[ He's just so used to respectfully using "Miss" to people he looks up to. But, he can drop it, absolutely, and nods to signify as such. ]
Alright. I just figured some of this might be nice to know. For example, maybe it takes up his magic to fix up parts of the ship that we destroy. In which case, I'd be happy to help with that. I'm sure a few others would be as well. Simultaneously, I wasn't sure if you would want to monitor the amount of damage, just in case you wanted to not put Jenny's brothers at risk? I really don't know what the best case scenario would be here... but if you think it's something that's safe to share with everyone, maybe we can all brainstorm together~?
[ Mizuki's no good at solving things, but he can pose pretty good questions for other people to solve. He thinks that, at the very least, that makes him a little bit of a valuable asset to a team setting like this! Maybe? Okay, maybe he's not totally sure, but...! He wants to be useful. ]
Ehehe. Why do you think I'm here right now, not holding anything back? [ You might be against his weird devotions right now, Clarke, but that doesn't mean he's stepping down from them. ]
... You're so kind. Thank you. But if you decide to, I won't be upset.
( the first point to hit on, yet a promise she can't exactly keep. but at least in this moment? one she absolutely intends to. the problem being, clarke griffin and her impossible choices have a habit of undermining her best intentions, and tend to make her failures all the more heart wrenching. the only real confidence she can hold here is that, if his name's on that list, hers is somewhere above it.
if mizuki could devour evil people, he had so much more use to the people on board than someone simply numbed to the idea of slaughtering them.
as for devotions and trust? it feels unearned on her end. all she's done for him is entertain a few hypotheticals while drenched in finery chosen by their hosts, and then asked a few prying questions about her home world while slathered in gristle. none of which ought to earn the amount of faith that she can physically feel being lumped on top of her chest when mizuki counters her challenge to find someone to completely trust with the kind, casual declaration that he's already found that person. really the best recourse for clarke right now is to buckle her confusion back, keep it close to her chest to chew over at a later date. they've got more important things to discuss, like a plan. )
Destroying things and forcing him to repair them is a good place to start. But that's something we'd need to test on a small scale, and covertly, before we used it as a baseline for any sort of attack. That's absolutely something we could work through together and brainstorm together.
( and now for the unkind, decisive moment: )
But Jenny wishes she could have burned alongside her brothers. And after this long, considers death to be an escape. I don't think we need to worry about putting any of them at risk, and should just consider it as finally allowing them rest.
( so yes, clarke's absolute willing to sacrifice every shade on board to save the handful of souls here. )
[ Mizuki ponders this for a moment, doing his best to try to understand this sort of rationale. On some level, it makes sense. If Jenny had told Clarke that much, then surely the trolley problem here being her family versus the hostages here made things easy. He understands it... but he doesn't rationalize it very well. But maybe his bleeding heart is showing for someone who lost their family...
He doesn't need to get the rationale, after all, right? He never has before, so what would make it any different here? ]
Alright, then we'll tell everyone about it. And, who knows, maybe something good will happen, anyway? I had someone tell me a long time ago that good things come to good people. Maybe we'll just have to see what that makes Jenny?
[ Probably not a very good person, but anyone who's lived to be a number in the five digits probably wouldn't be labelled as a "good person". Not that Mizuki would make that sort of judgement call. ]
Edited (So many typos don’t look at me) 2022-04-12 01:48 (UTC)
( he wouldn't be the first person to blink at her in the wake of clarke revealing her intentions — priorities, plans, thoughts, anything really — and that moment of silent consideration serves as a painful reminder that the trust mizuki's decided to put in her is misplaced. unearned. potentially disastrous, and promisingly painful
will she always think she's making the right call? the best call? the only call that got as many people out of a situation alive as possible? tough choices with the betterment of humanity in mind, and bloody battle plans with the endgame of peace and prosperity? absolutely.
will those impossible choices ever be right? or easy? absolutely not.
it's a tad relieving for mizuki to eventually nod along, not challenge her too much or show any outward signs of doubt before they've even seen if this plan fails or succeeds. it's a breath of fresh air, and then a gut punch of a reminder that she's so far removed from everyone that knew her downfalls — surrounded by new people to disappoint and get hurt if she got this all wrong. so... )
Don't get me wrong. If we can help her, we will.
