💗 marinette (
bonnechance) wrote in
genevrier2016-04-15 05:13 pm
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💀 pour oublier ma peine immense
It had been a long and hard three years.
Ladybug had run out of fingers with which to count the sticky situations she and Chat Noir had been in because of Hawkmoth. But finally, finally, she and her partner had him dead to rights. As time went on, they had grown desperate, and they'd made mistakes - but nothing they hadn't been able to fix. He'd made mistakes, too, and that was how the two of them had managed to track him down.
Heart pounding, she cast her gaze down at the man that had been their adversary for so long. Hawkmoth stared back at the both of them with a dark glare full of loathing. There were a lot of things she had wanted to ask him when she finally caught up to him, but there was only one question she was actually able to form.
"How could you?" She whispered, her voice ragged. She was breathing heavily - the fight had taken a lot out of her. Out of her partner, and out of their enemy, too; had it gone on much longer, they all might have dropped dead out of exhaustion. "You hurt so many people."
Hawkmoth's eyes glittered, and he pressed his lips together into a thin line. Ladybug felt something roll down her cheek - sweat, she hoped, and not blood or tears, but she'd taken a hit to the temple earlier and she couldn't be certain that it wasn't bleeding (and in fact it was). But she was in better shape than him, at least. He was beaten down, he had lost.
All that remained was to take his Miraculous and make sure that Nooroo's power never, ever fell int the hands of someone like him ever again.
His refusal to answer stirred anger in her where there had once been pity.
"Men. Women. Children. You used them all - and for what? What on earth could have been worth it? I don't understand. Explain yourself, Hawkmoth."
He didn't answer. He looked between the two of them, seething. Ladybug scowled and knelt down in front of him, curled her fingers around his brooch, and yanked it away from his suit.
The magic holding his transformation together fell apart, and Nooroo emerged from the butterfly Miraculous at long last. Ladybug cradled him in the crook of her arm and watched as the facial features of their nemesis became clear.
A well-dressed man, middle-aged. Nobody she recognized. Without his Miraculous, he should have been powerless. Defeated. Done for.
She didn't catch his smirk until it was too late.
His hand darted into the suit jacket that hadn't been there before, and his fingers closed around something she couldn't see. "I'll make you understand," He snarled, and the next thing she knew his hand emerged from the jacket and the crack of a gunshot split the air. "Perhaps now we'll share the same wish."
There was a gun in his hand, Ladybug realized, as a dull roar and the man's twisted, bitter laughter filled her ears. He hadn't aimed at her. She turned toward her partner with dread.
He had aimed at him, and his laughter was not the laughter of a man who had missed his mark.
Ladybug had run out of fingers with which to count the sticky situations she and Chat Noir had been in because of Hawkmoth. But finally, finally, she and her partner had him dead to rights. As time went on, they had grown desperate, and they'd made mistakes - but nothing they hadn't been able to fix. He'd made mistakes, too, and that was how the two of them had managed to track him down.
Heart pounding, she cast her gaze down at the man that had been their adversary for so long. Hawkmoth stared back at the both of them with a dark glare full of loathing. There were a lot of things she had wanted to ask him when she finally caught up to him, but there was only one question she was actually able to form.
"How could you?" She whispered, her voice ragged. She was breathing heavily - the fight had taken a lot out of her. Out of her partner, and out of their enemy, too; had it gone on much longer, they all might have dropped dead out of exhaustion. "You hurt so many people."
Hawkmoth's eyes glittered, and he pressed his lips together into a thin line. Ladybug felt something roll down her cheek - sweat, she hoped, and not blood or tears, but she'd taken a hit to the temple earlier and she couldn't be certain that it wasn't bleeding (and in fact it was). But she was in better shape than him, at least. He was beaten down, he had lost.
All that remained was to take his Miraculous and make sure that Nooroo's power never, ever fell int the hands of someone like him ever again.
His refusal to answer stirred anger in her where there had once been pity.
"Men. Women. Children. You used them all - and for what? What on earth could have been worth it? I don't understand. Explain yourself, Hawkmoth."
He didn't answer. He looked between the two of them, seething. Ladybug scowled and knelt down in front of him, curled her fingers around his brooch, and yanked it away from his suit.
The magic holding his transformation together fell apart, and Nooroo emerged from the butterfly Miraculous at long last. Ladybug cradled him in the crook of her arm and watched as the facial features of their nemesis became clear.
