the_cupbearer: (little chuckles)
Ganymede | Benjamin Prince ([personal profile] the_cupbearer) wrote in [community profile] sixwordstories2024-04-11 09:25 am
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[ Smiling. ] I love our wedding bands.
scholarofages: Richard Armitage (02)

[personal profile] scholarofages 2024-04-16 07:04 pm (UTC)(link)
I confess, I've lost track of the time. It's a pleasant surprise to see you. We met at a party, didn't we? I'm sure it was. I remember you were a bit more interested in the conversation than some of the others gathered around.

[Marius, for his part, looks almost the same, except there's a healthy glow to his usually very pale skin that upon close inspection is probably makeup.]

So, who did you marry? Anyone I know?
Edited 2024-04-17 01:28 (UTC)
scholarofages: Richard Armitage (Default)

[personal profile] scholarofages 2024-04-17 03:36 am (UTC)(link)
Savonarola's bonfire of the vanities was a sad time. I loved Botticelli's mythological works. Though he did paint afterward, there was a darkness to his Christian work after that. And I never could copy the man's genius to my own satisfaction.

[He's well aware that neither of them has changed at all since that long ago time. And yet, all of Marius's senses insist that the other man is simply human. Obviously not. It's an enigma that the mind gift for now can't help him solve. And asking about it gives way to the obvious question: how is Marius still alive?]

I'm glad you're happy, though now you're only making me curious who he is. It's an interesting man who can hold the attention of someone as old as either of us.
scholarofages: Richard Armitage (02)

[personal profile] scholarofages 2024-04-17 07:16 pm (UTC)(link)
[Marius laughs softly at G's description of the Dominican friar.] I wouldn't know about Savonarola's private life, I've always found the religious yearning for suffering intolerable, but I do know there was more to Botticelli's change in tone than just one loud priest. The moralistic crusade in Florence took its toll on Sandro. He was feeling it even when I visited him, when he was still working on his piece about the birth of Venus.

[A nod and an appraising look at G.] I wouldn't begin to guess. I could probably read your mind and find out. I know I had that reputation even back in Venice. But...that would be rude. I thought you were mortal, but you obviously aren't. [And neither is Marius.]
scholarofages: Richard Armitage (Default)

[personal profile] scholarofages 2024-04-17 08:51 pm (UTC)(link)
[A long stare at G, and then Marius laughs. So. He's much older than Marius suspected. And yet, he still looked and felt mortal. Marius could still smell his blood, and it smelled good.] It was the style of the painting. Botticelli's style still held quite a bit of the older Medieval style of painting. I found it intriguing but it did also distort the image somewhat. I imagine she might have appreciated a few of my paintings of her from that time, they were somewhat more lifelike. You may have seen them from time to time if you ever visited my house when I hosted parties. It's too bad I don't have them, still.

I can't claim to know any gods or goddesses personally. [Not anymore, he adds silently.] But I do remember the reign of Augustus Caesar.
scholarofages: Richard Armitage (Default)

[personal profile] scholarofages 2024-04-18 04:16 am (UTC)(link)
There are times I wish I couldn't remember the specifics of what has happened over the last two thousand years. What happened to my home and my apprentices at the end of my stay in Venice, for instance. You probably heard about the fire? [Marius looks pained. He can still remember how Amadeo and his apprentices screamed for his help. Help he couldn't give.] If I recall, the rumor later was that my home caught fire. My apprentices, Amadeo, my servants, and I all died in the fire.

I do still go by Marius, by the way.
scholarofages: Richard Armitage (Default)

[personal profile] scholarofages 2024-04-18 04:56 pm (UTC)(link)
Something like that, I think. My...protégé, Amadeo, survived the fire, as well. He goes by Armand now. The fire...well it took a long time for both of us to heal from that.

It is good to see you. So few people I've enjoyed talking with still live.
scholarofages: Richard Armitage (Default)

[personal profile] scholarofages 2024-04-19 03:24 am (UTC)(link)
[Marius thought about how to respond to that for a long moment before answering.] We're probably more alike than you realize. My own gods didn't take notice of me, but there was one up in the north, a god of a group of druids, who took a liking to me. He needed me to help solve a great mystery that he was not free to investigate himself. Ah, that was a long time ago.
scholarofages: Richard Armitage (02)

[personal profile] scholarofages 2024-04-20 07:43 pm (UTC)(link)
That is too often the way of it. It is often an immortal being so far removed from humanity they don't even know the anguish they cause when they rip you from your life. Or they don't care. And you were so young.
scholarofages: Richard Armitage (Default)

[personal profile] scholarofages 2024-04-21 12:20 am (UTC)(link)
[Marius gives him an assessing look, sharp eyes noting his features.]

You were around Amadeo's age when you stopped aging. No more than twenty. You have a man's height, but had you been allowed to age further, you'd have put on more muscle to match.

Now? Who knows. Older. But I know how immortality so young affected Amadeo.
scholarofages: Richard Armitage (02)

[personal profile] scholarofages 2024-04-21 12:54 am (UTC)(link)
[Marius smiles reassuringly.] You can, but you still look young. I was a man of forty when I was brought to the druids' grove.

Perhaps I have an unfair advantage, though. I was very used to judging potential apprentices when I lived in Venice.
scholarofages: Richard Armitage (Default)

[personal profile] scholarofages 2024-04-21 01:16 am (UTC)(link)
Perhaps you wouldn't have. Would you call it good fortune? You knew gods and goddesses personally. And you obviously never returned to fight for your throne. Was that because you didn't want to, or for some other reason?
scholarofages: Richard Armitage (Default)

[personal profile] scholarofages 2024-04-21 01:25 am (UTC)(link)
I apologize. I do know what that is like. When Rome fell, I think it took a piece of my heart with it.
scholarofages: Richard Armitage (02)

[personal profile] scholarofages 2024-04-21 01:46 am (UTC)(link)
If any of my family survived the fall of Rome, it would have been in Constantinople. I don't know their final fate, but so much of Rome burned. I curse myself sometimes because I destroyed my records of my descendents, so I don't actually know. But it seemed so logical at the time. How would I explain that, two hundred years after I went missing, I returned, looking much the same as when I left? No. I could only listen from the garden to make sure they were well. And then the barbarians came.

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