Lambert (
whattaprick) wrote2020-02-08 03:36 pm
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IC CONTACT for
lostcarnival

DESCRIPTION: Half the time he forgets this thing even exists, or how to turn it on and off.
DESCRIPTION: The concept of a mailbox is rather foreign to Lambert, who's not exactly what you'd call big on personal correspondence. But there's a wooden crate you can probably drop shit into ???
BUG LAMBERT TO MAKE YOU SHIT: Given time and the right ingredients (which he'll usually ask people to provide) he can make potions (with potential side effects), oils, and bombs. You can bother him more about that in person.
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Though, his annoyance lessens as he listens to Lambert talk. ]
Do you want to be able to holds it longer? I can at least try to help if that's the case.
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You can see magic like Rita can, right? You're going to have to look at me when I change.
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Strange sighs, and looks slightly irritated and resigned as he does so. ]
In that case, change again. I'll- [ SIIIIIIGH ] -take a good look at the magic.
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Calm down, seeing my dick isn't going to burn your eyes out.
[ Why is Strange such a prude anyway, he's seen Lambert naked, like, a lot. So much. Lambert naked and variously dry, wet, bloody, muddy, and even dead; the prudishness now seems wildly misplaced, but anyway... time for things to suck again. ]
I'll keep the blanket on to spare you. No promises on the change back, though.
[ Celandine scampers off to the side, Lambert takes a breath -- and shifts, again. It isn't as instantaneous this time, the magic taking more of an effort somehow, a weight of possibility in the air that hangs for a long moment before it expands outward. It's unmistakably fae magic, and it's all colored in the pale gold of Lambert's soul, threading through the spell as it reweaves his body and consciousness in the blink of an eye. Then the dragon's standing in front of Strange again, and Lambert exhales, softly. ]
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Still, Strange watches, staring at Lambert rather intently as he shifts from human to dragon. The magic is beautiful (but then again, Strange feels most magic is) and, thankfully for him, intensely easy to piece out. ]
The magic is obviously yours. But it's so overwhelmingly fae. Perhaps if you found a way to make it less fae and more Lambert then the spell would come easier to you. [ There's a pause, before, ] Your magic is a pale yellow, by the way. People's magic occasionally shows up as a different color.
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Considering the spell's from the Ringmaster, no shit it's fae. [ What does 'more Lambert' even mean, as far as magic's concerned? It's not like Lambert knows what that means!
Celandine, in her little cape still, pipes up -- her eyes the same vivid color as the magic Strange just saw... ]
Like Lambert's fae marks, you mean?
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They're exactly the same color of Lambert's fae marks. And your eyes as well—you can hop on my shoulder if you want, by the way. [ Tiny little polecat in the snow! Might as well offer just to see if Celandine doesn't want to get her tiny little paws wet.
The question of what Strange means by 'more Lambert' is temporarily ignored as he thinks about the implications of the fact that each person's magic seems to be entirely color-coded. ]
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It wasn't always that color. [ She volunteers, entirely unsolicited. ] The Ringmaster said it must have changed because of Portland.
[ Lambert hisses softly, breath steaming the air in front of him. Chatterbox of a soul. He blames Strange blabbing about souls for that being a topic back at the front of his mind, for all he'd shoved that down and forgotten before. ]
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Thank you, Celandine, [ he says, nodding slightly, before turning back to look at Lambert. Well, well. Looks like Childermass and Steven aren't the only ones who's souls got shifted around. ]
It seems Portland changed us all more than we realize. [ Lambert's soul color shifted. Childermass seemed more of a court changeling than the rest. And Strange could view magic now, more surely and definitively than he could ever have dreamed of. But what the hell, if anything, did all of those mean? ] I can only wonder what, if anything, will change us all so drastically next.
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You wonder? Doesn't it bother you?
[ Lambert asks that directly, cocking his great reptilian head, instead of letting Celandine ask it for him, just a touch of weary cynicism in his voice. ]
I get the feeling these changes aren't going to fade.
