One of the gargoyles on the rooftop of the old theater was not what it seemed. Instead of a two winged creature, hunched forward and etched in stone, there was a smaller being, one winged and horned, sitting upright on his haunches. he had his knees bent leisurely, his feet and hands gathered together with his arms between his legs. He had his one wing spread, looming out and giving him a larger look. Usually he had it curled against him, but it felt nice to let it stretch.

He sighed softly, looking out over the night, the city falling into its usual, quiet routine once the sun vanished. People still came out, but certainly not as many as in the day time. Most really considered it unsafe. Or they were… sleeping. Which was perfectly normal. Merlinite’s schedule had changed, ever since he lost his human side. He had no need for regular schedules, anyway.

It was not like he could walk down the street in the middle of the day any more.

These days, he slept during the day, for the most part, and wasted any other light waking hours to frivolous activities while living under the library. He had plenty of books to read, and Camelot did a lot to keep him from getting too bored or cooped up, which was very nice of him. It was also clear to Merlinite that the Royal Knight was not treating him like a pet, but as a house guest, which was more kindness than he could really ask for.

When he came out at night, he tried to stick close to Camelot. Sometimes, though, the two took separate patrol paths, though, and tonight was one of those night. Merlinite was looking for something to do, some way to help the White Moon and pay a little of the debt he had toward them back. It meant patrolling, but not like he was used to.

He was not out here looking for starseeds or energy, and he had no intention of attacking any senshi or knights for a cause he did not believe in. Though he was still of the Negaverse, a General technically in rank, he had no loyalty to Chaos any more. What he wanted to do was leave them, but he was forced to stay. That was not unusual for the Negaverse: forcing people to fight for them, to be their soldiers, to abandon their friends and families. Chaos corrupted everything, and Merlinite had not been an exception to that.

It worried him that the corruption inside him would continue to spread, and would consume him eventually. He was terrified that he would hurt all the friends he had been able to make, and prove that he had no choice but to be a tool for the Negaverse. He did not want to believe that his destiny was to be a monster.

He was drawn from his thoughts as he felt a strong aura nearby. Evil. Like his own, but not as twisted. He knew the aura without really needing to think about it, with such familiarity that it made him shudder inside. There were some things that one could never forget, even if they wanted to. He knew this aura, because it was the one person he did his best to avoid. The one person he would give anything to never see again. The person that had made him what he was, and destroyed his hope for the future.

She appeared behind him, teleporting gracefully and standing lightly on her small feet, ankles curled gently together, giving her an incredibly dainty appearance. She had a spear in her hand, but she held it loosely, almost casually, letting it tilt away from her as she stood with no visible tension in her body. Her eyes were fixed on him, and he turned slowly to face her, taking a slow breath as he looked her over.

“General Painite,” he said, not sure why he opted to include her rank. There was no love lost between them, so to speak. Or perhaps far too much. Either way, he owed her no respect, yet did not say her name with sarcasm in his tone. He watched her, his tail coiling around his legs as he remained hunched down.

She watched him passively, tilting her head to the side as she got a good look at him.

This was the first time Painite had really seen her work. That night had been such a blur, and her mind had already done a good job of pushing all those thoughts out of her consciousness. It was not a time she liked to revisit, and it had taken ages for her to be able to move on from it. To be herself again, for what it meant. There was not much of her left, beyond her anger and wickedness, but she did not like it when real emotions came in to the picture. Merlinite made her cry.

No one did that to her, not any more.

That was not why she had taken his starseed into her palm and filled it with her own Chaos, pushing him past his breaking point and turning him into the half dragon she had before him now. She wanted to take him, wanted to keep him for herself. She had fallen in love with him, and given him a part of herself that even she thought had been long lost. And what did he do to it? He betrayed her. He destroyed her. He took the few things that were good in her life, all of which were tied directly to him, and forced her to throw them away. She hated him now, because it was all she had left in her.

He destroyed the rest, and had suffered for it. But was it enough?

No.

