Newt Scamander (
somethingwild) wrote in
faderift2018-04-21 08:54 pm
Entry tags:
Like a moth to a candleflame [Closed to Myr]
WHO: Myrobalan Shivana & Newt Scamander
WHAT: Myr and a rifter magical human disaster vs. a bunch of angry moths.
WHEN: Late Cloudreach 9:44, post Mage Strike and Rifter Arrival
WHERE: An unfortunate storage room in The Gallows.
NOTES: Mentions and descriptions of angry moths. For the Research division assignment here.
WHAT: Myr and a rifter magical human disaster vs. a bunch of angry moths.
WHEN: Late Cloudreach 9:44, post Mage Strike and Rifter Arrival
WHERE: An unfortunate storage room in The Gallows.
NOTES: Mentions and descriptions of angry moths. For the Research division assignment here.
Newt couldn't help but find himself delighted at his latest assignment for the Research division of the Inquisition. Moths! Angry moths, apparently, destroying perfectly good and innocent books. Any work that he can do involving creatures of any sort gets him excited, these days, cut off as he is from his work on magical creatures back home.
He has a partner for the assignment, which excites him because, if he needs a partner to investigate moths, surely they most hold some sort of danger? Perhaps they breathe fire, or have sprouted fangs in unusual places. (It would hardly be the most surprising aspect of any creature he's studied before; he's seen plenty of unusual things in his time.)
He takes his wand with him, even as he knows well how unreliable his magic is as of late. He'd rather have it with him than not, no matter how useful, or not, it turns out to be.
He reaches the door to the storage room in good time, he thinks. He wonders if his partner is already inside, and decides it can't hurt to look, just in case. He opens the door.
Moths. So many moths. A whole army of moths, it would seem, all of them fluttering like mad about the crates of helpless books.
"Merlin's beard," he exclaims quietly. A smile tugs at the corners of his face. This ought to be fun.

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"Determined little buggers, aren't they?" he mumbles. Then, louder: "No trouble--and thanks, yourself. We ought to talk about it sometime--I'd be glad to know more of your own magic."
Newt's questions require a little more thought, and Myr reaches back for his staff as he thinks (and the moths tick ceaselessly off his barrier), mainly for the security of having it in hand. "We might rid ourselves of the problem entirely that way," he ventures, slowly. "So it's not such a bad idea, but I'd worry they may light after someone else. Maybe if one of us goes on ahead and clears the way? We could get them down into the little side garden beneath the mage tower--shit!"
The calm he'd had for the earlier moth attack dissolves entirely as the moth on his face puts one little mothy foot on his eyebrow, alerting him to its presence--and that sound of chewing finally makes sense. He jerks a hand up with a knight-enchanter's alacrity, swatting the moth off his face with force enough it reels drunkenly through the air before crashing to the stony floor at their feet. "--damn. I think I hurt it."
He feels a little bad about that, that much is clear from his tone, even as he's probing with worried fingers at the damaged edge of his blindfold. ...Damn, damn, and double-damn but that feels severe; hopefully Newt's not in a position to look him in the face and notice all the scarring.
Better to get them moving before that can happen. "D'you--d'you want to go on ahead that way or shall I?"
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"The side garden, yes!" He exclaims, nodding. It's a very good idea, he thinks. Less of a chance for moth mayhem, that way.
Newt notices the moth that seems to have attached itself to the fabric folded around Myr's face. He notices, too, the way it seems to be chewing through said fabric. Before he can intervene, Myr reacts, swatting the moth away. Newt quickly makes his way over to the creature, wincing a bit at the sight of it on the ground. There's really not much he can do for it, sadly.
"They do seem fond of us, no?" He observes. "I wonder if it is our magic that attracts them."
"I can go on ahead, if you like," he says turning back to Myr. He notices some scarring on his face, but he doesn't ask of it; he has scars enough of his own to know not to pry, and, besides, now isn't the time. "I can clear the way and you can follow?"
i somehow deleted the notif for this out of my inbox like a total champion
"That may be our best bet," if Newt's clearing the hallways, there'll be no one around to notice Myr with his blindfold half-off, "and now that you've said it, I'd not be surprised if it is our magic they're after." Thump, thump, thump go the moths against the barrier, still vainly trying to get in for a meal. It's getting a little tiresome. "In which case I might not need to be so particular about what I'm casting to bring them after us. We'll just have to keep other mages--and maybe rifters?--out of the line of, ah, migration."