But karma's a joke. Bad things happen to good people, and bad people get happy endings. That's not a question of good or evil, that's just how life goes. Fate doesn't discriminate, and in dire straits we need to make our own chances.
( a real glossy way of saying you can't save everyone, so pick who matters most. )
[ It's not as if Mizuki even has anything to challenge Clarke with here. For the most part, he agrees. Mostly because it's in his nature to agree with those he looks up to, but also because looking out for those he cares about it far more important than looking out for those he doesn't know all that well. Least of all pirates.
Still, he lulls his head a bit at Clarke's dismissal of karma. There's a cold laugh in return. Again, she's completely right. It's far too optimistic for anyone to think otherwise, even if Mizuki really wants to believe it. ]
...Fortitude. We need fortitude. I spent a lot of time in Terra learning what the means from people.
[ Usually by force. And usually without their choice in the matter. She doesn't need to know all the details right now, though. They're not important. ]
( it's always, always okay to want to believe in something that might make life a little more palatable. understandable. comforting, even. but it's important to separate aspirations and hopes from the often colder, harsher reality they were faced with. the idea of karma could be a blanket wrapped around ones shoulders on a cold night, but shouldn't be counted on to keep frostbite at bay. )
I think we have a lot of people who've had to be very strong in their home worlds. I think we have stubbornness in spades. ( she is directly speaking about herself here, tbh. ) We might even have competence. And durability.
But I don't know about fortitude. Not yet. ( far too many people have seemed at ease here; some even prefer this nonconsensual pleasure cruise a decent break from their home worlds. one man wishes to run away from the grief of losing people close to him, some consider this a disjointed afterlife or else that their deaths were robbed from them. one girl was far too interesting in eating italian dishes floating through the walls instead of figuring out just where they were coming from. )
We might not know for sure, until people are pushed to decide for themselves how hard they want to fight for their lives. What did you learn about fortitude? What do you think courage would look like here, in the face of insurmountable odds and mysterious forces?
[ There's a light laugh, then a small shrug. ] Well, that was sort of a problem that I ran into. Learning about people's fortitude started to make me doubt a lot of my original views. I cannot confidently answer what true fortitude is, but rather, I know it's something needed for situations like this. It's a strange place to be in, right? But I've met many people who were confronted with their options-- calmly accept one's demise, or struggle to live on at any cost. When making the choice at their leisure, people who often say they'd choose the latter, as it's "simply" a matter of survival. Yet those who are forced to swallow the contents of those choices, in the heat of the moment...
[ He picks up his hand and twists it around to play with one of his side bangs idly as he kicks his feet in his chair, like he's talking to Clarke about something mundane or just talking about his day. ]
They've proven that instinct alone cannot give rise to true fortitude. They are easily crushed, or easily destroyed, or easily lose themselves.
[ He lulls once more, and... just starts to look tired. ]
... I don't know what it means to have it. I would like to see someone show it to me, though. And I think we need it desperately on this ship.
clarke distinctly remembers only giving him bits and pieces of information about her home world, most generalized and sweeping. none of the specifics, at least not without the dressing and plausible deniability of hypotheticals. so why does this conversation feel like it's taken such sharp and sudden turn into directly calling her out? her and the remnants of the 100; all of the sky people, all of the clans in the face of the apocalypse. easily crushed, easily destroyed, easily lost — and it's hard not to take that as a condemnation of jasper jordan, who'd stared down at the deathwave and decided he'd rather paint dnr on his hand and go out smiling instead of fighting anymore. )
The same person could fight tooth and nail to survive on instinct alone, willingly accept the consequences, and still decide it wasn't worth to go through a second time. It's not an either or scenario. The people, the times, the circumstances, and the desire to live — all of those change. I don't think you'd get any more solid a definition of true fortitude than you would true hysteria.
I can't offer you a textbook definition or example. But I guarantee those who've swallowed their consequences without issue somethings wished they'd choked on them.
