Lydia (
thepainted_lady) wrote2010-11-11 04:04 pm
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JMM 37.10 Defying Gravity [For
hadtobeahero and <lj site="livejou
Something has changed within me
Something is not the same
I'm through with playing by the rules
Of someone else's game
The music was loud and the crowd was already drunk at noon, as Lydia made her way through the press of their too-hot bodies. She’d killed a girl heading this way and taken her clothes--her own far too ripped and bloody from her run through the woods--and boots (since she’d run off without any shoes) and felt like she fit in fairly well, though she was still occasioning quite a bit of comment.
Then again, women in leather miniskirts, corset tops and boots tended to do that anywhere. She felt a hand on her ass and let it pass. It was a grope, sure, but a quick sense from the touch...he wouldn’t take it farther if she complained. Not what she was looking for, then. She wanted her usual prey, but she needed a lot of them, or their kin. People the world wouldn’t miss, people she could use and still face herself in the morning.
Edgar had mentioned this place as somewhere to avoid, last time they passed through the area. She saw why when her attention was caught by the group in the corner.
Unfortunately for Edgar’s peace of mind, she had no intention of avoiding them today.
* * *
A half hour later, she was on the back of the bike of their leader, his blood singing in her veins--not enough to incapacitate him, but enough to give her compulsion an iron-clad hold. She’d tasted the others, too, for the same reason, and killed one more so she would be at her strongest and now they were winging their way back to Füssen. She locked down her emotions tight, letting herself go numb for the moment to give no signal of her approach. If she was right...Samuel wouldn’t be able to feel the bond between her and Sylar as sire and progeny, and if her emotions were shut down...he wouldn’t pick up on anything empathically, either.
Besides, she needed to be cold to face Peter again.
“Stay here,” she told the men, sliding off the back of the bike and pointing to an abandoned warehouse. John was down here somewhere, she was sure of it. “Don’t make any noise, don’t get into trouble. Sleep, until I call you.” She took one of their cell phones and waved it at the leader. “When I call...you’ll come immediately to me, understood?”
He nodded, looking at her a little glassily.
“Good boy.”
* * *
She visited a shop she’d found a couple of weeks before, filled with teas from all over the world, and smiled at the woman, who recognized her despite the somewhat...drastic change in her appearance.
“Everything’s at the cleaners,” Lydia said, making a face at her clothes. “All I had left was the costume I wore to a party on Halloween...”
The woman laughed, then, and they discussed the silliness of men and costumes and the things they forced themselves into, and yes, of course, she had exactly what Lydia needed, and she handed it over. Lydia shuddered a little bit, though she hid it, and was careful not to let any of it touch her skin.
“Could you mix some up for me, straight, in a to-go cup, and then another batch....blended in with something to mask it? My boyfriend hates the taste of the herb, but it’s the only thing that helps with his headaches, and he’s got such an awful one today...” She gave the woman an appealing little smile, tucking the pure herb away in a bag.
Another smile, and five minutes later, Lydia walked out of the store with one hot cup of vervain tea in her hand, ready to be poured down the throat of one Peter Petrelli, forcibly if necessary, and a neatly wrapped up tea bag, just waiting to be brewed.
Some people’s habits were, after all, just a little too predictable.
Now to find Peter, and change the rules of this game to hers.
Something is not the same
I'm through with playing by the rules
Of someone else's game
The music was loud and the crowd was already drunk at noon, as Lydia made her way through the press of their too-hot bodies. She’d killed a girl heading this way and taken her clothes--her own far too ripped and bloody from her run through the woods--and boots (since she’d run off without any shoes) and felt like she fit in fairly well, though she was still occasioning quite a bit of comment.
Then again, women in leather miniskirts, corset tops and boots tended to do that anywhere. She felt a hand on her ass and let it pass. It was a grope, sure, but a quick sense from the touch...he wouldn’t take it farther if she complained. Not what she was looking for, then. She wanted her usual prey, but she needed a lot of them, or their kin. People the world wouldn’t miss, people she could use and still face herself in the morning.
Edgar had mentioned this place as somewhere to avoid, last time they passed through the area. She saw why when her attention was caught by the group in the corner.
Unfortunately for Edgar’s peace of mind, she had no intention of avoiding them today.
* * *
A half hour later, she was on the back of the bike of their leader, his blood singing in her veins--not enough to incapacitate him, but enough to give her compulsion an iron-clad hold. She’d tasted the others, too, for the same reason, and killed one more so she would be at her strongest and now they were winging their way back to Füssen. She locked down her emotions tight, letting herself go numb for the moment to give no signal of her approach. If she was right...Samuel wouldn’t be able to feel the bond between her and Sylar as sire and progeny, and if her emotions were shut down...he wouldn’t pick up on anything empathically, either.
Besides, she needed to be cold to face Peter again.
