Alucard \\ Adrian F. Ţepeş (
cryptsleeper) wrote2018-11-11 04:32 pm
20s AU Post
Current Carmilla plot outline
--Post-fire, Carmilla and Mr. Peanut team up mostly to use each other. Carmilla's spent the past several months (since November, it is now February 1925) networking, and it's clear to her that Alucard's not suited for the position and that the other two are the obvious weakness. Mr Peanut needs something back, so this is perfect on her end. Mr Peanut can only imagine the joys of vampire blood in his work, and he'd like an army of vampires for his own ends.
--Shit stirring from Mr Peanut (all of March?)
--Mr Peanut also begins to sell mis Miracle Serum, which has vampire blood in it.
--Gang is very much trying to murder Mr Peanut during this.
--Start of April, vampire gets a call from one of the blood bank contacts that 3 patients have come in and are displaying some bizarre signs. Investigation yields the fact that they're in process of turning, and they've all taken the same serum.
--Additional investigation reveals O FUCK IT MR PEANUT
--Meanwhile Carmilla's been made aware of a familiar she didn't sire, so she knows something's up. Big fight with Mr. Peanut and thus Mr. Peanut is left depowered
--Gang commits a murder
--Carmilla's well sured up on her contacts now, and it's time for open rebellion (mid-April)
--In a more subtle attempt to let Alucard just step aside, she cuts the breaks on demon car and shows up to gloat/suggest he not pull a dad and go to deal with his grief quietly while she runs the city. The how he wants to do it is up to him (black widow joke goes here.) Treffy and Sypha walk in.
--1 week of straight up rebellion; feedings, no help from allies, need to do damage control instead of fight carmilla, every dracula rule is
--MEANWHILE IN GRAVITY FALLS, triangle shows Vlad what's up to try and psyche him out, somehow this finalyl snaps Vlad out of his depression and he heads home
--Just in time for Alucard and Carmilla to be tearing each other to bits in one of the bayous, it's not going well
--Vlad coming in means the king of vampires is accosted by a belmont with a pair of blessed knitting needles and a speaker with a fucking gun and he's just like what the shit happened to the world while i was gone
--Wards around the fight means that only demon car can break the wards, everyone has to pile in.
--Carmilla gets her ass kicked AND SENT TO THE JUSTICE DIMENSION
THEN THERE WERE FAERIES.
--Prior to all of this the vampire and Sypha have done a shit ton of research on how to get their Belmont back
--Sypha has also been practicing debating with dad, which leaves everyone Very Tired.
--When Trevor is actually snatched up (1 year after marriage, it takes fae effort. Taking Arn's shape fails, so it's a lot more kidnapping by force), Sypha and Alucard go into Faerie
--But they're playing this as politics, not as heroes rescuing their damsel, so that means the faeries are just "wait what now excuse u?"
--There are 3 gates and 3 trials (the particulars we're still bullshitting.) Each is asked to sacrifice 3 things. (Alucard: voice, his titles as bestowed upon by his father and his people, i forget the third; Sypha: her human form (she's a birb), fuck what were the other two)
--They enter the court at the end of the third trial. After LITERALLY ALL THE TITLES Sypha declares she Speaks for Trevor Belmont
--Claim debate over Trevor, turns out that the rules are in Sypha's favor.
--But that means debating to leave Fae without giving up what they've chosen.
--Sypha lawyers it all out, Alucard is a safety deposit and hangs out with Fae!Trevor
--In the end, safe passage out of Faerie consists of Sypha giving up her memory of the necromancer (billed as a great mage she studied under), the vampire gives up his immortality, and Trevor is replaced with Carmilla (dad was aware of this option and OK with it), but Trevor has his ability to swear taken. He now soundslike a rubber ducky when he tries
--Everyone gets home okay, except for the AU of this AU where the gang fails, but Trevor's on their doorstep like a bat out of Hell because time doesn't work right and he's been in Hell for a WHILE.

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Alucard is fairly latched onto her, at this point; his breath is steady against her shoulder, and if she left it long enough she would lull back into drowsy, shallow slumber herself, but then she hears the sound of Trevor coming back and makes herself stay awake just a little longer, head angling to watch for him to return.]
Yes.
[She's speaking French; that's just what she'd settled on as easiest, somehow, half conscious choice and half just because that's what fell most naturally from her tongue when she'd tried to start speaking.]
Why are you?