...Perhaps you're right. For true hysteria, I definitely understand your point of view. Here, though, I'm afraid I have to disagree. I believe that true fortitude, in the long term, will better one's "self". In the end, people with that fortitude will make the worlds- this place or otherwise- better. Brighter futures, better people, and the knowledge to pass onto others.
I can only hope that whoever has something like that will share their thoughts and feelings with me. Maybe then I'll finally understand.
( but mizuki!!! that's exactly what's happening here!
though clarke can gauge that her meaning isn't quite getting through to him. or maybe it is, and just really disagrees with that assessment, but he'd be wrong to. she briefly casts around for a way to explain it that might make more sense, and lands upon... )
Brave people can have evil motives. Genocidal warlords have the resolve and confidence to think they're doing the right thing. Not all types of fortitude are geared towards the betterment or survival of humanity, or would make the world a better place. Even what starts as the best of intentions can quickly become the worst sort of crime.
Have you never heard that every villain is the hero of their own story?
But he is very dead set on this sort of thing. If just because it's something he's seen over and over and over. To the point where his whole worldview on how people work and what they think and what that means to him had changed completely. He still has more to say on the matter, of course, and many thoughts that he needs to sort through to truly convey himself, but he simply shakes his head for now. ]
Two factions view each other as threat. One sends an army to kill the invading party, but that party's leader manages to kill an entire army to protect ( her — the slip up almost happened. ) their people. Now they're a villain to their enemies, and a hero to their people.
Mmmh... [ Ah yes, hello, decisions. His worst enemy. ] I don't really have the context to answer this effectively. "Invade" carries a negative connotation, but my company back home would do this for the health and protection of innocents.
... But certainly, it'll be the side with the more righteous intentions.
The invaders didn't think they've be stepping on anyone else's toes, but now they're stuck. Both sides just want to survive and preserve their way of life, and both think they're equally righteous.
Who's the bad guy here?
( don't think his tendency to divert to the opinions of other people hasn't been noticed. as much as that's a useful weapon skill set to have in one's back pocket, she really really wants to hear how he'd pick. to gauge mizuki's fortitude, to learn about any stronger opinions he hides behind paltry smiles and pleasant idolization. to figure out how much she should tell him about her history of leaving bodies in the dust, in preparation for the fact they might have to do just that for jenny and her brothers in the near future — and feeling guilty about it would be a waste of time. )
... Ehehe. Sorry, Clarke, if it's like that, I can't answer... I really don't know. This is the sort of thing that the Doctor would decide for me, you know? It's why I want to ask other people such hard questions. Maybe, you know, if I can learn from them...
[ Mizuki hangs his head for a moment, trying to go over the options in his mind. But it's so hard for him to put himself in that sort of situation. What would the Doctor say? He's not the Doctor. That's the whole point. That's the whole problem. He wants to understand that stance, that view, these choices, these options-- it's so hard, though. If he knew what the answer was to anything, he wouldn't struggle nearly as hard to...
He winces a bit, and shakes his head a little with his head still hung. ]
I don't know.
[ Sorry, Clarke. Doesn't look like an answer is happening. ]
( it's a little frustrating. she'd partially hoped he'd at least give her examples of hard choices the doctor has made in the past, from which clarke could then better extrapolate... well, mizuki's limits. the extent of his learned morality. or at least a little bit more about the odd dynamic she senses between him and his master. it'd always be so, so much easier to understand someone if they all just came with manuals, or conversational scripts. she'd feel a lot less like walking on egg shells and trying to figure out which ruthless idea was going to prove to be too much for him.
everyone had a limit.
but mizuki just sort of... deflates. sags around the shoulders, won't meet her eyes anymore. the disconnect is that he genuinely doesn't know the answer here, and clarke assumes he just doesn't want to say.
indecision is still a choice, when doing nothing would prove just as deadly as lashing out. but being stuck on hard questions isn't anything new for her either. a slightly soft, equally coaxing and coaching tone infiltrates her voice — oddly similar to the tone her mother used at patients bedsides, and while stroking tear from her daughters face. )
I don't think anyone would really know what to do in that sort of situation. Not at first, at least. But in the thick of things it gets a lot easier to act instead of just think. And I've heard you make this sort of decision before. ( maybe just under the guise of a hypothetical, but it counts. also absolutely not apples to oranges to their very first conversation, but as the maker of lists and the member of the invading party here, clarke's a little... biased. skewed. )
You'd do anything you could to keep the people you care about safe, right? It doesn't matter if, in the end neither side is evil. If peace and coexistence can't be reached, one side is going to lose and one will win — it's less about who's right or good, just who's desperate enough or has the most fire power. Protecting your loved ones doesn't mean you're not killing someone else's, and that goes for both sides. There's no bad guys, just victims.