“Stay here,” she told the men, sliding off the back of the bike and pointing to an abandoned warehouse. John was down here somewhere, she was sure of it. “Don’t make any noise, don’t get into trouble. Sleep, until I call you.” She took one of their cell phones and waved it at the leader. “When I call...you’ll come immediately to me, understood?”
He nodded, looking at her a little glassily.
“Good boy.”
* * *
She visited a shop she’d found a couple of weeks before, filled with teas from all over the world, and smiled at the woman, who recognized her despite the somewhat...drastic change in her appearance.
“Everything’s at the cleaners,” Lydia said, making a face at her clothes. “All I had left was the costume I wore to a party on Halloween...”
The woman laughed, then, and they discussed the silliness of men and costumes and the things they forced themselves into, and yes, of course, she had exactly what Lydia needed, and she handed it over. Lydia shuddered a little bit, though she hid it, and was careful not to let any of it touch her skin.
“Could you mix some up for me, straight, in a to-go cup, and then another batch....blended in with something to mask it? My boyfriend hates the taste of the herb, but it’s the only thing that helps with his headaches, and he’s got such an awful one today...” She gave the woman an appealing little smile, tucking the pure herb away in a bag.
Another smile, and five minutes later, Lydia walked out of the store with one hot cup of vervain tea in her hand, ready to be poured down the throat of one Peter Petrelli, forcibly if necessary, and a neatly wrapped up tea bag, just waiting to be brewed.
Some people’s habits were, after all, just a little too predictable.
Now to find Peter, and change the rules of this game to hers.
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Then, with a muttered apology, and hoping he'd be distracted by the blood that she'd so nicely brought and not turn around when he got his strength back and send her flying or stake her or something before he realized she was trying to help, she went after the first bullet. To her credit--enhanced-speed, dexterity, eyesight and reflexes made her very fast about it?
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"I have to...or you won't heal..." She touched his back lightly, but the one wound was already healing with the bullet out, and that gave her the resolve to go after the others with the same determination, though she felt something in her break a little every time she hurt him, after he'd been through so much.
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"Thank you," he managed, still exhausted in spite of the handful of lives he'd claimed.
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"I'm sorry I didn't come sooner," she said softly. "I've been looking. I tried a locator spell, but...I couldn't get more exact than the neighborhood, and he..." That was the night, she was pretty sure, and her stomach twisted again, thinking about it. She forced it down. "You were gone already, when I found where you'd been."
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And, hell, until this morning, she'd believed it was just them, too, turning on her, for whatever reason.
"John..." she reached for his hand. "It wasn't...he wasn't..." She took a breath and tried again. "It wasn't Peter. I mean, I know it looked like him? But when he was so sick, when you left...after what had happened to me...it was Samuel. He took control of him, somehow. Possession or whatever. Peter, as himself, would never have done this. Samuel...he was trying to hurt me. So he hurt you. And he used Peter, and then, when Sylar found out..." Her voice cracked, and she took another breath. "He's got Sylar now. He's taken him over, and he's been compelling Peter for days. Both of them..." She closed her eyes, a little shudder running over her skin, and then she looked at him.
"I broke his hold on Peter right before I came here. He's the one who told me where you were. He was...devastated. I sent him to watch Sylar. Samuel. With vervain in his system, so he can't be compelled again."
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Though honestly, chances were he would have still laid the blame with Peter and not made the leap to possession even if he had been in his right mind. Where Lydia would have rationalized it as him simply not knowing Peter, however, that was not the case. Quite the opposite, actually. In following Sylar, he'd seen much of Peter over the years -- hell, he'd even turned his focus on the boy for a few weeks when he'd lost sight of the killer when he'd been detained at the Company -- and he knew that he had a dark streak. He tempered it very well, yes, but it was still there and what was the difference between shooting your own brother or taking a nail gun to your mortal enemy and torturing the man who had technically killed your best friend and, quite possibly, others, too.
He didn't say that, though, flashing her a semi-apologetic look instead. He hadn't meant to snap at her, if what he'd said could be considered scathing at all, but he was rapidly growing more and more irritated. With Peter. With Samuel. With all of them, all of this, except perhaps for her and Sylar. And it was apparently showing and it wasn't over yet.
He reached up, scrubbing a hand over his eyes, and then moved to get to his feet, wincing, expecting pain where there had been pain for a week now, and sighing in relief when it did not come. "Regardless, though, we should go find them. If he has my boy, chances are it won't take him long to realize that Peter's lurking about, and I'd like to take care of this before any of us suffer any further."
Well, truthfully, he could care less whether or not Samuel found Peter and bled him dry. After all the boy had done to him, he rather thought he deserved it. What concerned him more was the fact that Peter's blood was poisoned, and if Samuel drank from him ... well, he didn't want that.
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"I hid the herbs you brought back. We found them in the clearing. They're at the Gasthaus, but even Sylar doesn't know where they are, so Samuel won't."
