NOAH JACOBSEN
Druid
Posts: 123
Played by:
ANGE
Last seen Jul 19, 2024 17:26:18 GMT
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Post by NOAH JACOBSEN on Jul 27, 2022 19:12:39 GMT
Walking around to the driver’s side, Noah dipped into the open window to kiss his wife. One of them was covering the summer school at the high school this year at least, satisfying the principal’s orders that as many staff as possible join his scheme to get as many kids caught up by the start of the new year as possible. Sure, he saw the merit in it, but at the same time there was a whole world of stuff he’d come to Mystic Falls to sink his teeth into that he hadn’t even had a nibble of yet. ”I should be back earlier than you. I’ll get a start on dinner if it’s not already on. Love you.” Another kiss before he was stepping back onto the sidewalk to let her pull out.
There was a beauty to having three adults in a household, especially three who were willing to pitch in as much as each of them did. Growing up he’d watched his dad’s triumvirate do just that, covering each other’s backs in every regard. It had been hard to imagine life functioning a different way after that – the faintly selfish single-life not one that had ever been on the cards. That meant he was lucky, luckier than some.
Turning as the car headed out of sight, Noah looked up at the glossy exterior of the office building. Luckier than Destiny at the very least.
He headed in through the revolving doors, running the gamut of security and having to wait for them to call upstairs to confirm his ‘appointment’ before they’d hand him a visitor’s pass. Given the way he pored over the local newspapers every morning he should’ve caught Destiny’s name attached to the Daily by now. Noah leaned back against the wall of the elevator, watching the numbers scroll up above it. He guessed she’d pulled on every thread the newspaper had given her in the search for information about her family, but the sort of thing he’d pulled from his dad’s journals and out of the man himself, it was no wonder there’d been nothing to find. That sort of thing wasn’t splashed across the fronts of newspapers, it was buried in them, clouded in so many layers of lies that even the people involved wouldn’t have recognised the truth anymore.
A pat of his pocket confirmed his notebook was right where he’d shoved it as he’d gotten out of the car. Neat notes made, his stomach twisting with every single word. Still, as he exited the elevator, Noah offered the woman behind the reception desk a bright smile. ”Hi. Noah Jacobsen, I have an appointment with Destiny Baccari. I’m a little early …” A curse sometimes, but he’d heard the change in Destiny’s voice when he’d told he had something, and he imagined she wasn’t going to mind him shuffling into her office fifteen minutes early – unless she was stacked with other appointments.
The woman picked up the phone, speaking quietly into it. Noah dipped his head, not making the added effort to listen in. Destiny had asked for this – good or bad. The phone clicked down quietly before the woman rose. With a click-clack of heels that had to be at least four inches high, he was led back through a room that looked no different to the ones they showed on TV shows about news rooms. Cubicles in the centre of the room, folks with heads bent, working industriously over laptops and computers, offices ranged around the two outer walls, the boss in the biggest of them of course.
With a smile the receptionist dropped him off at the door, with a rattle of knuckles against the glass to announce his arrival. Noah caught it as she swung it open and stepped back. ”Thanks,” he called back over his shoulder to her before he stepped in. Hie smile went crooked as he made his way towards Destiny’s desk. ”I’m glad you were able to fit me in. I was gonna suggest coffee somewhere … or you coming over to the house. I wasn’t sure how .. private you wanted to keep it.” Like he’d done that first time he offered Destiny his hand to shake across the desk. More ears would probably prick up in public here than they would anywhere else, those supernatural buzzwords of ‘druid’ and ‘darach’ practically sirens to some.
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DESTINY BACCARI
Darach
Posts: 180
Age:
25
Occupation:
Mystic Daily Owner
Status:
Engaged
Partner:
Grey Maddox
Played by:
Julia
Last seen Nov 17, 2024 17:51:44 GMT
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Post by DESTINY BACCARI on Aug 12, 2022 22:05:51 GMT
━ i'll stay awake at night with just my skin and bones ━ IT’D BEEN MONTHS SINCE SHE’D MET NOAH JACOBSEN. Actually, it’d been months since she’d had any news of her family… or good news at all. When they’d met, she was getting used to the idea that her pregnancy would last. How fucking stupid, right? Apparently, three months didn’t mean shit when people like Tanner or Leah were around.
