Yet in his eyes, all the sadness of the world..
Those pleading eyes that both threaten and adore..
In the mien, the Outsider was not an evil spirit. There was cruelty in him, yes, for war could not countenance a man without a vein within for it, but there was no joy in him for the suffering of others, no satisfaction or contempt for their foibles and short-comings. He wasn't
evil, no, never that. There was just the cold vein, that hard vein of cruelty and a measure of vindicta which he carried in life, which made itself known in the knit of his brow and the set of his jaw, and which cast the patrician's aspect of this Devil in the unfavourable light of unintended malice.
It was that sense of that inadvertent malice that coloured him now in his tasks of the mundane, painting his countenance unjustly while he polished the old mahogany counter and cleaned the last of the glasses. That preternatural focus, that slow and studious regard of a man that knew too many things, the intensity, the choler --
-- until his deep-set eyes lifted and alighted upon the Shadow. A misnomer for such a brightness in his life, but the world was a curious thing of ironies and idiosyncrasies. No, this beloved soul was anything but penumbra and blight, and it was she, not his brief pleasures in the mundane, that eased the vindicta from his brow and the hateful lines at the edges of his mouth. There was no true absolution from spite, no revelatory and binary inversion that turned vile into sweet - but there was a softening at the hard edges of his being, where the sight of this precocious girl-child was enough to drive warmth into an otherwise hard, unyielding heart.
He breathed, the Devil. A slow exhalation, a quiet release tension, and a smile. He reserved these smiles for her, the dreaded Outsider. Little half-measures of kindness that she alone was privy to, passed between them like secrets between erstwhile lovers. His gaze and that smile persisted when she drew near and flitted past, a ghost in skirts as light as the steps that carried her within and out of reach, with her soft and lilting voice. It was only when she spoke that the spell was finally broken, allowing the Devil to lower his eyes and return his attention back to the tending of a glass in no more need of cleaning.
"He is young..," he demurred with quiet aplomb, accepting his companion's critique with mustered dignity and without challenge.
"He doesn't understand yet the impermanence of things."Another glance, more heed to the Shadow that climbed the counter with girlish exuberance and without any hint of propriety. No, she was right, this coquettish youth of thin limbs and great spirit: no eyes watched her more intently than the dark and haunted hues that fixed her now. They glittered where they were set, bright beneath a heavy brow and weighted with expectations. They held secrets, those iniquitous eyes; the secrets of life, of death, of time and entropy.
This, too, will pass they said with all their indelicate intensity, though the warming heart below whispered hopes to the contrary. The joys, these delights, the lilt of her voice and the cast of her noble face, these things would be lost, eventually. Lost to time, to distance, to..
The dark mind, the unhappy thoughts, these things, like the choler and vindicta that coloured his face, were banished with the girl-child's demands. What strange and ephemeral power she possessed, all but lording it over the monster who would be a man, though he didn't seem to mind. He just cocked his head with a cant quite uncharacteristic to his disposition, and then his small smile, a miracle on his otherwise lined and weathered face, broadened to a degree that couldn't be considered anything less than
boyish. Oh, it was a brief thing, that boyish little smile. It barely breathed for a span of heartbeats while he dipped his chin with simple acquiescence, before both it and he were gone and about the business of shadows and fiends.
A return to the mundane, to the quiet task he was set upon by girlish whim and imperious demand, though there was no rancor to it. She demanded and he obeyed, a servant to desires beyond his own, all for the sake for a sentiment he had allowed to take hold and bloom. Oh, but he wouldn't speak it aloud, at least not now, not with walls that listened and twilight with waxing bright in the sky above. But he could feel it, the Devil. He could feel and nurture it with the quiet intensity he was known for, while he set a kettle to boil and prepared a clay mug for a beverage that scented of pomegranates and spice. He let it suffuse him in the way he let other, more vulgar emotions suffuse him, though this particular sentiment did not bring agitation to his movements or humours. Indeed, it brought a measure of joy to his otherwise bleak and morbid existence, which prompted more uncharacteristic expressions from him.
Why, the Devil began to hum a soft tune under his breath. He prepared tea and boiled water and hummed, and when the formers were finished and he was left with nothing but the latter and a steaming mug in hand, he returned to the Shadow's side with her demand at the ready, steaming and fragrant between calloused thumb and forefinger. He set it on the counter beside the lithesome beauty without preamble, and took his place by the counter in likewise fashion: close, at hand, near enough to feel and scent in the air. A scion of perfidy, this one, a thing never more abundantly clear than when the Quill was quiet and still, and all the remained was them. The peat and spice, the citrus and quenching iron.. the blood and the smoke. These things clung to him, subtle at first, but profound.