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[ With like four different factions playing keep-away with four different people, one necklace, and one spirit, the fact that everybody managed to get out in (relatively) one piece is a bit of a surprise. ]
I don't mind my magic shifting or becoming more of a changeling myself as long as it helps keep me safe.
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If Lambert had known what would happen ... [ She pauses. ] It wouldn't have changed much, I suppose. It was the only way he could think of to help.
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I appreciate what you did, by the way, [ Strange murmurs, knowing full well that as soon as Lambert calls Celandine back, he'll know what he said. ] I might not have seen what happened when you were possessed but you helped save Childermass and get us home.
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We didn't do that much. It was mostly lucky Yuya was there.
[ Lambert sighs, a great puff of steam rising from his mouth. ]
Seen what you needed to see? I'm changing back now.
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Strange nods at Lambert's question. He watches Lambert change back with as much intensity as he did before, though Strange starts talking in the middle of it. ]
I've a theory. We already know that different worlds and realms have different types of magic. I could never summon a daemon in England, for example, just as nothing in your world could perform some of the magic we've seen the fae use. And yet, due to our travels between worlds, we're able to pick up on that magic and replicate those spells in places where they normally couldn't be cast. But as long as you simply replicate it, it will never be yours and you'll never fully push past the boundaries you've been given.
[ He's not doing that good a job explaining it. Strange frowns for a moment, thinking it over, before he plows into a question. ]
This might help. How much do you know about music?
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What's music got to do with magic?
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Music's written note for note, tone for tone. [ And Strange hums a few bars of some sort of old folk song. He hums them in a very measured fashion, like he's reading the notes directly off a sheet of paper. Thankfully, he stays on key, but it's obvious just from the humming that Strange isn't going to win any awards for his singing. ] But nobody performs music like that. You put yourself in the song and change it up a bit. [ And so, Strange hums the same few bars again, but the tempo's changed a little, a few of the notes are longer and shorter, it's Strange having a bit more fun with the piece and humming it like people might actually sing it. ]
That's what you need to do with your magic. It seems a bit too straightforward. I know you'll say that witchers aren't meant for this or whatever excuse you've used before, but at least try to explore it a little.
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It's not an excuse. [ He snaps testily, almost a snarl, while Celandine puffs up a little in distress on Strange's shoulder. ] It's a fact, one I grew up being reminded of every day we trained, that every bit of magic a witcher could scrape together a real sorcerer could do better. That the signs we use barely count as spells at all, and that copying what we were taught is the best we'd ever be able to manage. So no, I don't know where to begin to explore magic, because I never could.
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You explore it by trying to change your spells. Try to make Igni burn a little bigger. Remain a dragon a little bit longer every time you shift. That...that whatever the hell you did when you cast Yrden when we all were drunk? Try to do it again but every time we cast it.
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The shift in mood has Celandine scrambling down off Strange's shoulder, scuttling over to Lambert across the snow to chide her other half before he says something he'll regret. ]
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I just don't understand why it's not as easy for you as it should be. We're in faerie, for heaven's sake! This place bleeds magic.
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He doesn't have to actually spend all his time yelling at the people he likes. ]
I'm not like you. [ Is what he has to offer, finally, looking up at him. ] It's like ... it's like you and exercise. I have to work for it. [ He scowls, reflexively. ]
And we only care about working on magic if it will keep us and the people we care about alive. [ Celandine says, despite being a testament to not being a spell not at all that related to survival. Well, unless mental wellness counts. ] You live for magic. We just use it. You're right -- this place bleeds magic. And there's so little we were taught against that.
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A brief period of mulling things over tells Strange that the nicest way to call bullshit is to just not call it out at all. ]
If you say so, [ Strange simply responds, though it's obvious he's not convinced about the matter. ] If you ever change your mind, though.... [ Strange trails off, but it's obvious what he's leaving unspoken: if Lambert ever changes his mind, then go bother Strange. ]
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Thanks. [ He says, quietly. And then -- ] I'm staying out here a while longer. You can stay or head back to the Carnival if you want.
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[ One of the joys of dumb teleport spammy magic. ]