She pushed the thought away and replaced it with something better. Her dad wasn’t alive, but maybe her sisters were. Maybe she’d have someone else behind her━not that it’d matter now, but she still held out hope. Grey was her family, he was all she needed, but part of Destiny wanted to piece together her childhood and see if any of it could be whole again.
If Noah’s dad knew hers, then perhaps he’d know where her sisters ended up. If not, then Destiny was happy to hear about her dad━other people’s stories would bulk up the image of him in her head, and she’d get to see if he was as amazing as she remembered. He’d always be her dad, but was he the same man around everyone else? Did he share stories of his kids that she couldn’t remember? Of his own parents?
Somehow, it all related to her own ability to be a parent━as if that was even possible now. Destiny wanted to know how he’d done it, like she could gather the advice she was supposed to obtain from her mom and dad from beyond the grave.
Destiny sat nervously in her chair all day. She’d barely gotten any work done, just kept imagining the stories Noah would tell her and building her hopes up━it was better than lingering on the shit with JJ, right? She wondered what kind of advice her dad would give her if he was around━if he’d like Grey, what he’d tell her to do. How to fix this.
She’d missed out on so much without him.
She jumped when the call came, and then picked it up with bated breath, letting out the confirmation to send Noah to her office. He was here, carrying all those stories with him. Destiny stared at her fingers, hovering over her keyboard, and somehow pretended that she’d still get something done in the next thirty seconds. When her office door opened, she let those expectations melt away.
“Hi! No, yeah, of course!” Destiny stood, exposing the flat plane of belly that the glamour still covered. She leaned over and grabbed his hand, not shaking so much as squeezing with excitement. “Decently private, probably,” She laughed breathily and sat, motioning to one of the chairs across from her. “Have a seat!” Destiny offered, still bursting with energy that wasn’t completely truthful. She could barely sleep, just stayed curled around Grey at night and caught maybe a few hours. Most nights, she fell into nightmares or stayed up trying to avoid them.
It wasn’t as if she was somebody people wanted a gossip piece on, but they’d likely have to censor themselves and she wouldn’t get the full effect of his information. Plus, Destiny would be looking over her shoulder the whole time, and she wasn’t about to allow Leah to steal more pieces of herself.
The fact that she could be invisible and teleport, though… Destiny sometimes wondered if she was lingering nearby at all times. Watching over her, looming, waiting for the opportunity to cause more shit.
She sucked in a sharp breath. “Thank you for coming; it means a lot.” Destiny pressed on a smile, “So! I guess you talked to your dad? Did he tell you more about mine? Did they work together a lot, or…?” Leaning forward on the desk, her head perched on her palms, Destiny looked a bit like a kid waiting for something special. All big, glassy eyes and hopefulness, desperate to cling onto something positive.
NOAH JACOBSEN | no notes.
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NOAH JACOBSEN
Druid
Posts: 123
Played by:
ANGE
Last seen Jul 19, 2024 17:26:18 GMT
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Post by NOAH JACOBSEN on Aug 27, 2022 14:19:28 GMT
Some lines in the supernatural world were blurred. It was rare for species themselves to actually meld – although the talk of hybrids in Mystic Falls had kept him anchored here when he might otherwise have given up his investigation into the slaughtered wolf packs as a wild goose chase and headed home – but abilities, those could and did stretch across those lines. Like psychics druids could master tele- and bio-kinesis with years of practice, but mindreading? That wasn’t a skill Noah had in his back pocket. He didn’t need it though, not to feel the crackle of nerves in the air as he’d stepped into Destiny’s office. Would he feel that energy fall like rain to the office’s cheap, industrial carpet tiles when he stripped the curtain back and revealed the man behind it? God, he hoped not.
He'd felt his own stomach twist as his dad had paused on the phone the first time he’d mentioned James Baccari’s name. There was a whole world squeezed into that heartbeat of time. Dread, a sick anticipation and a wave of pity Noah knew he wasn’t going to let roll back out at Destiny when they spoke. People didn’t want to be pitied, especially a past that they only realised had been a minefield after they’d reached the other side of it. Sympathy, empathy, understanding – sure, but not that overwhelmingly sugary pity that filled people’s eyes and left you with that sick feeling in the pit of your stomach.
