Valdis (
redlightgreenlight) wrote in
ioduanlogs2018-08-01 02:52 pm
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How do You Solve a Problem like Meira?
Characters: Valdis and some open
Date: August 2018 (ish)
Location: Around Aifaran
Situation: Various
Warnings/Rating: In Headers
Valdis was tired. Between the return of the Narrakra and the discovery she could return ruins to complete something would have been bad enough without the memory of the visions or what she had seen soul-walking inside that corpse. Aside from that, the knowledge that she could move the Void with more power than she believed had sparked a new determination to harness its power without fear. The events of the last week had been eventful, what with the short term Dreamfolk that had arrived only to vanish once the damage had been done. Admittedly most of them hadn’t left much of a mark, but some had. She hoped that things would calm down for a few weeks at least.
Date: August 2018 (ish)
Location: Around Aifaran
Situation: Various
Warnings/Rating: In Headers
Valdis was tired. Between the return of the Narrakra and the discovery she could return ruins to complete something would have been bad enough without the memory of the visions or what she had seen soul-walking inside that corpse. Aside from that, the knowledge that she could move the Void with more power than she believed had sparked a new determination to harness its power without fear. The events of the last week had been eventful, what with the short term Dreamfolk that had arrived only to vanish once the damage had been done. Admittedly most of them hadn’t left much of a mark, but some had. She hoped that things would calm down for a few weeks at least.
no subject
"I took up drawing after an incident several years ago," she explained as she took the book from him, "There is a large part of my life that I don't remember, and sometimes sketching helps put together the fragments I do have."
But not this time. This time, based off lack of facts and conversation, felt much harder to pin down.
no subject
"Is it some form of amnesia? I've heard stories about the damage that a blow to the head can cause. Warriors have lost track of their entire lives that way." Trahearne pauses and then adds, "I also know that age tends to wear away the details. I tried explaining that to a sapling once, and I unintentionally frightened her into thinking that time would 'steal' her experiences from her."
no subject
"You could say that," she replied, "But it's not that I don't remember. You see, I once lived by another name, but something is blocking the memories of that person...I don't know why it keeps them."
A breath before opening the sketchbook and pointing at one of the faceless figures. She knew his face, knew his voice, knew that he couldn't have always been filled with sorrow and hatred; but she couldn't remember a single instance of his kindness or his love.
"This is my father...I only recently learned of the connection." Or at least, compared to her life, "In all my memory, he had been my enemy, and I killed him as one."
no subject
"I imagine that there's little chance that a spell or curse is involved. It... very well could be that there's a deep part of your mind that doesn't want to remember. That fears the pain involved from knowing it."
Trahearne reaches out to tap the edge of the paper. "None of the stories I read about parents loving their children unconditionally ever addressed the darker side of the issue. That people are people, and are capable of being terrible even to their own flesh and blood. If he was your enemy, then you did what you had to do."
no subject
Her gaze shifts back to the sketchbook, deciding to turn a few pages back. Sketches of Pepper, Devin, Anani, scenes of the city, the ones connected to the visions, the vast darkness. All the way to the first sketch of those she had lost so long ago.
"I'm sure there is pain and fear involved with the memory loss." Valdis sighs, "And yet it is far more complicated than that. Still, it's frustrating to only have bits and pieces that vanish as if they were never there. Hence the sketching."
She wasn't sure of much about her father, but the time she had met him after regaining her soul, he hadn't been the most loving person in the world. She managed a smile.
"Being crazy doesn't really have many perks."
no subject
"Do you think that makes you crazy? Or is there something else?" Trahearne asks, taking care to keep his tone a bit lighter. "You're free to not answer, but - whatever your struggles, I'm sure there are solutions, or ways to manage the burden. Nothing is so complicated that it can't be untangled, even if it's slow going to get there. Those bits and pieces will surely add up one day."
no subject
"I suppose not," she replied. It was more the fact that she carried a giant serpent within her, a being of death and chaos that delighted in destruction and kept secrets. "The sketching is the easiest way to manage it, the Dreaming likes to throw things at me from time to time. It left me a crystal unicorn this morning, which triggered memories of my father, but they are quickly fleeing."
Anani shoved his head against Trahearne's hand, demanding to be pet.
no subject
"That's too specific of an item to be a coincidence. Sometimes I wonder if the odd events the Dreaming springs on us are some sort of... reaction to our thoughts or feelings." He looked back over to Valdis, saying in a thoughtful tone, "It could be a sign that you should keep it. Having it close might help you hold onto those snatches of memory, if nothing else."
no subject
"The Dreaming is fluid, and it is known to act in such a manner." It wouldn't be the first time things had appeared based upon thoughts and feelings. "I'm sure those in the Aisling Tower knows more about how it functions, but I'm not inclined to engage in conversations regarding their experiments."
She would hang on to the unicorn though.
"How old are you, Trahearne?"
no subject
"I saw twenty-six years before I arrived here," he said next, "Which I realize sounds young. I'm still the oldest of my kind. Sylvari are quite new to my world in the scheme of things," he explained with a faint smile.
no subject
"I'm not sure its so much sentient as it is a force," Valdis replied, considering the possibilities of Trahearne asking the questions. It could be more fruitful to have someone with less suspicion visiting the tower.
She glanced at him, surprise in her eyes when he stated his age. "You speak with far more wisdom than any twenty-six year old I've met. The races of my world are ancient. The youngest is still twenty-three hundred years old."
no subject
To her other comments, Trahearne's smile turns a bit sheepish. "I suppose I'm what I needed to be. It's much the same on my world - every other race has been there for many, many years. We had a bit of a rough start, but since then sylvari have become widely accepted, despite a few bumps here and there. It's my hope that we'll be able to survive to the point of being as ancient as the other races are."