[ He would apologize for not answering, but if he apologized for every single time he didn't make a decision, it would be the only phrase out of his mouth. And, honestly, he's not all that sorry that he can't make decisions like this. If someone is around to make it for him, then doesn't that just make the other person happy? ]
... Mh. If I were a part of it at all, I would pick the side with my loved ones involved. But... that is why I am not in charge of making decisions like that. My decisions will always be selfish. [ Always, always, always... ] But if someone kind and heroic were making the decisions, then it would be okay.
I know you think that things are not so... definitive like that, and... I know that they're not. But... it's hard for me to see... that. There's no blurry lines or questionable outcomes or... anything like that. There's good ends and bad ends. The heroes and the villains. The rights and the wrongs. I... don't... understand the in-betweens. I'm trying to. But...
[ Mizuki looks more and more uncomfortable as he talks about this, fidgeting in his seat and worrying his gloves against the handle of his umbrella. ]
( any trace remnants of frustration over a lack of answer melt from her shoulders as mizuki stop-starts-trails-off through somewhat fumbling thoughts. having been on the receiving end of abruptly posed, weighted, hard choices, clarke can belatedly chide herself for pushing at him for an answer. it wasn't a comfortable position to be in, and just because solutions come to mind for her more immediately now doesn't mean she can't recall all the waffling, self-flagellating, and emotionally violent hoops she'd had to jump through in the beginning.
it's perfectly fine he doesn't have an answer here. it's just a hypothetical after all, right? real decisions were hard to make outside of the pressing finality of real threats.
and really, it's enough to hear him summarize that he'd pick his friends over anyone else again. if she'd been subconsciously trying to figure out where their priorities aligned, at least they shared that particularly strong thread wrapped around their hearts. )
Hey — ( soft again, with a tease of silence immediately after while clarke waits to see if he'd lift his gaze to her face again. then she can nod, a small, forlorn smile pushed to the edge of her lips. ) It's okay. That you haven't figured it out yet. It's not supposed to be easy.
But you should think on it. There might not always be someone around to make those types of decisions for you.
[ His smile is nervous, at first, and he attempts to say some sort of "thank you" for attempting to comfort him, but is briefly caught off guard by her very next line. This, actually, sheds all the nerves from him entirely, and he instead smiles very genuinely at her. ]
Oh, that won't be a problem. [ Very matter-of-factly. ] I'll protect that person, no matter what. And I am very good at protecting people.
( look, it's nice that he's so optimistic and assured. but that doesn't change the fact clarke can spot a dozen blaring holes in that argument that seems to comfort mizuki so much. )
Just... think on it. Please.
( not an out and out demand, but damned if clarke isn't shoveling weight on those words in an attempt to get her way. )
[ It might not be a demand to Clarke, but the sternness of it makes Mizuki believe it is one. And he's not one to turn down an order like that. He continues smiling and gives a little nod. ]
Alright, I'll do my best. [ Though, he can't say his best is all that good... ] Sorry I couldn't be of more assistance... but I hope I was able to give you something new to work with?
You've given me a lot to think about, Mizuki. Thank you.