That was probably going to come anyway. Noah could’ve handed over the pages from his dad’s journal – the rumours, the stories, printed in that neat handwriting – but there was going to be no comfort in such stark accounts, just a razor’s edge that would cut soul deep. Not what you wanted when you were pregnant and every ounce of stress could upset that delicate balancing game between mother and child. Destiny hadn’t looked ready to drop the baby on the floor of his classroom when they’d spoken, her bump hidden beneath the concealing layer of clothes, hiding the timeline of her pregnancy like bark shielding a tree’s rings. He’d tried doing quick calculations in his head, figuring how long there might be before the baby arrived, but in the end Noah knew he couldn’t wait for that to happen before he pulled that curtain back. It wasn’t fair, no matter the fallout.
The moment he walked into her office and Destiny rose from behind her desk Noah realised it was probably too late for that concern. He wouldn’t be calling for an ambulance when he triggered and early labour with bad news. Either the worst had already happened or there’d been a fast bounce back after a pre-term labour. The answer was a mine he wasn’t about to leap right onto with both feet. There was enough bad coming in this conversation as it was – and if there had been a good outcome, Destiny would likely offer that truth up herself.
Noah’s throat was tight as he immediately adjusted his field of vision away from her flat stomach. Just a tiny bit but that shift in perception was almost always enough. His other hand came up to pat the back of Destiny’s as she squeezed, like the anticipation was making everything in her contract. ”I figured, so I erred on the side of caution,” he admitted. Family wasn’t always something you wanted going private, although in an office of reporters, could you ever get real privacy?
He was almost tempted to look over his shoulder to see if there was a disembodied ear dangling in front of the door, Harry Potter style as he sat down. Noah immediately reached into his pocket, setting his notebook down on his thigh. His fingers curled over it lightly as he shook his head, the corners of his lips tipping up in an echo of her smile. ”I was glad I could help filling in some gaps.” Not that those missing pieces of the jigsaw were likely to give Destiny the finished picture she was hoping for.
The smile that had been there – small and friendly – grew brittle. Noah pressed his lips together for a moment, knowing that Destiny would see the change, despite the hope that filled her big blue eyes. ”For a time they did.” An obvious observation given that James Baccari and his wife had died not that many years after he’d met the man. That meeting had apparently been a line drawn in the sand. ”Your dad was well known in our circles. I hate to be the bearer of bad news but … your dad … he burned most of those bridges. Destiny, he wasn’t a good man. I’m sure you’re somewhat aware of this but darachs, they’re the dark part of our world, your dad, he embraced that. He did some things …” Created ripples that his daughters, well, Destiny at least, seemed to have skated on top of rather than being drowned by. Others whose lives had taken a similar dramatic turn in their world hadn’t fared so well.
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DESTINY BACCARI
Darach
Posts: 180
Age:
25
Occupation:
Mystic Daily Owner
Status:
Engaged
Partner:
Grey Maddox
Played by:
Julia
Last seen Nov 17, 2024 17:51:44 GMT
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Post by DESTINY BACCARI on Sept 23, 2022 19:51:25 GMT
━ i'll stay awake at night with just my skin and bones ━ NOAH DID THAT THING EVERYBODY DID nowadays━he looked. It was worse when she’d just returned to work, when all anybody could do was stare, and yet most of them never asked. Noah only glanced, thankfully, though Destiny was surprised he’d known anyway. Maybe she’d shown some sign then that she wasn’t aware of. Whatever it was, Destiny was glad the moment was fleeting.
She pressed on a smile and sat, eager to hear what he’d learned about her dad. Things had been… well, terrible recently, and this was supposed to be something better━something that would put a genuine smile on her face.
Up until his expression shifted, Destiny had gotten her hopes up. When she saw his smile turn stale, no longer glimmering in response to her own, she prepared herself for the worst. That he’d learned nothing, his dad couldn’t remember a single thing about hers, and she was back to square one. She felt the tears well up already, that same heat in her face she experienced far too often lately.