A well-dressed man, middle-aged. Nobody she recognized. Without his Miraculous, he should have been powerless. Defeated. Done for.
She didn't catch his smirk until it was too late.
His hand darted into the suit jacket that hadn't been there before, and his fingers closed around something she couldn't see. "I'll make you understand," He snarled, and the next thing she knew his hand emerged from the jacket and the crack of a gunshot split the air. "Perhaps now we'll share the same wish."
There was a gun in his hand, Ladybug realized, as a dull roar and the man's twisted, bitter laughter filled her ears. He hadn't aimed at her. She turned toward her partner with dread.
He had aimed at him, and his laughter was not the laughter of a man who had missed his mark.
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He shook himself out of it suddenly, blinking back awake, and let go of her hand against his shoulder to wipe his face, clearing his throat.
"... am I okay to get up?" he mumbled. The IV's had been taken out after he woke up, and he wasn't hooked to anything any longer. It was technically possible.
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Marinette was not a medical professional. It probably wasn't her place to say whether he was or wasn't okay to get up - but no one had told her he couldn't. If it was imperative that he stay in bed, wouldn't someone have told her he was on strict bed rest...?
...what Adrien wanted, Adrien got. If he wanted to get up enough...
"If you feel up to it, I'll help you up myself," She replied. "But if you're feeling weak... you shouldn't push yourself, okay?"
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Partially, he wanted to see if he was capable of standing up. He figured he had a good 50/50, but he really wanted his mouth to stop tasting like death.
Before she could protest, Adrien squeezed her hand, then reached out for her. He would... probably need some help even sitting up, actually. He felt a bit dizzy.
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When he reached out for her, she put out her arms to support him, one arm sliding around his back to prop him up and the other staying on his arm to guide him into a sitting position. She watched his face anxiously.
"How are you feeling so far...?"
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"Still here," he said breathily, going for a lightheartedness that Marinette probably wouldn't feel. He flashed a half-smile, then inched his legs over to the side. Thank goodness he was wearing pajama pants. This could have been so much worse than it was.
When he was facing her, Adrien put both of his hands on Marinette's shoulders and looked up at her, offering a triumphant smile.
"So far so good."
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It was progress. He was recovering remarkably quickly, wasn't he?
"Moment of truth." She shifted her hands to offer a more stable support for when he actually stood and put his weight on his feet instead of sitting on the edge of his bed. "Let's get you back on your feet."
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It was reflex. He said it unthinkingly, with a devil-may-care smile that showed his teeth, ready to take on the world.
"Don't worry. Cats always land on their feet."
Adrien stood up.
2/2
And then he fell.
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"Adrien!"
Her reflexes were good, at least. She caught him, hooking her arms under his armpits and bracing herself to keep him standing upright, and then eased him back onto his bed with as much care as one might afford a newborn. Her cheeks had paled for a different reason. She might not have been injured, but she was sick - sick with worry that by not stopping him from trying, she'd allowed him to get worse.
Her hands fluttered over him anxiously, tucking him back in and smoothing his bangs away from his eyes.
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"... that went much better when I imagined it," he groaned, and shut his eyes.
He was trying to laugh it off, but the dismay settled visibly into the corners of his mouth.
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They'd managed to get him sitting up before; maybe they could do so again, after he'd had some time to adjust.
"I'll go get you some water so you can at least have that drink, if you want?"
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We went to school together, she'd said.
"... yeah."
Don't blush. Don't blush.
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She smiled, and she hoped it was reassuring. Leaving his bedside wasn't really something she wanted to do, but it was for a good cause. She slipped out of his room to head for the kitchen in search of a cup and a straw so it would be easier for him to drink without spilling everything.
How hard could it be to find the kitchen in a house like this?
...well, hopefully he'd still be awake when she returned.
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He must have closed his eyes, because when he opened them again, blearily, a small lavender something was on his blankets. It had wings that drifted open and shut, and Adrien stared blurrily at it for a few moments, afraid to focus or blink, or even acknowledge it.
Were hallucinations part of the head injury?
Thankfully, Marinette returned, and the small distraction quickly disappeared. Adrien blinked several times.
"Is there a window open?" he asked softly.
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Marinette returned holding a cup of water with a straw in it and came to Adrien's bedside again, setting it down just long enough to look him over with a little bit of concern when he asked his question. Well... at least he was still conscious. That was something.