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[ He brings the pillows over to Sypha, sitting next to her to help prop her up a little. Upon the tray are two pills, each pressed into the shape of a rose. One is a soft purple and the other pale pink. Each is mixed with one of Theodora’s perfumes. The tea is now more honey than it ever was tea. The apple cake is warm from the microwave. Every thing on the tray smells of things that are not terrible incense.
He strokes Sypha’s hair idly, waiting for her to sit up so he can stack pillows behind her. ]
...will you ask me to tell the truth? I want to say a lot of comforting bullshit, but- I think you’re a little too sharp for that.
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[Still sleepy, she eases herself up a fraction at a time, until she's disentangled enough from Alucard and mostly vertical enough to shove some cushions behind her. As she does, she instinctively angles herself toward Trevor, gravitating into the touch of his hand like a plant in search of the sun.]
Trevor.
[It's softer than usual, a little mushy around the edges of the consonants, but it's unmistakably her Intent Voice.]
When I give you an order, you will ask me for confirmation before following it, until I say otherwise.
[And then:]
Now, when you talk to me, tell me the truth.
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Is that an order? [ He asks, leaving only for a moment to retrieve the tray of cake and tea and probably-not-legal medicines and setting it on her lap, climbing back into bed at her side. ]
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[Weight settles over her lap, and now she's got something concrete to focus on, the tray of all these good things that she absolutely doesn't want to let spill over onto the mattress and her bedmates, so she can't move around too much, or carelessly. She's not moving around much or carelessly anyway, as it is, but it's nice to have the reminder.
Especially when Trevor settles back in next to her, warm and solid, and it's so tempting to just melt against him.]
I am not...thinking very carefully about the things I say, lately. From the headache. So now you are a little more safe, in case I make a mistake. But this command, I want you to follow, yes.
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(That was the first thing he really said to her, wasn’t it? An accusation of coddling. And here he is.)
-this will happen again. This will always happen again. I could tell you that we won’t let it. I could mean it. But it wouldn’t be true.
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This will always happen again, he says. And maybe it's just that it's still so soon, that the marks on her arms are still there and she still sometimes reels from the realization that it's mattress beneath her rather than floorboards, but it leaves her afraid despite her best efforts, as though again is synonymous with now and she's about to be thrown back into that pit, even though she knows rationally that it burned behind them.
She doesn't realize that her breathing has gone ragged, or that she's pulled in on herself like a wounded animal despite their sleeping Alucard's best efforts to stay holding her.]
You are very bad at making me feel better.
[It's supposed to be a joke, maybe. Possibly. Except it's raw and it's sad and what little humor she can manage to scrape together isn't really enough to carry it.]
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[ He shouldn’t have done this. He really shouldn’t have done this. It hurts her, hearing it. He knew it would. But- what he’s going to ask of her is going to hurt her no matter how careful he is about it, and he needs to do it now. He needs to do it while this is still fresh, because otherwise he’ll never be able to make himself say this shit. And she would never order him to just spit it out if she knew what it was. ]
I need to ask something of you, before it does. And you’re going to fucking hate it. Just- promise you’ll hear me out, and then I’ll kick myself out of the bed.
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[Wait. Wait, no, that's — no, look at that, she's made a mistake already, just like she thought she would, and she knows it.]
That's not — I didn't mean it as a command. Don't treat it as one. Just please don't leave me, please don't — I don't care what it is. But don't go.
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I won’t. I promise I won’t. Not until you ask it of me.
[ And she will. He knows. He’s asked this of so many speakers before her, lost so many friends to this fucking request even before he lost those same friends to shells and machine gun fire and executions. ]
I want to give you my Saint-Etienne. [ That probably means nothing to her. It may as well be a fancy french euphamism for something rude. It takes him a moment to gather the courage to clarify, and in the end it’s only the order to be truthful that allows him to. ] It’s a pistol, my old sidearm. I’ll show you how to fire it.
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He wants her to learn to use his weapon because he knows this will happen to her again. Because he thinks if she has it, then maybe — maybe it won't.
And now she understands why he already believed she would hate him for it. Of course he would, because he's known Speakers, known the ones who were in Europe running through the mud and the gore trying to bring peace in a world gone mad, and so he must know what something like this would demand of them. A Speaker with a gun and the intent to put it to use is no Speaker at all.
It does make her recoil, deep down. It rattles something deep-seated and fundamental, inside of her. But —
But she remembers, all too clearly, Alucard carrying her out of the basement, of the chaos and magic all around her, and the sound of her own voice crying Trevor, help me and he'd found a way, he'd done it, he'd given her something of himself when she'd needed it most.