For a time, to Destiny, meant ‘shorter than he cared to remember.’ It only backed up her fears, expression falling the same way her heart sank to her stomach. She nodded slowly, sure that if she started speaking, then the tears would pour, too. She also hoped it’d communicate to Noah that she understood he’d done what he could, that she wasn’t expecting any miracles━even though she had been.
Finally, he continued, but it wasn’t what she expected. He did find something, only it was obviously inexcusable in Noah’s eyes. Her brows knotted together when Noah used the words wasn’t a good man.
He was a Darach. Like Grey. Destiny always considered herself one, too, obviously, but that was because she’d learned the word from her father. She’d only recently started to embrace it.
“Okay.” She said softly, voice level. Destiny pushed away the smile that threatened to tug at her lips. It made her happy that she was just like her dad, no matter what that meant. Grey had introduced her to the kind of power she could hold as a darach, and perhaps she’d been afraid of it before, but how could it be wrong when it was what her dad tried to teach her?
“So... a darach. Things like what?” Destiny finally asked, eyes ticking over his face. “You mean sacrifices? Turning against the other druids? Was he involved with a pack?” Her hands shifted off the desk and dropped to her lap. She gathered them together and squeezed, trying to keep the buzzing in her belly at bay.
NOAH JACOBSEN | no notes.
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NOAH JACOBSEN
Druid
Posts: 123
Played by:
ANGE
Last seen Jul 19, 2024 17:26:18 GMT
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Post by NOAH JACOBSEN on Sept 24, 2022 16:58:01 GMT
Talking had always been the main part of the job, but negotiating and coaching didn’t always mean breaking the worst possible news someone could hear. People in the emergency services had training for that, practised for sitting people to do to tell them that their loved ones had been caught up in something horrible, informing them that they had died. Although he’d learned everything he knew pretty much at his dad’s knee, that was still something he felt clumsy with. All that bad news held in his hands as he’d spoken to Destiny over the phone, shuffled around like a hot potato that was about to drop and sear its way through the centre of Destiny’s life.
Noah could feel it there as he walked into Destiny’s office. He tossed it from side to side in his mind, still trying to figure out the best way to let it fall free. Did you just rip the band aid off – so to speak – and try and patch up the wound you left afterwards? Or, did you do it bit by bit, hoping that the tiny stings were easier to handle when they came one at a time? Not that finding out that your dad had slaughtered not only most of a wolfpack, but also its druid, someone who was supposedly a friend, was a little sting.
His own stomach had twisted with each word his dad had spoken over the phone. Beside him on the couch, his wife had tried to soothe those shifts she’d seen in his posture, her hand gripping his, rubbing those small circles on his back and eventually gathering him into her when he’d set the phone down and the weight of what he was going to have to do settled on him. He’d wondered if Destiny would have someone to do the same after their meeting, the faint signs of pregnancy he’d seen when she’d visited his classroom had told him that she probably did, but he’d learned a long time ago not to take anything as guaranteed.
Now, the bump that should’ve been there was gone, the hidden wounds she already bore probably taking its place. He didn’t want to deepen them, working into those sore spots with the sort of news that would devastate anybody even on the best day of their life with what he’d heard. Now he was here though, Noah figured he didn’t have a choice. He’d laid the groundwork for the revelation and Destiny would know if he tried to alter that at the last moment.
Her smile had been hopeful, his wasn’t, not once it started to crumble. It almost felt like she was preparing herself for that other shoe to drop then. Noah’s frown cut lines between his brows, his fingers tightening where they curled over his knees, like he could somehow squeeze that news down into something that was going to be easier for Destiny to swallow. She nodded slowly, almost as though she was accepting that first twist of the knife in her gut.
With his throat feeling raw, he paused after that first announcement. Destiny was frowning right back at him, her dark brows knitting together. Now reeling quite as much as he’d expected from it, especially not with that quiet ‘okay’. Noah cleared his throat, wondering just where he was in the minefield he’d been sure his discoveries had laid for him. ”Maybe not always a darach, but certainly by the time he … he cut ties with my father, he was one.” His throat tightened again, like a noose – or a garrot – had been slipped around it, strangely fitting considering just what James Baccari had done before he’d eventually died just the same way.