( maybe nothing expressly new, that she hadn't already garnered from her own chats with pirate jenny or being filled in on natsuno's findings — with the fun bonus of jade curtis in the background, offering unwanted but not unwelcome commentary. and then there's so... so much to consider about her little cannibalistic jellyfish friend, with this inability to form his own convictions suddenly at the forefront.
willing to protect whomever he chooses to align himself with to the death, it seemed. willing to follow through hard, bloody orders and terminate enemies. all too happy to be of assistance, and begging for direction...
really, sometimes mizuki comes off more like a weapon begging to be wielded than a person. and as her own personalized instrument of destruction and death, clarke doesn't know what she honestly thinks about that realization. )
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Alright. I just figured some of this might be nice to know. For example, maybe it takes up his magic to fix up parts of the ship that we destroy. In which case, I'd be happy to help with that. I'm sure a few others would be as well. Simultaneously, I wasn't sure if you would want to monitor the amount of damage, just in case you wanted to not put Jenny's brothers at risk? I really don't know what the best case scenario would be here... but if you think it's something that's safe to share with everyone, maybe we can all brainstorm together~?
[ Mizuki's no good at solving things, but he can pose pretty good questions for other people to solve. He thinks that, at the very least, that makes him a little bit of a valuable asset to a team setting like this! Maybe? Okay, maybe he's not totally sure, but...! He wants to be useful. ]
Ehehe. Why do you think I'm here right now, not holding anything back? [ You might be against his weird devotions right now, Clarke, but that doesn't mean he's stepping down from them. ]
... You're so kind. Thank you. But if you decide to, I won't be upset.
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( the first point to hit on, yet a promise she can't exactly keep. but at least in this moment? one she absolutely intends to. the problem being, clarke griffin and her impossible choices have a habit of undermining her best intentions, and tend to make her failures all the more heart wrenching. the only real confidence she can hold here is that, if his name's on that list, hers is somewhere above it.
if mizuki could devour evil people, he had so much more use to the people on board than someone simply numbed to the idea of slaughtering them.
as for devotions and trust? it feels unearned on her end. all she's done for him is entertain a few hypotheticals while drenched in finery chosen by their hosts, and then asked a few prying questions about her home world while slathered in gristle. none of which ought to earn the amount of faith that she can physically feel being lumped on top of her chest when mizuki counters her challenge to find someone to completely trust with the kind, casual declaration that he's already found that person. really the best recourse for clarke right now is to buckle her confusion back, keep it close to her chest to chew over at a later date. they've got more important things to discuss, like a plan. )
Destroying things and forcing him to repair them is a good place to start. But that's something we'd need to test on a small scale, and covertly, before we used it as a baseline for any sort of attack. That's absolutely something we could work through together and brainstorm together.
( and now for the unkind, decisive moment: )
But Jenny wishes she could have burned alongside her brothers. And after this long, considers death to be an escape. I don't think we need to worry about putting any of them at risk, and should just consider it as finally allowing them rest.
( so yes, clarke's absolute willing to sacrifice every shade on board to save the handful of souls here. )
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He doesn't need to get the rationale, after all, right? He never has before, so what would make it any different here? ]
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[ Probably not a very good person, but anyone who's lived to be a number in the five digits probably wouldn't be labelled as a "good person". Not that Mizuki would make that sort of judgement call. ]
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will she always think she's making the right call? the best call? the only call that got as many people out of a situation alive as possible? tough choices with the betterment of humanity in mind, and bloody battle plans with the endgame of peace and prosperity? absolutely.
will those impossible choices ever be right? or easy? absolutely not.
it's a tad relieving for mizuki to eventually nod along, not challenge her too much or show any outward signs of doubt before they've even seen if this plan fails or succeeds. it's a breath of fresh air, and then a gut punch of a reminder that she's so far removed from everyone that knew her downfalls — surrounded by new people to disappoint and get hurt if she got this all wrong. so... )
Don't get me wrong. If we can help her, we will.
But karma's a joke. Bad things happen to good people, and bad people get happy endings. That's not a question of good or evil, that's just how life goes. Fate doesn't discriminate, and in dire straits we need to make our own chances.
( a real glossy way of saying you can't save everyone, so pick who matters most. )
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Still, he lulls his head a bit at Clarke's dismissal of karma. There's a cold laugh in return. Again, she's completely right. It's far too optimistic for anyone to think otherwise, even if Mizuki really wants to believe it. ]
...Fortitude. We need fortitude. I spent a lot of time in Terra learning what the means from people.
[ Usually by force. And usually without their choice in the matter. She doesn't need to know all the details right now, though. They're not important. ]
Do you think we have that here on this ship?
