daud | the knife of dunwall (
wolfofdunwall) wrote in
kingdomsofrain2018-03-15 04:04 pm
Entry tags:
picture prompt meme

the picture prompt meme
leave a picture/pictures and i'll respond with a character of your choice (or, if you'd prefer, of my own choosing). or leave a comment and i'll respond with pictures.

no subject
He could say something in return, even if it wasn’t much. From Daud, any offer of unprompted personal information was a rarity consciously given.
“It’s been a long time since I worked for anyone outside a contract.” Since before the Mark, and even then he’d never stayed with one employer long. “I can’t imagine really working under any of my clients. Bunch of frothing rich bastards.”
His clients. Unaware of what they asked or what he could do. Knowing only that they wanted their way and had the money to get it. And what were they going to do without him? Higher lesser men, sloppier assassins who may or may not get the job done. Hell. Maybe some of his Whalers would start taking hits of their own. There was an uneasy feeling behind that thought, something torn between revulsion and pride. Just look at what he’d done. Just look at all of it.
Shit. He couldn’t think about that. Daud took another draw on the cigarette, turned his eyes back to Zsasz.
“I appreciate the information. Gives a newcomer a little more to build from.”
no subject
Victor smiled briefly, at least the shadow of it, lifting his shoulder in what could pass as a shrug. "Pays the bills."
And then some. "Just remember not to do any work for free. We're professionals around here."
no subject
He shook his head, offering the fleeting suggestion of a smirk. “I'm guessing you don't have much trouble paying those bills. Feels good to be popular, doesn’t it?” It was half a joke, half an honest reflection. He didn’t want that kind of notoriety anymore, but he expected part of him would miss it for a long time to come.
His eyes flicked around the establishment before returning to Zsasz. “You interested in a drink while we’re here?” He felt like he could use one. Hell, maybe after this he’d buy a bottle of his own from the nearest liquor store, take it to wherever he could find to spend the night. (Assuming he decided to sleep at all; assuming he didn’t spend the entire span of darkness prowling the city.)
no subject
Victor raised a hand just a little, but it was enough to get the waiter's attention. "The usual." Whatever that was supposed to mean. He moved his fingers to Daud, indicating quite eloquently that he should order whatever he wanted. It wasn't until the waiter had walked off to get their orders that Victor continued where he'd left off.
"What would you do if you didn't do--" Instead of finishing the sentence, Victor moved his hand to simulate a gun, miming taking a shot. Clear enough, he was sure. "Never had a good answer for that question myself. But you? You gotta have one."
no subject
Then there was the other question, and that was the question, the deeper cutting question, and Daud tried not to let his discomfort show through.
It wasn’t as if he needed an answer. There would be plenty of time (years and years in cycle) to figure it out. Maybe all he wanted right now was quiet. Space to ease his mind and try to remember what it mean to live outside the assassin’s life. He’d earned that, hadn’t it? He needed it.
(This was all assuming he was capable of anything else. Assuming he hadn’t forgotten how to exist in the absence of pursuit and blood. What was he apart from his work? That. That was the other half of the question, and one he was especially eager to ignore.)
He turned his attention to his cigarette for a moment, letting himself take a drag, playing at nonchalance. “I’ve got time to figure it out.
“As far as bills go, work was profitable in Dunwall. I have a tidy sum saved up. Not that I want that getting around.” Not that he expected the information would leave this table, either.
He’d divided the money among banks and less reputable sources, had some stowed back in Dunwall if anything drastic happened. And if need be, he was well-versed in the art of theft. There was no reason to expect money would be a problem.
Still. He could’ve used that scotch right about now.
no subject
Although, so far at least, the Penguin was doing better than anyone had predicted. Victor was happy enough with that. He liked him. "I'd get bored."
He said that sentence just before he got a glass set in front of him, clear liquid and some ice cubes. He waited for Daud's order to be put down before raising his glass in a cheer and then taking a sip. Just water, he might still have some work to do today. "Before I started working for Don Falcone, I was bored. Almost killed myself out of boredom."
More or less, anyway. "I gambled a lot. Tried to find a thrill. You don't get bored?"
no subject
"I've never been able to gamble. It doesn't interest me." He had a hard time envisioning Zsasz gambling, but then it was hard to picture Zsasz in any setting beyond his work.
(And himself? What else could he be visioned as? Where and what was he save for an assassin, and what could he possibly build out of life? ...He didn't want to think about it. Better to address the question without dwelling.)
Daud offered a too-casual shrug. "And I haven't had time to be bored. Guess I'll have to wait and see if it comes for me."
He would've liked to claim it wouldn't happen. Would've liked to have said he'd never been one for thrills, but it would've been a lie. It'd been part of the attraction to his work, hadn't it? The rush of pursuit and taking another's life in-hand, of choosing to end it and knowing there was nobody to stop you. The electric calculation of every movement in action, adjusting for each new factor and still remaining fixed on the target. The months of building up to the act, the gathering of research and the construction of an airtight plan that might need to be completely rewritten in the moment. All of that had brought excitement.
And all of that was what he'd given over.
It had been the right call. It had. He'd just... It'd take some getting used to.