(She's just not sure which thought frightens her more. The thought of being thrown back into the basement, or the thought of her grandfather's eyes as they fell on the gunpowder residue on her hands.)
It takes her a minute. But then, slowly, she angles herself as best she can to look at him, and it's very deliberate, the words she pronounces.]
Tell me why.
[Because —
Because Trevor is the one who sees what has to be done. Trevor is the one who pushes Alucard to be the regent he has to be. And even when she hates that, she recognizes that Alucard needs it. She trusts their Belmont to see, to know, and he takes on the burden of calling for the hard choices every time, when she doesn't want to, when she wants to believe in peace.
This time it's not Alucard he's pushing, but that doesn't mean she trusts him any less.]
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(“I have never known a Trevor Belmont.” The speaker says to him, pushing the pistol back into his hands. A speaker cannot do or say anything harsher than to surgically cut someone out of thier own story. In the tale of his friend in the write robe, he never played a part. They do not speak again. He is dead a week later, and the mud frozen too hard to bury the body. It rots, just rotten meat wrapped in white linen, and it never knew Trevor Belmont.)
He breathes in and then out. It’s slow. He’s not conciously playing for time, but he is absolutely playing for time. ]
Is that an order?
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She doesn't know why, really, that she needs to kiss him like that, right then. It's not born of passion or even affection. But later, perhaps, it'll occur to her that it's not so dissimilar a thing to when Alucard had claimed him with a similar kiss at the turn of the new year — instinctively possessive, equally uncompromising.]
Yes.
[It needs to be. He won't want to tell her otherwise, and so she takes the choice altogether out of his hands, and puts it onto herself.]
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[ The kiss is- he’ll process it once this is done. He’s not really been much for emotions even after Sypha’s return.
(He doesn’t remember much of the time immediately following the rescue. The whole thing feels like a fever dream, of wanting too much and of being in too many people’s heads at once. He woke up in a room of dead flowers that smelled of rotten meat, with Sypha’s name written on the ground in her blood. And he emerged, washed the worst of the stink and the magic off himself, and found the two of them in their own bed. He distinctly remembers his reaction being a tired, numb ‘welcome home’ and then falling into the bed, and he hasn’t been any better for being outwardly emotional about this whole thing until now.)
-It makes it easier. Puts him in a place where he doesn’t have to think about what he’s doing, only trust that Sypha is asking him to do what is right. ]
You told me that you could never comprimise on ‘here’. So I’m asking you to choose ‘safe’ over ‘happy’. And- I know you. Any time you would use it would be a time that you needed to use it. Any time that you would use it would be a time where you not having it would mean that this happens again, or that someone dies.
[ He presses his lips together. He knows how much he’s asking her to give up. Alucard asked her to give up her world, once. He’s asking for something more. He’s asking for her identity. ]
Please. I’ll give you anything.
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It makes her want to cry, if she had any tears left; she's not sure if she does, after all the crying she's done already. That last plea didn't fall under the umbrella of her order to explain himself. He added that in all on his own.]
I think I told you once that...that I felt as though I had ceased to be a Speaker, when my family went west and I came back here. I felt as though I had abandoned everything I knew. And you asked me if I thought there was no story to be had here. You thought I could still be one, even if...
[The thought dies on her lips. They tremble instead, and she makes herself look him in the eyes.]
You knew better, then. You knew when I didn't. So — if I do this, am I...can I be a Speaker, even still?
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[ He meets her eyes. He doesn’t move to hold on to her. Not yet. Not until this is done. ]
Dying is easy and useless, and every fucking speaker I met thought that that was what helping people demanded of them. I don’t think it ever fucking was. Dead people help nobody. Living people do, when they live to help those who need it the next day and the day after. Death isn’t the sacrifice that helping people asks of you. It’s doing what you need to live, so that you can help as many people as need it.
[ ...if he were a more introspective person, he might realise how much of this is him speaking to himself. ]
If this were the sacrifice that was asked of you, to do all the good that you could, would you do it?
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[It's not really an answer to his question, but it's the lead-in to it, perhaps. The first sentence of the introductory paragraph. There will be a thesis statement, sooner or later.]
Not the way that you did. I don't think I could pick up a weapon and take a life for...a cause. For something so big that it forgets the people wrapped up in it.
[Her lip quakes again. She feels sure, somehow, that she's saying this wrong. That it's a horrible insult, somehow, rendered terribly through gawky words that she can't make right.]