So they don't get distracted and go haring off after a new target. On that note--and a hunch--Myr begins speaking softly, winding his free hand through the air as if collecting threads of silk. He's not so great an improvisor he can change the spells for calling bees on the fly, but he can bend his will and the Fade toward moths--
And gradually, the great scale-winged constellation moves away from bothering Newt to cluster against Myr's barrier alone. Looks like now's the time to make a break for the garden.
No worries! Happens to the best of us. <3.
The moths beat out a desperate sort of rhythm against the barrier, and Newt can't help but feel poorly for them. Perhaps when this is over they might be able to study them? And see if they can at least bring them back proper to their natural environment.
Newt takes the moths flocking to Myr's barrier for a cue, nodding.
"Right," he says. "I'll lead the way. Lumos!" This spell, at least, he usually never has trouble with, and it flickers to life as he begins to run towards the garden. As he makes his way outside, he begins shouting and gesticulating for people to get out of his way. Surprisingly, it actually somewhat works.
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Between the spell and the shouting, Newt's making himself very easy to follow, and Myr blesses him for it. Not that the garden's particularly far away--and not that Myr doesn't know the route--but holding two spells at once like this is distraction enough without having to remember his way down to the garden as well.
They reach the outdoors in short order and none too soon; the barrier's begun to flicker and the moths are wandering further and further afield from following Myr--though it's only once they reach the garden proper that he dares to release the second spell, and with it a weary sigh. Too much all at once, for certain. "Well," he starts, stops. Takes a deep breath and leans against his staff. "--Well. We've got 'em out. Now what?"
Out in the fresh air and sunshine, no longer attracted by the insistent tug of a spell, some of the moths begin to disperse and investigate their environment. The rest, unfortunately, are still knocking against the barrier like Myr and Newt are porch lights.
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It probably doesn't help, though, that he has his wand held out, a glowing knife, for all that the people around them can really see.
He hears Myr follow behind him soon after, which he appreciates as the appearance of the moths certainly helps to hurry people along. Several people scream at the sight of them, and Newt tries not to sigh over them. Honestly. They're moths.
Newt takes a moment to catch his breath once they reach the garden. Myr releases the magic holding the moths, and he watches as they begin drifting away. Well, some of them.
"I don't suppose there's a way to create a lasting barrier to keep them contained in the garden?" Newt ponders, eyeing the moths beating against the barrier. They certainly do seem drawn to Myr and Newt in particular.
"Is it our magic, you think?" He asks as the question occurs to him. "That draws them to us?"
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Having caught his breath, he straightens from off his staff and reaches up to adjust his slipping blindfold again. At least it's not in danger of coming apart the way he thought it was for a bleak moment back in the hall, but-- Well. Worry about that when there's not a more interesting problem at hand.
"I'd not be surprised if it were. Might be worth asking the Provost if the others they've attacked were mages--that'd give us another point to draw from." And the thought of them being drawn to mages gives him a moment's pause as a thought ticks over. "D'you think, if we moved away from them enough and I brought down the barrier a little while, you could grab just one of them? I've got an idea I'd like to test out."
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"I'll make a note of that," he nods, reaching into his pocket for the spare piece of parchment he'd slipped into it. "Once I have a quill in hand," he adds sheepishly a moment later. Well, he did leave in rather a rush to escort the moths.
Newt considers the possibility. "I think so. Shouldn't be too difficult to catch a hold of just one," he says. "I'm ready whenever you are."
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He smiles then at Newt's abashed moment. "I've a pencil with me, if you want that once we've got our new friends a little more settled." And not trying to eat them, or their clothing, or whatever it is precisely these odd moths want so much they'd keep bouncing off the barriers with such zeal.
"But right--here we go." He takes a large step back, then another, making a beckoning gesture to Newt to come along with him. It's only when the sound of moth impacts on the barrier have dropped off noticeably that he stops in place and lets go his hold on it (with no small relief). Straightway they've got moths coming at them--but at enough distance Newt should be able to grab one of the nearer ones before the whole flock arrives to wreak sartorial destruction.
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"Ah, I would appreciate it," he says gratefully. "I tend to leave in a rush quite a bit, and I'm always forgetting something."
Newt follows at the gesture, waiting for Myr to let go of the barrier. As soon as he does, the moths come flying at them, determined as ever. Newt reaches forward and grabs one as gently as he can but with a firm enough grip that he doesn't have to worry about the creature flying off.
"Got you, you little bugger," he says.