Maxim Horvath (
bitterguardian) wrote2012-01-12 01:33 pm
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Crashing a (tea) party
It's funny how quickly Balthazar and Horvath have become fast friends again. They were almost brothers, once upon a time, and without the nasty complication of being on opposite sides, or Balthazar being insane, they've fallen straight back into old ways.
So it's not all that unusual for Horvath to be visiting the Arcana Cabana, leaning casually against a counter and playing with a little stone statue of a bird while Balthazar rummages in a stack of cardboard boxes nearby, regaling him with stories of his travels, punctuated by the occasional sneeze from the dust he's stirring up. Horvath's hat and coat are still on, but only because he's just gotten there a few minutes ago, and they haven't moved to the back room for tea yet. Both the old sorcerers are looking forward to a peaceful afternoon of nostalgia, tea, and cookies.
So it's not all that unusual for Horvath to be visiting the Arcana Cabana, leaning casually against a counter and playing with a little stone statue of a bird while Balthazar rummages in a stack of cardboard boxes nearby, regaling him with stories of his travels, punctuated by the occasional sneeze from the dust he's stirring up. Horvath's hat and coat are still on, but only because he's just gotten there a few minutes ago, and they haven't moved to the back room for tea yet. Both the old sorcerers are looking forward to a peaceful afternoon of nostalgia, tea, and cookies.
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...what? He doesn't watch television, but he does listen to the radio and frequent independent bookstores.
Following Dave's gaze, he looks subtly pleased. "The outer circle is mostly silver. It has a stabilizing effect, without cancelling any spellwork withing the ring."
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He's watching Dave in his peripheral vision, relieved that he seems to be relaxing a little. It struck him as a terrible start, considering he may someday be teaching some version of the same boy.
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(And let's not mention how his little nerd heart is so thrilled that Balthazar knows they are grey, not green.)
He reaches out and runs a finger along the metal, pressing his lips together in thought. "I always wondered what was down here. Is this where you live?"
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Balthazar probably has a few boxes of sci-fi pulps and back issues of 'Weird Tales' in his attic. A guy can go through a lot of books in a few decades.
He's mildly surprised by Dave's question. But then, he did imply he hadn't been here in a while. Something may have happened. But then, Balthazar wasn't planning on running the shop forever. "Well, not in the basement," he says. "There's an apartment in the floor above the shop. And a small attic."
It's all a bit oddly-shaped and labyrinthine, much like the way he packs inventory into the shop itself. One gets a distorted sense of physical space.
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"We do sleep in beds, you know, and eat, and do all those normal sorts of things. Even if we do count as ancient artifacts." He's a little amused by Dave's questions, as if he's got that grade-school kid mentality where they think their teacher just sleeps in the classroom at night.
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He then looks at Horvath, wrinkling his nose a little. "I didn't mean it like that! I just—I mean, come on. You know Balthazar. He's like a... tall, walking enigma. We don't usually have conversations like this."
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Particularly not the tall part. He's not the tallest person in the room. Not the shortest, either, though.
"I'm an enigma?" He looks comically confused...and slightly flattered. He glances at Horvath questioningly.
To be fair, Dave is meeting him under vastly different circumstances. And he has no reason to be professorial, or mysterious, just now.
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His gaze goes back to Dave. "Did you create it yourself, or did he?"
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He shrugs. It seemed like the best word.
"Balthazar created it," he says, in reply to Horvath's question. "But I've made a few impressive ones in my day."
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Balthazar frowns at the cup of hair, wanting to ask questions, but unwilling to take the risk. "...I'd expect no less of you," he says to Dave after a moment, then looks at Horvath, beckoning him over. "Do you mind dealing with the aqua regia? I'll put out the salt."
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"That's good. The impromptu circles are good practice, but there's something to be said for a carefully crafted, more permanent one, provided you have a safe place to establish one." He fetches things one-handed, as familiar with the ritual as Balthazar is.
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He's just coughing into his hand, see?
While the two much older sorcerers do their thing, he's content to sit and watch quietly. If there's one thing his Balthazar taught him that he never forgets to do in the presence of other sorcerers, it's to watch.
He may have defeated Morgana, but Dave knows he's nowhere near knowing all he needs to know.
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"The last time I fiddled with dimensions was when I was teaching Stuart," he says distantly. "I haven't had much call for it. You'd better check my figures after me, Maximus. Actually, you, too, Dave. If you don't know them you'll at least be getting a look at something new."
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Dave is about to watch masters at work...
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When Horvath moves his whatever that is—a cell phone?—he feels around in his pockets for his own, which is conveniently sitting back in his lab in the correct time.
He'd be lying (and badly, of course) if he said this wasn't kind of exciting.
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"My last apprentice. From 1898 until 1907. But he's long gone." He frowns at nothing in particular, face downturned. "Stuart Prentiss. He was a good man. More of a philosopher than a fighter."
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So instead he just nods and focuses his own gaze on the markings, silently trying to match them up against ones he's committed to memory.
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"Right. There's a difference between tapping into time and tapping into dimensions, although they're related fields. Playing with time is riskier in the sense that you can create a closed loop and annihilate yourself, but moving between dimensions creates the potential to get completely lost. I know of at least one sorcerer who did just that. Anything you can imagine exists somewhere, sometime. Also a number of things you can't imagine." He smiles wryly.
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With an effort and a grunt, Horvath lowers himself to one knee and makes a few subtle additions with the chalk. He could probably use a little help getting up again when he's done. "We... could send him off with a PINpoint, though, you know..." It's faint, but there's a hint of hopefulness in his voice. It seems like a shame not to give the boy a way to visit again, whether or not he chooses to use it.
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He continues listening and continues nodding like he understands what's going on (he does—or most of it, anyway), but then he glances over at Horvath, one eyebrow raised curiously.
"A... what?"
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Secretly, he's amused, though, and with a shake of his head he answers Dave's question, "There are low-cost devices given out in the dimensional hub where Maximus and I met. They're called PINpoints. They're quantum rather than magical, strictly speaking. Although I suppose when you get to that level of complexity the difference is...not much. It's how we visit one another and communicate."
He has his in a pocket, and gets it out while Horvath checks his work. It looks more or less like a digital watch with extra buttons and a large display. "We can't use it to get you home, since we don't know what coordinates to put in, but you could take one with you and work from there, if you're willing to take the risk."
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"In case of emergency. It would be a way to reach us." He finally glances up at Balthazar, although he probably looks a little sheepish still. "You can't deny the Nexus has excellent resources... he's come this far."
He hands back the chalk and starts to lever himself back to his feet with the cane.
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While it's true that he and risk used to be enemies, they're almost friends now. On a first name basis, certainly.
"Yeah," he says, easily. "I'll take one. If—I mean, if it's okay with both of you."
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"It is cool, I admit. I took a look at the insides already, but I need to research more before I try tampering. I strongly advise you to do the same." Tinkering and mechanical work are not Balthazar's primary focus, but he's known many inventors and scientists. He's curious, and wouldn't be surprised if Dave was equally so.
"Maxim, you'll need yours to get home, but if I'm giving him mine, I expect you to get me a replacement." This is not strictly necessary. He has other ways to get to the Nexus. But it's fair.
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