But to protect you, I would. To protect Adrian, I would. And...
[She's shaking, now, but she hasn't looked away from him. She hasn't forgotten how often, either, she's thought of ordering him against throwing his life away.]
If...if it was to come home to the both of you again...then — then maybe...I could.
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Just let me teach you. Just carry it. Maybe you’ll never need to use it. Maybe we’ll be able to keep you safe. Maybe it truly will never happen again.
But if the two of us fail, it’s one last thing.
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[She goes easily. It's careless, probably to be so unmindful of the tray, but it's hard to make herself care right now. (Certainly she will more if the tea spills all over the bed, but. There are other beds, and the sheets will wash.)
No, right now she just wants to be held, and Trevor gathers her up so easily, and slowly her trembling eases away as she simply melts against him instead.]
Then yes. I will let you teach me. I'll...try to learn. I'll let you keep me safe, Trevor Belmont.
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[ He pushes the tray away, to a part of the bed without any legs under it. Letting go of Sypha to carry it further away isn’t an option right now, so they’ll both just have to take care not to kick it.
He’s not really- done this. Not since she returned. He’s been present but distant, leaving this sort of comfort to Alucard. He’s better at it, after all. It’s not the first time he’s touched Sypha since her return (that would be difficult. He’s been sleeping next to her, even if he’s mostly just been making himself into a wall between her and whatever is on his side of the bed) but it’s the first time he’s done so with any purpose.
His voice is choked. ]
Thank you. Thank you, so much.
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Then I want your stories.
[It's quiet, but she stays back just far enough that she's not forced to mumble the words on account of how she's pressed against him. They're soft, and low, but not muddled.]
All of them. Every one of them. I want you to give them to me, to keep and to hold, and when you run out of your own stories I want you to make up others, and still tell them to me. I want you to sit up late with me, night after night, telling them like Scheherazade until we both fall asleep. I want to memorize the sound of your voice in every language you know. I want to be your Speaker. To speak for Trevor Belmont.
[She breathes in slow, shaky. She lets the same breath out again, warm and humid against his neck.]
I want you to replace in me what you take from me. Will you do even that?
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[ Yes, he switched to english for a moment, just to make a pun. He sounds less tired now than he did before, something like warmth and humour finally finding its way back into his voice when he switches back to french. ]
They’ll be- how did you put it- bad at making you feel better. Lots of dead people, never for a good reason. Lots of shitty things that never amount to anything other than being shitty things.
[ He leans his head forward, burying his own face in her hair. ]
...should I start with what it’s like to fly?
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[She shouldn't laugh, except that it's funny. It's funny and stupid and clever and so — so normal that the laughter rattles out of her throat before she's even had the chance to wonder whether she feels like laughing or not.]
You have to tell me everything. The good ones, too. You can tell me about me, if you have to resort to it.
[But this is new. This is new and strange and promises to be wonderful.]
...Yes. Make me feel what it's like to fly.
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You’re fourteen years old, but you say that you’re eighteen. You think you must be all done with growing, but you’re not. You don’t even need to shave yet. And you’re terrified when you enlist, because you’re in a country you don’t know and using a name that isn’t yours, and then they tell you that they want men to fly. And you never even knew that was a thing that people did, because the only men you’ve ever known to fly are the kinds of men who hurt people. And it slips you’re mind that they want you to hurt people, as well, just in a different way. All you can think of is ‘fuck you, vampires, I can do this too’.
And you’ve seen planes before, but only ever in flight. They’re ugly things on the ground. But they tell you that they need men with your height and build, men who aren’t afraid to do what men can’t do- and the sky practically feels like your fucking birthright when they say it that way, because you’re the fucking consequence of men not being afraid to do what men can’t do.
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[She means to be quiet and listen while he tells his story, really, but she can't help but keep up a word or two of commentary as his recollection starts to paint a picture in her mind. The great ugly things, planes — she's never been on one, either, but she can imagine how unsettling they must be, climbing into one and being launched so high off the ground with nothing beneath you. That's not the way that travel is supposed to work, not like trains and riverboats and cars where there's the security of the earth underneath.
But there's love there, too, and she pays attention to that as well. That Trevor loves the sky, because it feels like it was made for him, what he was meant to do. At least, it did back then.
If she were to retell this story, she muses silently, she would make very sure to put emphasis on that.]
What does it feel like? To...take off. Isn't it frightening, to go up and know there is nothing beneath you?
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