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I think we have a lot of people who've had to be very strong in their home worlds. I think we have stubbornness in spades. ( she is directly speaking about herself here, tbh. ) We might even have competence. And durability.
But I don't know about fortitude. Not yet. ( far too many people have seemed at ease here; some even prefer this nonconsensual pleasure cruise a decent break from their home worlds. one man wishes to run away from the grief of losing people close to him, some consider this a disjointed afterlife or else that their deaths were robbed from them. one girl was far too interesting in eating italian dishes floating through the walls instead of figuring out just where they were coming from. )
We might not know for sure, until people are pushed to decide for themselves how hard they want to fight for their lives. What did you learn about fortitude? What do you think courage would look like here, in the face of insurmountable odds and mysterious forces?
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[ He picks up his hand and twists it around to play with one of his side bangs idly as he kicks his feet in his chair, like he's talking to Clarke about something mundane or just talking about his day. ]
They've proven that instinct alone cannot give rise to true fortitude. They are easily crushed, or easily destroyed, or easily lose themselves.
[ He lulls once more, and... just starts to look tired. ]
... I don't know what it means to have it. I would like to see someone show it to me, though. And I think we need it desperately on this ship.
cw: suicide mention
clarke distinctly remembers only giving him bits and pieces of information about her home world, most generalized and sweeping. none of the specifics, at least not without the dressing and plausible deniability of hypotheticals. so why does this conversation feel like it's taken such sharp and sudden turn into directly calling her out? her and the remnants of the 100; all of the sky people, all of the clans in the face of the apocalypse. easily crushed, easily destroyed, easily lost — and it's hard not to take that as a condemnation of jasper jordan, who'd stared down at the deathwave and decided he'd rather paint dnr on his hand and go out smiling instead of fighting anymore. )
The same person could fight tooth and nail to survive on instinct alone, willingly accept the consequences, and still decide it wasn't worth to go through a second time. It's not an either or scenario. The people, the times, the circumstances, and the desire to live — all of those change. I don't think you'd get any more solid a definition of true fortitude than you would true hysteria.
I can't offer you a textbook definition or example. But I guarantee those who've swallowed their consequences without issue somethings wished they'd choked on them.
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I can only hope that whoever has something like that will share their thoughts and feelings with me. Maybe then I'll finally understand.
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though clarke can gauge that her meaning isn't quite getting through to him. or maybe it is, and just really disagrees with that assessment, but he'd be wrong to. she briefly casts around for a way to explain it that might make more sense, and lands upon... )
Brave people can have evil motives. Genocidal warlords have the resolve and confidence to think they're doing the right thing. Not all types of fortitude are geared towards the betterment or survival of humanity, or would make the world a better place. Even what starts as the best of intentions can quickly become the worst sort of crime.
Have you never heard that every villain is the hero of their own story?
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But he is very dead set on this sort of thing. If just because it's something he's seen over and over and over. To the point where his whole worldview on how people work and what they think and what that means to him had changed completely. He still has more to say on the matter, of course, and many thoughts that he needs to sort through to truly convey himself, but he simply shakes his head for now. ]
I haven't.
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Two factions view each other as threat. One sends an army to kill the invading party, but that party's leader manages to kill an entire army to protect ( her — the slip up almost happened. ) their people. Now they're a villain to their enemies, and a hero to their people.
Which opinion do you think is right?
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... But certainly, it'll be the side with the more righteous intentions.
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The invaders didn't think they've be stepping on anyone else's toes, but now they're stuck. Both sides just want to survive and preserve their way of life, and both think they're equally righteous.
Who's the bad guy here?
( don't think his tendency to divert to the opinions of other people hasn't been noticed. as much as that's a useful
weaponskill set to have in one's back pocket, she really really wants to hear how he'd pick. to gauge mizuki's fortitude, to learn about any stronger opinions he hides behind paltry smiles and pleasant idolization. to figure out how much she should tell him about her history of leaving bodies in the dust, in preparation for the fact they might have to do just that for jenny and her brothers in the near future — and feeling guilty about it would be a waste of time. )no subject
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[ Mizuki hangs his head for a moment, trying to go over the options in his mind. But it's so hard for him to put himself in that sort of situation. What would the Doctor say? He's not the Doctor. That's the whole point. That's the whole problem. He wants to understand that stance, that view, these choices, these options-- it's so hard, though. If he knew what the answer was to anything, he wouldn't struggle nearly as hard to...