She rose fairly fluidly, emotions back locked down, and held out her hand to him. "I don't know anything about ghost banishing, and I spent most of the week on trying to find you, not realizing that's what I should still have been researching. What do you need me to do?"
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So much depended on how far Samuel's hooks extended into Sylar. If he was still at least partially aware, it would be easier -- he could even potentially help them get Samuel out of him. If Samuel had forced him into some dark corner of his mind and trapped him there, though, things would be more difficult. Either way, getting Samuel out would still be possible, if not highly unpleasant for Sylar and potentially him, too, if Samuel could manipulate the bond he had with the killer, but how much it would take would depend on Sylar himself.
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The sun had finished setting while he fed and she worked on his back, but she paused anyway, before they reached the door, to press his ring into his hand.
"Peter gave me this to return to you..."
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"And back to the situation, I'd imagine that was exactly what it was. Apparently he didn't have much luck in the matter, but ... I doubt very highly you would have felt anything if Samuel had him in entirety." And the fact that he didn't was good. Very good.
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"I told Peter to meet me back at the alley after he made sure Samuel drank the tea." She wouldn't call him Sylar, wouldn't combine them in her head, not anymore. She needed to make that difference for herself, to remind herself of why she was holding on.
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He slid his fingers back down to hers, taking her hand again, and moved towards the Gasthaus again. And while he didn't pause at the mention of tea, he did arch his eyebrows. "Tea?" She'd mentioned giving some to Peter so he couldn't be compelled, but ... he did the math, and frowned. She planned on drugging Sylar. It made sense, he supposed, and it was possibly the only way to keep him from running or killing them both now that the game was over, but he still couldn't honestly admit to being happy. "Mm, I see. I suppose, at least, that will make things easier for us."
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"The only reason any of us are still alive is because he was still finding it amusing to torture me," she said quietly, holding on to his hand a little bit like a lifeline, taking some sort of assurance in the fact that he seemed to know what to do. Whether he approved or disapproved of her choice didn't matter as much as it might have any other day. She knew Samuel better than any of the rest of them. She knew what needed doing, there. "The moment he realized the game was up...we'd all be dead. I had to stop him from that, or from doing something to harm Sylar." The tea Sylar could recover from.
She ran her free hand through her somewhat tangled hair. "Is there something we can do to keep him from jumping bodies again, before we go in? Keep him from taking control of Peter or one of us, if we start in getting him out of Sylar?" A slight shudder ran over her. "I don't want him any more in me than..." He'd already been. She looked away, cutting the thought off, switching it. "We need to make sure he's contained."
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"Unfortunately, no. I need those herbs you spirited away first. I can keep him out of us after that, when we're trying to get him out of Sylar, but before ... " He looked away and down the street, sighing, and shook his head. "We can only hope the vervain will affect him, too, if only for long enough to get what we need out."
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"Hopefully it's working, then, and we can be in and out fast, and deal with whatever comes."
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And somewhere down the street, Peter appeared from the Gasthaus, half-running, looking around for them.
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Peter kept his distance when he approached, though he hadn't seen the look in John's eyes, not quite able to meet them. "I got him to drink the tea. He's upstairs."
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She nodded sharply, not smiling, but acknowledging. "Did it...work?" She'd been a bit concerned that somehow with the ghost and all of Sylar's abilities maybe the magic or whatever of the herb wouldn't work.
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"It'll have been plenty, I assure you," John answered tightly, nearly spitting the words. He glanced up at the window he knew lead to their room, then back to Lydia. "Where did you leave them, girl? One of us needs to go get those herbs, and if you leave me here with your human, I may accidentally tear his throat out."
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He climbed up through the window hurried and took a quick look around once he was in the room. Sylar, still wearing Samuel's face, lay face down in a wet mess that could only be the remains of his tea, and John was half-tempted to go over a kick him in the ribs on principle alone, knowing that he would heal. He thought better of it, though, not willing to risk waking him up or alerting him to his presence if Samuel's ghost was still aware even if his boy was not, and steeled his jaw, forcing himself to move past them and to the hideaway Lydia had mentioned. He reached up into it, pulling down the bag of herbs he'd bought, and moved back towards the window, pausing only long enough to retrieve his cane when he spotted it. Magically or otherwise, it was only a prop, but he damn well wanted it for what he was going to do.
He jumped back down to the street, landing in a crouch, graceful despite his exhaustion and his juggling act, and moved back over to them. He leaned the cane up against the wall, shifted the bag from one hand to the other, and started going through it, looking for something. What he came up with was a handful of small white flowers, and he handed two of them to Lydia, keeping one for himself, before dumping the rest of them back in the bag.
"Eat that." He hoped he didn't have to tell her to just eat one. The other was for Peter, but hell if he was touching him to hand it to him, himself.
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Then again, that wasn't quite as personal against Peter as just...John was about the only person she felt comfortable near at the moment.
"To keep him from jumping into one of us," she explained, so Peter wouldn't think they were trying to poison him or whatever.
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