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[Corvo has nothing to hide from Daud and no reason to lie to him now. If he wanted to do Daud any harm, Corvo could've done it already. The offer is what it is, but Daud is too stubborn to accept it. Instead, he's fixated on his revenge.]
Die? For what he can do?
[Corvo shakes his head.]
Then so do all who bear his mark. His power is our power.
[Or it was Corvo's power; not that he truly needs it anymore.]
[ There's a flash in Daud's eyes and for a moment he feels sharp, feels almost in contact with the scene playing out. ]
That's coming soon enough.
[ For him, anyway. Delilah must have been taken care of. Corvo's been severed from the Void. And Emily... Well. That isn't Daud's trouble. Nor does he seriously entertain Corvo's remark. Perhaps the Chosen should be destroyed; it isn't the point right now. And he doesn't know whether Corvo believes it. ]
Once we've gotten rid of him, nothing like this needs to happen again.
[ He doesn't specify what he means by 'this.' He doesn't think he needs to. ]
[ He'd like to believe it was all the Outsider's doing. He really would. But even believing it's half that bastard's fault is better than nothing. Lets him almost, almost fool himself into thinking he needn't fully shoulder the blame. Lets him almost believe he was the victim as well as the monster. (Though the delusion rarely penetrates to his core. He knows too well what he'd done, how it'd felt. Knows he'd made certain choices and stuck with them, bloody as they'd been.)
Daud flinches and looks away, sniffs. Of course Corvo would bring that up. Coming from anyone else, Daud would've taken the assertion easily enough. Would've simply pointed out that he couldn't have done it (he could have) without the Void's powers. That it never would have happened if the bastard hadn't interfered. From this man, though, he can't so easily brush it off. ]
I'm aware.
[ When he looks back, he's surprised to find Corvo standing. He hadn't heard a thing and now the man's above him, now he's got the high ground and could so easily attack. (And who knows what Corvo would do for that woman, long gone as she is. (As if she's ever been gone for Daud. As if he isn't visited by her memory again, again, unending.))
He's tensing again, though it's not so focused this time, though now he's too sharply aware of the lingering question of Jessamine and all that it suggests. ]
We'll all be better once he's gone.
[ He has to believe it, though even now the conviction in his voice has waned, wavered just minutely. ]
[If Daud denied his past actions in any of those ways, Corvo would not have accepted the excuses. Daud certainly couldn't convince Corvo that he was incapable of killing Jess without his power. Maybe it wouldn't have been so easy, and maybe Corvo would have stopped him, but Daud was probably a talented killer before the Outsider came long.
Looking down at him, Corvo could do whatever he wanted. End Daud's life. Make him suffer until his last breath was gone. Years ago, he pardoned Daud, and if he could do it then, when the loss was so fresh, he can certainly continue to do it now that age has tempered Corvo's anger.
Corvo doesn't know if they'll be better off with the Outsider gone. Or if Daud and Billie can even do it. Guess they'll all wait and see.]
Goodbye, Daud.
[Corvo does not expect he'll see the man again unless it's in the Void.]
no subject
Die? For what he can do?
[Corvo shakes his head.]
Then so do all who bear his mark. His power is our power.
[Or it was Corvo's power; not that he truly needs it anymore.]
no subject
That's coming soon enough.
[ For him, anyway. Delilah must have been taken care of. Corvo's been severed from the Void. And Emily... Well. That isn't Daud's trouble. Nor does he seriously entertain Corvo's remark. Perhaps the Chosen should be destroyed; it isn't the point right now. And he doesn't know whether Corvo believes it. ]
Once we've gotten rid of him, nothing like this needs to happen again.
[ He doesn't specify what he means by 'this.' He doesn't think he needs to. ]
no subject
The Outsider didn't kill Jessamine, Daud.
[A man did that. The one sitting in front of him. Corvo sighs and gets to his feet.]
You should reconsider Emily's offer. It wasn't made lightly.
no subject
Daud flinches and looks away, sniffs. Of course Corvo would bring that up. Coming from anyone else, Daud would've taken the assertion easily enough. Would've simply pointed out that he couldn't have done it (he could have) without the Void's powers. That it never would have happened if the bastard hadn't interfered. From this man, though, he can't so easily brush it off. ]
I'm aware.
[ When he looks back, he's surprised to find Corvo standing. He hadn't heard a thing and now the man's above him, now he's got the high ground and could so easily attack. (And who knows what Corvo would do for that woman, long gone as she is. (As if she's ever been gone for Daud. As if he isn't visited by her memory again, again, unending.))
He's tensing again, though it's not so focused this time, though now he's too sharply aware of the lingering question of Jessamine and all that it suggests. ]
We'll all be better once he's gone.
[ He has to believe it, though even now the conviction in his voice has waned, wavered just minutely. ]
Tell the Empress we're not interested.
no subject
Looking down at him, Corvo could do whatever he wanted. End Daud's life. Make him suffer until his last breath was gone. Years ago, he pardoned Daud, and if he could do it then, when the loss was so fresh, he can certainly continue to do it now that age has tempered Corvo's anger.
Corvo doesn't know if they'll be better off with the Outsider gone. Or if Daud and Billie can even do it. Guess they'll all wait and see.]
Goodbye, Daud.
[Corvo does not expect he'll see the man again unless it's in the Void.]