He winces a bit, and shakes his head a little with his head still hung. ]
I don't know.
[ Sorry, Clarke. Doesn't look like an answer is happening. ]
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everyone had a limit.
but mizuki just sort of... deflates. sags around the shoulders, won't meet her eyes anymore. the disconnect is that he genuinely doesn't know the answer here, and clarke assumes he just doesn't want to say.
indecision is still a choice, when doing nothing would prove just as deadly as lashing out. but being stuck on hard questions isn't anything new for her either. a slightly soft, equally coaxing and coaching tone infiltrates her voice — oddly similar to the tone her mother used at patients bedsides, and while stroking tear from her daughters face. )
I don't think anyone would really know what to do in that sort of situation. Not at first, at least. But in the thick of things it gets a lot easier to act instead of just think. And I've heard you make this sort of decision before. ( maybe just under the guise of a hypothetical, but it counts. also absolutely not apples to oranges to their very first conversation, but as the maker of lists and the member of the invading party here, clarke's a little... biased. skewed. )
You'd do anything you could to keep the people you care about safe, right? It doesn't matter if, in the end neither side is evil. If peace and coexistence can't be reached, one side is going to lose and one will win — it's less about who's right or good, just who's desperate enough or has the most fire power. Protecting your loved ones doesn't mean you're not killing someone else's, and that goes for both sides. There's no bad guys, just victims.
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... Mh. If I were a part of it at all, I would pick the side with my loved ones involved. But... that is why I am not in charge of making decisions like that. My decisions will always be selfish. [ Always, always, always... ] But if someone kind and heroic were making the decisions, then it would be okay.
I know you think that things are not so... definitive like that, and... I know that they're not. But... it's hard for me to see... that. There's no blurry lines or questionable outcomes or... anything like that. There's good ends and bad ends. The heroes and the villains. The rights and the wrongs. I... don't... understand the in-betweens. I'm trying to. But...
[ Mizuki looks more and more uncomfortable as he talks about this, fidgeting in his seat and worrying his gloves against the handle of his umbrella. ]
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it's perfectly fine he doesn't have an answer here. it's just a hypothetical after all, right? real decisions were hard to make outside of the pressing finality of real threats.
and really, it's enough to hear him summarize that he'd pick his friends over anyone else again. if she'd been subconsciously trying to figure out where their priorities aligned, at least they shared that particularly strong thread wrapped around their hearts. )
Hey — ( soft again, with a tease of silence immediately after while clarke waits to see if he'd lift his gaze to her face again. then she can nod, a small, forlorn smile pushed to the edge of her lips. ) It's okay. That you haven't figured it out yet. It's not supposed to be easy.
But you should think on it. There might not always be someone around to make those types of decisions for you.
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Oh, that won't be a problem. [ Very matter-of-factly. ] I'll protect that person, no matter what. And I am very good at protecting people.
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Just... think on it. Please.
( not an out and out demand, but damned if clarke isn't shoveling weight on those words in an attempt to get her way. )
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Alright, I'll do my best. [ Though, he can't say his best is all that good... ] Sorry I couldn't be of more assistance... but I hope I was able to give you something new to work with?
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( maybe nothing expressly new, that she hadn't already garnered from her own chats with pirate jenny or being filled in on natsuno's findings — with the fun bonus of jade curtis in the background, offering unwanted but not unwelcome commentary. and then there's so... so much to consider about her little cannibalistic jellyfish friend, with this inability to form his own convictions suddenly at the forefront.
willing to protect whomever he chooses to align himself with to the death, it seemed. willing to follow through hard, bloody orders and terminate enemies. all too happy to be of assistance, and begging for direction...
really, sometimes mizuki comes off more like a weapon begging to be wielded than a person. and as her own personalized instrument of destruction and death, clarke doesn't know what she honestly thinks about that realization. )
Was there anything else you wanted to tell me?
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