree to be barking up.
He let the vision move forward, and quietly stepped out of the bathroom to follow Abigail as she sat down at the table to eat her breakfast. Eggs, bacon, pancakes. And now Mars felt hungry. Despite not actually being able to smell the food he saw, his imagination did fill that in just to torment him. He turned the ring faster, speeding through the meal and then watching Abigail go up the stairs, likely to her room. He waited for her to come back down and go into the living room with a book in her hands. He couldn't move closer to see its title or contents without being in vision of the real people in the living room. He looked for when the girl's mother went to the door, and Abigail ran back up the stairs with her book to hide away. He watched the stairs for a few more moments and then the spyglass returned to his pocket.
Mars left a lollipop on the stairs for the girl as he walked back into the living room. He thanked the woman of the house and sat down next to his companion, giving Lionel no clue as to what he'd done or learned with that short time.
What that experience told him now was thus: Those weren't the healing tears of someone who had just had their dead daughter returned to them. They were the fearful tears of someone who clung to that notion while a more subtle voice told them they had not. More than the the heartbreak of losing everything already, the woman was afraid that what had been returned to her would be taken away again, or that what had been returned wasn't real at all.
Mars pitied her. But if his job required taking more from this woman, he would do so. Hopefully it wouldn't come to that.
Lionel dragged Mars into his charade, and he willingly played the fool. "Ah, you're right! I swear I'd never remember the stuff if you didn't remind me. If you don't mind madam, where might I find your washroom?" Upon being told the way, Mars stepped around the corner and truthfully followed the direction into the bathroom, a better place than most to start a search. He took from an inner pocked of his coat a small spyglass and raised it to his eye, seeing himself and it in the mirror. Then he slowly turned the band around the far end, and he saw himself put away the item and walk backwards out of the room, plunging it into the darkness of a closed-off unlit space. He turned the band more, going back quickly until light returned. He'd gone back a bit too far, and made no comment as he turned the band the opposite direction until a young girl reached up to turn on the water to wash her hands. He leaned down to inspect her through the spyglass, and again got the impression that she was nothing inhuman. Physically she had none of the signs of demonic possession, though he did look away from the spyglass to scatter some green dust onto the faucet handle where he'd watched her touch. There was no reaction. Likely not a demon then. That was a good sign, though he still didn't know what it was he was actually dealing with here. He raised the glass again and looked closer. No visible signs of necromantic reanimation either, and she certainly wasn't any kind of zombie he'd ever encountered. He didn't rule out a more exotic form of undead, but something told him that wasn't the right tree to be barking up.
He let the vision move forward, and quietly stepped out of the bathroom to follow Abigail as she sat down at the table to eat her breakfast. Eggs, bacon, pancakes. And now Mars felt hungry. Despite not actually being able to smell the food he saw, his imagination did fill that in just to torment him. He turned the ring faster, speeding through the meal and then watching Abigail go up the stairs, likely to her room. He waited for her to come back down and go into the living room with a book in her hands. He couldn't move closer to see its title or contents without being in vision of the real people in the living room. He looked for when the girl's mother went to the door, and Abigail ran back up the stairs with her book to hide away. He watched the stairs for a few more moments and then the spyglass returned to his pocket.
Mars left a lollipop on the stairs for the girl as he walked back into the living room. He thanked the woman of the house and sat down next to his companion, giving Lionel no clue as to what he'd done or learned with that short time.