"No," She answered. "Do you want me to open one for you once we get you sitting up again?"
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Adrien paused, frowning at the blankets. Had he been feeling better he might have realized how crazy this sounded, but for now, he was rolling with what he had.
"... thought I saw a butterfly."
He sounded vaguely confused, and very tired. Still, he attempted to pull on a smile for her and was mostly successful.
"Thanks, Marinette."
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Nooroo.
It had to be Nooroo. There wasn't any reason for it to be anything else. Hawkmoth was gone, there weren't any more stray akuma to come fluttering in here. It could only have been the kwami, wanting to check that Adrien was okay. She made a small mental note to check up on Nooroo later and see what his thoughts on Adrien's recovery were.
"Huh? Oh, you're welcome..." He didn't need to thank her, but she knew better than to say so. Instead, she slid an arm around his shoulders. "Okay, let's get you sitting up a little... we'll take it slow. Let me know if you get dizzy."
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Adrien mumbled it, feeling a little stupid. It clearly wasn't here now. Was it some kind of impression of memory? It felt so familiar...
He settled as she reached out for him, bracing himself as best he could, accepting her help this time. They went slowly, and while he felt a little less than perfect, it wasn't anywhere near what had happened when he tried to get up.
Adrien figured that if he had the presence of mind to worry about how bad his breath was, he was probably fine.
"You think my hand-eye coordination is good enough for a toothbrush?" he asked, only partly joking.
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...and thank goodness, he had an easier time sitting up than he's had trying to stand. That was wonderful. Marinette had been worried that moving him so soon might not have been a good idea.
Had Nooroo used his powers to help him? She hoped so.
"It's a distinct possibility," She said with a small smile as she slid him the cup of water. "I'll go grab one, and if it looks like you might stab your eye out with it, I'll take it from you. Sound good?"
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A not-so-dry run, Chat might have said, If this goes badly.
It was hard to say whether he was still hiding his identity, or he didn't actually remember. His quick wit had been slowed by his hurts, but some things were reflex.
Initially he missed his mouth with the straw, but he at least got it in the vicinity of his lower face. After a moment he managed to catch it with his lips, staring down at his bedspread. He was too thirsty to be flustered.
"Remind me to never get shot again," he murmured, when he finally took a breath. It almost sounded like a joke, but it was a bit more gallows-humor than he normally went for.
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Marinette could practically feel her face falling, and so she ducked her head to try and keep him from seeing. Hopefully the water was a distraction. She didn't want him to feel badly about it - that he was making jokes about it at all was a good thing, wasn't it...?
But she couldn't get the image of his eyes losing their light out of her mind. Couldn't get Hawkmoth's voice out of her mind...
"Bien joué."
She flinched.
Never get shot again was the one thing she would not allow Adrien to forget, under any circumstances.
"Nobody with a gun is going to get anywhere near you," She said softly. "Not ever again."
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Adrien reached out, fingertips brushing her cheek. They were cool from the cup, but steady. Remarkably steady.
Not for the first time, he felt a comfort, a kinship, a connection with her, this virtual stranger who had been there when he woke up. She'd been alone at his bedside, no one here to comfort her.
"... I'm sorry." He pressed his lips together, then cupped her cheek. "It must have been awful. I shouldn't have said that."
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When Marinette spoke, her voice was a whisper.
"You don't need to apologize to me."
I should be the one apologizing to you, She thought, but she couldn't bring herself to say it. Not yet, not when the explanation wouldn't make any sense to him at all.
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Just thinking about it made his head hurt, his chest ache with some kind of distant pain he couldn't remember, but still felt the echoes of. It felt like he'd awakened from a dream, unable to attach emotion to reality.
He had no idea what had happened, but he couldn't believe for a moment that it was her fault.
"If even my father doesn't blame you," he finally said, "I don't think you have grounds to blame yourself."
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Ladybug was supposed to be the one with a plan, and she'd had one; the plan had just gone pear-shaped and managed to get Adrien shot. She was pretty sure the only reason Gabriel wasn't actively blaming her was because it was easier for him to blame Plagg and Tikki.
But she didn't want to disagree with Adrien, either. Not now.
"...maybe you're right," She conceded. "But it doesn't really feel that way, sometimes."
It might be easier to accept once he was able to sit up without help.
"—but we're not here to talk about my problems. Is the water helping? Do you need more?"
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