Shifting in his chair, Noah felt the pages of his dad’s journal crinkling in his pocket. Would Destiny believe those anymore than just his retelling of the phone conversations his father had with hers. ”Sacrifices, yes, and turning against the people who would’ve helped him. There was a lot of blood spilled.” His lips pinched, like he was trying to keep that wave of nausea swallowed down. ”He was involved with a pack, but it was another that he ended up destroying. Not long after my dad last saw him…”
He reached into his pocket with numb fingers to retrieve those pages. ”I don’t know why, I don’t know if anybody involved knew why other than your dad, but he started to pick off members of the pack. By the time he confronted their emissary – a man my dad considered a close friend – most of them were dead. He sacrificed their druid too. My dad spoke to him afterwards … on the phone … they didn’t see each other face to face again. He … he said it was for his children. I know that puts a weight on you and I’m sorry for that. It’s not easy hearing that your dad isn’t the man you thought he was.” That was a weight Noah knew he was unlikely to ever bear, his family had been lucky, their path always a clear one.
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DESTINY BACCARI
Darach
Posts: 180
Age:
25
Occupation:
Mystic Daily Owner
Status:
Engaged
Partner:
Grey Maddox
Played by:
Julia
Last seen Nov 17, 2024 17:51:44 GMT
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Post by DESTINY BACCARI on Oct 7, 2022 15:15:34 GMT
━ i'll stay awake at night with just my skin and bones ━ DESTINY WONDERED IF SHE’D HAVE MORE NIGHTMARES after this. Images of her dad splattering blood everywhere, murdering others just as she had Remzi (or Raik, whatever). No, not murdering━sacrificing. There was a difference. A purpose to this, Destiny was sure of it. She grasped at straws like the tattered edges of her mind, trying to fit it together, figure out why he would turn his back on the people who’d helped him.
Eventually, the more Noah explained, the more pieces she was given. It was like the puzzle kept expanding, and she still had no idea which pieces fit where. She couldn’t even find the edges to start working from the outside in.
‘He … he said it was for his children.’
Suddenly, it all made sense. Tears welled in her eyes, hands trembling in her lap. Noah would likely think it was a negative reaction, and that was fine with her.
But Destiny was happy. Was that wrong? It was like she’d figured it all out. It was for family; he did it to get stronger. Grey had suggested the same thing while she was pregnant and though it didn’t work like they’d thought, she still tried. Her dad did the same thing and succeeded, but that didn’t protect him from the girls he’d sought to shield. Guilt rose up like bile in her throat, and not for the men whose lives he’d ended in her name.
“You’re right.” She croaked. Her dad wasn’t the man she thought he was; he was far greater than anything she’d imagined. She should’ve worked harder to protect Petyr. But, if her dad’s legacy was anything to go by, Destiny knew it was in her blood. She had the ability there, under the surface, to be just like him.
And she had Grey to thank for all the untapped potential that’d come pouring out before. Her dad would’ve liked him, she thought. A powerful darach, and yet, more than that━someone who made her feel safe, loved and happy; who encouraged her to be greater in all the best ways.
All the ways that would’ve made him proud.
She wanted to know more, though. Her childhood was in scattered bits and pieces, and the pages he presented had words scribbled on them that she could barely see through her tears. “Can I…” Destiny asked politely, motioning to the pages. She leaned over the desk and smoothed a hand over the one on top, finding her father’s name. “Did he ever mention doing this before? Y’know, that he lied to your dad, maybe? Anything else about us? His family?” Was there a reason? Was someone sick? In danger? Did there have to be?
It seemed like druids didn’t go ‘astray’ without proper cause. Had he been pushed into it, or did his parents teach him like he had with Destiny?
NOAH JACOBSEN | no notes.
