president_evil (
president_evil) wrote in
thecapitol2014-11-15 01:50 pm
Entry tags:
All the time I'm told, stay away from the Devil
WHO| Wesker and You! You lucky thing, you.
WHAT| Some Capitol function or another. (Really, do they need a reason to party?)
WHERE| Let's say a private residence, for funsies.
WHEN| Uh, now-ish? Nowish, sounds good.
Notes/Warnings| Step right up for your daily dose of dickishness, doctor's orders.
With the dust of another mini-arena finally settled, Wesker's attention had shifted to preparation of the next - full - match. While it mattered little to him personally, the effort was expected of his position.
Rallying for his tributes, the hope of the glorious spotlight of the Capitol shining upon his district once more, the glamor, the fanfare, the adoration....
It was tedious, yes, but it was a fine cover for his more liberal minded intentions, and while the recent Celebrus interview did seem to be going over well, he knew maintenance was a necessity.
Hearts and minds, as they said. (Equal parts fear and respect.)
So when his escort wrangled an invitation to an event being put on by one the city's string-pullers, Wesker deigned to spare a few hours of his time.
(The ends, would justify the means.)
WHAT| Some Capitol function or another. (Really, do they need a reason to party?)
WHERE| Let's say a private residence, for funsies.
WHEN| Uh, now-ish? Nowish, sounds good.
Notes/Warnings| Step right up for your daily dose of dickishness, doctor's orders.
With the dust of another mini-arena finally settled, Wesker's attention had shifted to preparation of the next - full - match. While it mattered little to him personally, the effort was expected of his position.
Rallying for his tributes, the hope of the glorious spotlight of the Capitol shining upon his district once more, the glamor, the fanfare, the adoration....
It was tedious, yes, but it was a fine cover for his more liberal minded intentions, and while the recent Celebrus interview did seem to be going over well, he knew maintenance was a necessity.
Hearts and minds, as they said. (Equal parts fear and respect.)
So when his escort wrangled an invitation to an event being put on by one the city's string-pullers, Wesker deigned to spare a few hours of his time.
(The ends, would justify the means.)

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Tonight, given that he's exhausted the list of people who paid attention to him when he was fresh in the Arena, he's mingling with new persons. Dressed in a long, dark coat with a flared collar that reveals burgundy satin beneath, he's stepping easily into the shoes of a debonair villain. It's a role his Stylists have set for him that he's all too happy to fulfill. He takes a seat in one of the plush chairs in the lobby of the ballroom and finds himself sitting across from a face he knows from magazines and Games footage but not from actual conversation.
"Mr. Albert Wesker, I'm told?" He relaxes into the chair and rests his cane over his knees.
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So similar they were, and yet so different.
A pair of killers, like dark stains against the glitter of the ballroom. A Victor against a Tribute, black against gold.
It both grated, and yet appealed. (Wesker had always enjoyed a fine piece of composition.)
"Mr. Cassidy." His head turned, attention apparently fixing despite the uncertainty of his dark lenses. "I presume."
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For as much as Tom is a stranger to this world, to this culture, for as much as he's a prisoner trapped within the spectator's bloodsport, this here is his element. Sitting across from people whom he doesn't have to affect any morality for, people as soulless as he is. Pretense flakes away like dead skin or old leaves.
An Avox brings them both wine. Tom sniffs it before he takes a sip.
"Have you been enjoying yourself?"
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"I miss many things from my world," he replied, pale thumb stroking across the rounded bottom of his glass, long fingers curling around the stem. "This is not necessarily one of them."
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Tom figures if Wesker's Tributes count for anything to the man, they're only there as decorations for an ego. Most villains are alike that way, and Tom doesn't think he's wrong in his hypothesis here.
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"Perhaps if any of them could be helped..." his voice trailed away on a sigh, pushed wearily through his nose. "Most consider themselves far too noble and prefer to believe they're spiting the system. It's really nothing more than a waste of time and money."
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Now that he's been excluded from the ranks of the other Tributes, he feels it almost paramount to separate himself from them in the eyes of everyone else. He isn't one of those petty, squabbling would-be rebels. He's just trying to get along within the system and is being crowded out by his less considerate peers.
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(A monster would know a beast.)
"The repeated negative reinforcement of painful death does coax some of them to play along, but it's not a quick process." His wine swirled, another lazy lap around the glass. "And my patience for willful stupidity is rather limited."
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Not that he actually sees that as a flaw in himself.
He takes a sip. "I've heard quite a few things about your victory. Choked out a teenager, did you?"
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No denial. No hesitation. Just a simple statement of truth. Of fact.
He had painted that arena red, and he had won.
"Though I'm sure some would say nothing as titillating as bombing a cafeteria full of children."
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toads ;A; ribbit ribbit
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Mandus frowned into his wine, gritting his teeth back and forth. He was not surprised to be surrounded blithering idiots, but a small part of him hoped that one of them -- just one of them -- would understand.
You take yourself too seriously, Oswald darling, was what Dr. Florbelle had said to him. You might unsettle the Tributes if you keep it up.
He scoffed, his fingers tight around the wine glass.
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He waited to be met, confident in the powerful weight of his stare.
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"Mr. Wesker."
He turned to face him completely, his fingers loosening around the glass.
"It is an honor."
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"The pleasure is mine, Mr. Mandus."
(He'd knew, of course. He'd read the official reports; had heard the gossip.)
"I had hoped we might meet."
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Mandus was as susceptible to flattery as any other man (any other pig) as much he hated to admit it. It filled his heart with a sort of delight, that this powerful, monstrous man had been hoping to meet him. He had read articles about Wesker, oh yes. He had heard about how his world had fallen to plague. He had seen the monster in his gullet, marveled at how its gaping throat so closely mirrored the red-tinged hallways of his dreams.
But ah, no one in this place was generous. Mandus must remember that.
"You're interested in my sponsorship, I presume." His mouth twitched with disappointment. "For your Tributes."
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Then his mouth curled, and there was a flash of teeth.
"But I must admit, I have heard so much about the legend, I hoped to find the man its equal."
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His bruises from his journey into the sewers were all but healed; only a yellowish tinge to the skin of one wrist gave his beating away. Anything else was covered up by the stiff and uncomfortable suit he'd been buttoned into. His hair was tied back, and it looked like some stylist had at least made an effort to clean him up. He was clean, of course, but there was little to be done about his weathered face, the scars, the roughness in his features.
Right now, he was sniffing a drink dubiously. Some kind of strong spirit, he knew, but there were fruit juices in it, and sugar, and other things he didn't recognize. He had not drunk from it yet.
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In the case of Thorongil, Wesker was still deciding the value of the information.
Still weighing his options.
He regarded the man silently for some time, watching him sidelong as an over-eager sponsor prattled on, then, finally, when an opening presented itself, drifted over.
(It was so hard these days to judge the usefulness of a tool simply by sight.)
"If they wanted you dead, you would be," he murmured lowly, sipping from his own glass of dark, red wine.
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He's still holding the glass like he doesn't trust it, though.
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He gave no particular emphasis, his voice remained the same smooth unhurried purr -- a mentor, advising his tribute.
But there was a hint there. A clue.
A test.
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"So, you heard about my arrest," he says. "Curiosity killed the cat, they say -- or in this case, earned him a beating."
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He should have been informed far sooner than he had been, which itched in his jaw unpleasantly, but that was another matter entirely. (One he would see to quietly, and personally.)
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"I have no intention of becoming an example," says Thorongil flatly. "I will do what I must not to be a subject on which the Capitol exerts its power, as a lesson to the rest."
Willing to cooperate, but not happy to.
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