Yet she never seemed to mind it, he was gladdened to know. Not when it clung to her clothes or her skin or the bed that they shared --
"Mm?"He was listening, yes, of course he was. He wasn't lost in her noble profile, nor were his thoughts straying towards eloquence and rhapsody with regards to her beauty and his sentiments. There was just the two of them and the quiet conversation after a day spent in commerce, and he was present and ready for it, and not simply just admiring the Shadow where she sat on her perch, committing her countenance and voice to memory, lest one day he find her gone without anything to remember her by. Impermanence, as he had said before. It was the why and wherefore concerning his intense scrutiny. He wanted to savour her, this Shadow, this haunting beauty of pale eyes and tussled hair. This was just a dream, just a lovely, wonderful dream..
"There are markets." For a pair of souls caught in a gossamer dream, there was nothing insubstantial to the sound of the Devil's voice. No deep baritone to rattle the bones or strike sensation in the pit of a belly, but the refined tenor of a practiced orator; quiet with its clipped pronunciations, and delicate with the aristocratic flare. This was not to say his was a feminine voice, no, never that, but rather it belonged to a herald, or a storyteller. Indeed, he had already told stories to the Shadow he currently observed, and she had ever seemed to delight in the way he could spin them with thrilling highs and epic lows. Would that they could spend an eternity together, where her delights were ever his to inspire and exult in.
"We could take a carriage to the District of Silk, and window shop pretty dresses for you and the girls. From there, it is just a brief walk to the Market Square..," he trails off. She has turned from noble profile to outright glance, and has quite pressed the voice from the Devil. There was always a shock, whenever she leveled those pale pinks on him. To be sure the shock has lessened over the years of their involvement, but there remains a thrill that never quite wanes, no matter how many times she looks back at him. It was if he never truly expects the certainty of her attention, forever caught off-guard by the weight behind her eyes that she settles atop him. Connection, yes, that was part of the sentiment; connection to her, to the mind that turned behind those eyes, to the heart that beat beneath her chest for him.
He swipes his tongue across the generous curve of his mouth, persisting. There was hardly anything so undoing as the attraction of a beautiful girl, some distant part of his mind chatters, and he struggles albeit briefly to reconnect the threads of conversation. Why were her cheeks so rosy? She was becoming too pretty, by far.
"The scones were lovely, little monster. Muse was very sore about the theft, though." And here he chuckles low and deep, unabashed by the memory of stealing confections from a child. That she was his daughter was irrelevant; the Devil was a cad and a monster, and there were very few crimes beneath him. Loose ethics and morals, this one. But that does not stop him from moving down the bar to stand closer to the Shadow, who soon finds one of her hands taken up by the Devil she blushed so prettily before.
Lowering his gaze to delicate fingers and allowing himself the indignity of a wider, more affectionate smile, the Outsider brings Zurie's delicate fingers to his lips to scratch and mark them with beard and ardor both. "
"We could certainly find some strawberries for a venture into jam," he breathes against her hand, withdrawing it just enough to inspect the ring finger with an expression that look dangerous close to muted satisfaction.
"The Threshold City is the town that never sleeps. Once we're finished up here, we'll make our way over. There are a few other items I'd like to purchase before we return home. Some few ingredients for dinner. Our girls have appetites, and my pantry is starting to run low." A hum; a contented little sound as he thought of the sounds of pattering feet and girlish giggles echoing through the halls. In so many brief years, he had exchanged solitude and peace for the chaos of a household, and though he may never say so aloud, there was a savage joy in him for it all. That joy was never more abundant than when he was with the beloved soul that gave it to him, and so it was to she that it was shown in his dark, glittering eyes. Just a flit of attention, just a hint of that sentiment expressed with the way he looked at her and the way he squeezed her hand, then muted, withdrawn. His was not a bold affection, the Devil's ardor. Subtle, discrete, especially in public places such as these. He was not cold with it, he did not deny the Shadow the knowledge of his love, and truly, this was love, but there was no showmanship to it, no spectacle. He was her quiet creature, but her creature all the same.
"You'll have to get used to wandering this city on your own, one of these days. I'd send you with a chaperone, but little Lotte seems to have run off with my champion." A wrinkle of his nose; a playful expression, though not without a little worry for the pair.
"We pray for Isk, yes, we pray for that man. Perhaps you'll just have to make due with a devil at your heels for now. What do you say, mm? I'll take you away from here on a little adventure, find some strawberries for you to try and kill me with." And here he grins, the Devil, as if sharing some private and esoteric joke while he releases her hand and encourages her with a nod.
"Drink you tea before it gets cold. Where else would you like to go?"