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NOAH JACOBSEN
Druid
Posts: 123
Played by:
ANGE
Last seen Jul 19, 2024 17:26:18 GMT
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Post by NOAH JACOBSEN on Oct 22, 2022 17:32:48 GMT
The apology choked up in Noah’s throat as he saw the tears well up in Destiny’s eyes. A tremor rolled through his, upset biting deep. He looked around the desk for tissues to push on her, but didn’t see anything and it was no use patting his pockets down, he didn’t have a handkerchief to produce. This was ill prepared. He shouldn’t have suggested doing this at her work. Home wouldn’t been better, somewhere she wasn’t in the fishbowl of an office. Noah resisted glancing over his shoulder, by now there were probably plenty of eyes on the office, people were inherently nosy after all.
Empty handed, he scooted forward far enough he could at least settle his hands on the edge of the desk. Close enough that if he needed to he could reach for her hand, as though it would be a comfort that would make up for hearing that her father had lost his mind and killed a score of people. There was no making up for that, no matter what you had thought of him previously.
When Destiny had sat in his classroom there’d almost been a pride in an announcement of what she was. Now Noah wondered if that was all because of what her father had told her. This tended to run from one generation to another, parents teaching their children. His dad had filled his mind with all sorts of amazing things, making their position as mediators clear in it all. He’d embraced that, was still proud of it. How did you do that when your legacy was death? When you knew there was blood on your family’s hands? How did you feel anything but horror in the face of it?
Destiny hadn’t fallen entirely apart as those questions must have filtered through her own mind. Noah heard the crack in her voice though and reached out then, offering his hand in a gesture meant to comfort. ”I’m sorry that I didn’t find something less tragic. I think he was a good man once upon a time … a good father. One who believed that what he was doing was right. It’s easy to find the wrong path and once you’re on it, it’s nearly impossible to get off of it.” If you changed your mind that was. Some didn’t. They found whatever it was they were looking for on that path and they saw no wrong in it in the end. Like Destiny’s father. He’d seen reasons for it and if there was any guilt afterwards at what he’d done, then his own father hadn’t known anything of it.
It wasn’t his hand Destiny reached for in the end, but the pages he held in his other hand. Noah glanced down at them for a moment, almost forgetting they’d been there. He nodded, his frown deepening as he held them out to her. ”They’re not easy reading. There may be details in there that are difficult …” They were handed over all the same. He could offer help, but at the end of the day this was all in Destiny’s hands now, literally. Noah settled back slowly, his hands settling again on the arms of the chair he sat in. If this was him he’d have taken the news home to his wife and sister, knowing he was safe there to fall apart if he needed to. It was really none of his business if Destiny had anybody like that, but he hoped that she did and wouldn’t face this alone.
Teeth raked over his lower lip for a moment before his eyes ticked up to meet Destiny’s. The news of the sacrifices seemed to have hit his own father hard. A man he thought he’d known and had trusted had done something horrific – and without an ounce of remorse. He couldn’t imagine his own father doing anything like it, but others had, there were reasons why the wise oaks became dark ones. Noah nodded his head, his expression taking on that grim edge again, after a moment. ”He did. When he spoke to my dad he ... he told him that he'd sacrificed his own parents. People usually don’t fall that hard the first time, they work up to it.” Always pivoting around something though. For Destiny's father that had been his own parents, a cycle that seemed to continue as he and his wife had ended up sacrificed too. ”A few years after they lost spoke, your parents died too. In the same way. I don’t know if you know much about that? About them being sacrificed too? There was word that one of your sisters worked with a pack too for a time afterwards, but that’s a thread I haven’t had much luck in pulling yet, sorry.” His apologies felt weak in the face of it all. This was like trying to make up for an axe carving through the middle of your life with a single word – you just couldn’t patch it up that easily.
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DESTINY BACCARI
Darach
Posts: 180
Age:
25
Occupation:
Mystic Daily Owner
Status:
Engaged
Partner:
Grey Maddox
Played by:
Julia
Last seen Nov 17, 2024 17:51:44 GMT
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Post by DESTINY BACCARI on Nov 8, 2022 20:59:28 GMT
━ i'll stay awake at night with just my skin and bones ━ A GOOD MAN ‘ONCE UPON A TIME?’ SHE HAD TO HOLD in her laugh. No, her dad was always a good man. A good father, even if he had to die at the hands of one of his own daughters in the end. Guilt worked its way into her again. He’d done so much for Destiny, and she’d repaid him by listening to Lacey and putting him to death. It left them as orphans, but, worse, it removed a great father from this world.
She wondered about her own path. Perhaps she was always destined (ha) to find her way back to this, fated to find Grey and… well, complete everything that came later. Petyr shouldn’t have had to pay for their sins, but at least he was somewhere none could touch him now.
“I understand,” Destiny spoke softly as she reached for the papers, “Thank you.” She wanted the difficult details. She wanted to know everything that had to do with her dad, no matter what Noah thought about it.
Settling back in her own chair, Destiny’s eyes slid downwards, drifting over the words scrawled there. It was hard to read anything while she was still listening to Noah, but she lapped up everything she could in the handful of silent seconds. The details of what he’d done were written clearly, information that came practically straight from his mouth. She could still remember his voice, pieces of him, and the memories drifted up like bubbles now, bursting in her brain and unloading new parts of him each time.
She had to ask. For her, the driving force was also her son, but did her dad wait ‘til he had them? Maybe her older sister?
No.
Destiny’s eyes widened at the revelation Noah spilled out in front of her. Another thing clicked into place, and then a hundred others followed. His own parents. Darachs usually don’t fall that hard the first time, Noah claimed, but she did. Her family did. “Wow.” Destiny whispered, and found that the tears in her eyes had started to slide down her cheeks. She wasn’t an evil child who’d rid the Earth of her father; she was a darach completing the rituals set by her teacher. It was genetic; it was in her blood. She’d spent her whole life thinking she was a monster, that her dad spent his afterlife hating her from wherever he ended up, but maybe he didn't. Maybe he was happy━proud, even, like on his last day. God, she couldn’t wait to get home and tell Grey.
Now onto the worst part. Well, what previously was the worst part. It still ached in her chest━Destiny still wished she hadn’t carried it out, but the pain was easier now. Her brows went up at the mention of her sister, though. It couldn’t have been Lacey, she wasn’t like them, so it had to be… “Julia.” She breathed, trying to temper the urge to smile. Did Julia… become like them? It was a possibility she’d carried out the sacrifice, apparently, which was news to Destiny. Thankfully, the shock covered what would’ve otherwise been a telling expression.
“Really? I… no, I didn’t know they were sacrificed; I was just a kid, so nobody really shared that information.” She lied, “So… you think maybe my sister did it? Is it, like, genetic?” Destiny’s brows furrowed, the last question being a genuine one. Their species obviously was, but was the darach part… did it make them more inclined to end up this way? A ‘dark oak’? “Um, I don’t know if it helps, but I got some information that my sister was going by ‘Jennifer Baccari’ for a while instead. She came back to California, too, I think.” There was nothing that could tie Destiny to any involvement with them and, if Noah pulled up something else that wasn’t, well, positive (in his opinion), then he’d just think Destiny had an onslaught of bad apples in the family. Which was fine for her, really.
“Thank you so much, by the way.” She smiled sadly, lifting a hand to rub at the wetness on her cheeks. “I know it’s not… y’know, what I was expecting…” That much was true, “... But I’m glad I know something about him now. I could never remember a lot after what happened, so this is… it’s better than nothing.” Destiny nodded, sucking in a long breath and blowing it out to calm herself. This time, she gave him a smile that was a little brighter, “Is there anything I can do in return? You went through all the trouble to collect this information for me, and I just…” She looked down at the pages again, bits of proof about her dad she could hold close. Words didn’t replace a father, but Destiny had someone else to love her now, a new family, and so she wasn’t mindlessly searching for a stand-in.
NOAH JACOBSEN | wrap w yours mb?
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NOAH JACOBSEN
Druid
Posts: 123
Played by:
ANGE
Last seen Jul 19, 2024 17:26:18 GMT
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Post by NOAH JACOBSEN on Nov 23, 2022 19:42:24 GMT
She was thanking him for trying to give a man who seemed to have burned it all away, if it had existed at all, a good side. He’d had daughters, had raised them for years before whatever it was had snapped in him. Destiny could’ve gone through her entire life believing that good side was all that had existed. If he’d been in her place … he would have wanted to hear the entire truth, but would’ve shattered the bedrock under his feet that his parents had always provided. He’d built all of his own beliefs on those his dad had instilled in him, trusting that it was all based on the right reasons. Just the thought of his dad having twisted it left nausea rolling in his gut.
Sympathy filled his eyes as Destiny reached for the papers. Did she have the same? Those sick butterflies in a stomach that had flattened in the time he’d seen her. Maybe Destiny’s bedrock was already dust and this was an added explanation for it. It was easier to cope with what the world threw at you if there was someone there to build it back up for you. He had his wife and his sister, people who would understand, who’d feel the same pain, but would close in and hold him up all the same.
Noah’s gaze swept Destiny’s desk as he settled back, not afraid to meet her eye, but looking for some sign other than an ephemeral bump to show that she had someone on her side to do that. Finding nothing, they returned back to her, watching her read through the documents. There was more detail there than he’d given her, the nuances of his dad’s words rather than his own paraphrasing. Did you want that stark painting of your grandparents’ deaths? Probably not. One more crime, one more hammer blow on that bedrock that had Destiny’s eyes going wide. ”I know it’s not the legacy you probably wanted to hear about,” he said hoarsely. It wasn’t an easy one to carry. Generation to generation, maybe spilling her mind to the life that had almost been, if circumstances had been different. That was a weight that would’ve left him breathless, that did leave Destiny crying.
He swept over her desk again, looking for tissues to mop those tears away. It was easy to feel powerless when there was nothing you could do to really change the circumstances someone find themselves in. ”Julia,” Noah echoed as she supplied her elder sister’s name. ”The last my dad knew of her was when she joined them, but after the pack died … he lost track there too.” Too much of a coincidence maybe, but he wasn’t about to kick the rubble of that bedrock too far out from beneath Destiny’s feet.
His lips pinched in the surround of his beard. Trying to theorise what had happened to both of them was going to muddy that ground, risking a landslide, which was just as bad as the erosion. ”I don’t think the cops had any suspects, maybe that means your sister was involved. I’m sorry, I really wish I could tell you.” Stopping, he shrugged, his hands lacing together in his lap to stop them rolling in the air from thought to thought the way they did when he was teaching. ”I can’t say it isn’t. What we are is passed down from one generation to the next, if that was all you were told, maybe there was a chance it was what you believed you had to do … what you believed was right.” He knew that what was doing was, but his family had stuck to the light, the wise Blond brows rose as Destiny offered something back. The slaughter of the pack in California had been another massacre shrouded in mystery. ”That could help. I can check, see if anybody’s heard from her.” If perhaps Julia – Jennifer – had been a part of that slaughter and was now laid to rest under another name in California.
Almost restlessly Noah began to rub his fingers over his knuckles. His head tilted, an apologetic smile touched his lips as she brushed the tears away from her face. He really needed to start carrying a handkerchief. ”I wish I could’ve come with better news.” The adage about no news being good news might’ve been fitting here, but he couldn’t sit on what he’d learned when he’d made a promise to try and find out. Noah nodded, the polite erasing the apologetic in the curve of his lips. ”If I hear anything more, I’ll be in touch.” It was the least he could do to try and make up for this.
Although Destiny seemed to believe that the debt in this case ran the other way. Noah raised his hands, that self-effacing look filtering over his features as he stood. ”There’s no cost here. I was glad to be able to help. It’s tough not knowing what brought you to where you are. My wife came from a similar situation and it … it wasn’t easy. Thank you for the offer. I meant what I said about keeping in contact. If there’s anything more I find or you need to talk, please reach out.” He’d keep asking, for all that might help.
Noah reached over the desk to shake her hand, promising to see her soon. He stepped back from the desk, meaning to leave her to take all of this in without the added pressure of someone sitting there, watching every tear roll down her face. A foot from her office door, he stopped, glancing back over his shoulder. ”Actually, there may be something. I’ve been trying to find out what happened to a pack of wolves in New Orleans – the pack was wiped out, not by an outsider, but by them turning against each other. I found out it was tied to someone here, but that’s as far as I’ve gotten. If you could keep an ear to the ground? I’d appreciate it.” Nodding to Destiny, Noah slipped out. All this time since they’d made that drive from New Orleans and he was still no closer to solving that one mystery.
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