And it never would be. Painite hated him more than she hated most others, and that was an incredible feat to accomplish. Her life was built around hatred and revenge, and she made enemies like most people made friends. It delighted her to build a list of targets, and to hunt and play with her prey until they were broken not just in body, but mind as well. Her currency was scars, and in that she was rich and yet extremely benevolent. She was all too happy to share with others. Painite hated freely and without bias: anyone that drew her attention deserved to be paid for their effort.

She thought she hated Camelot most of all, as he had been the one to try and kill her and had very nearly accomplished that goal. She did not even know that Merlinite had allied himself with the Royal Knight, actually, though if she did find that out it would not help her opinion. Either way, she felt that the current, burning, roiling anger in the pit of her stomach that flared to life at the sight of her former companion was much stronger than the kind she felt when she saw Camelot. That was duty: that was natural. They were cat and mouse, born to hate one another and living up to their roles. Merlinite had been her friend, her kind. And he left her.

Painite did not like being abandoned.

Now, though, she was watching him with a terrible calm, and he knew the thoughts that were running through her mind.

“Painite,” he said, again, this time with a stronger voice. He stood, much taller than her not just because he was standing on the railing of the roof, and she was not, but because being turned into this half youma form of his had given him a few more inches to his already fairly tall frame. He loomed, and she was not intimidated in the slightest, looking up at him like he was made out of cotton and fluff.

Merlinite had gotten used to people being afraid of him when they saw him, but this reaction, he realized, was worse. He kind of wished she would be afraid of him, like everyone else, so she might seem a little more normal. There was a human inside her, he knew that. He had seen it. When she was so weak and vulnerable, barely surviving her fight with Camelot, and he had been taking care of her… he saw how gentle and sweet she could be. Who she must have been before Chaos had its hold of her. Now, though, he only saw Chaos. There was no Gently left, and it was hard to him to realize that there had not been much of her before he found her. It was that short time that had been the fluke, the mistake. She showed him her vulnerability on accident and he wondered if that played into how much she hated him now. She did not fear him, no. If anything, it was quite the opposite.

Merlinite was terrified of her, and it felt pathetic in context. She was so small and innocent looking… but everyone knew better than to take that at face value these days. And she did not try to play to that, knowing who and what she was. If nothing else, she was at least true to herself, and to everyone around her, in her way.

Not really an endearing trait.

“Look at you,” Painite breathed, shaking her head slowly and taking a step toward him. He had nowhere to go, and could not step back like his instincts told him to do. She continued forward, until she was close enough to reach a hand up. She could not quite reach his face, but she held her hand up toward him and looked at him expectantly. Hesitating a moment, he slowly climbed down from the railing, so she could touch his face. Her hand was cold against his skin, which was not exactly warm these days at the best of time. It made him shudder as her fingers traced over the scales on his face, making their way up to his curled horns and exploring them with gentle touches. Merlinite had no sensation in his horns, but her touch still made him shut his eyes and shiver.

“You’re lovely,” Painite said, her voice shaking, “you’re so lovely. Oh why did you run away from me? My Merlinite… come back with me. Please. Be mine again.”

He pulled back from her, clambering less than gracefully back up onto the ledge, where he felt safer despite how precarious it was. He looked at her, eyes blazing, but his burning eyes were stinging with tears.

“I am not yours! You destroyed me, Painite. You made me a monster and took away my one chance at being what I was supposed to be. Now I’m stuck being this… whatever this is! A youma! I’ll probably end up a full one because of what you did. Just because you didn’t want to lose me?! That’s what you said. You wanted to keep me. I’m not yours to keep, and you had no right to try! I knew you were crazy, everyone does, but I never thought you would do that to me! How can you ask me to come back to that? To the horrors you think are so fun? I might look like this, but you’re the real monster. I shouldn’t have to hide and be afraid! You should be the one that’s chased and hated!You should be the one that suffers, instead of always being the one that has to torture others. I should never have gotten involved with you! I should never have saved you”

Painite watched him as he ranted, eyes on his face for the most part, though sometimes his wing spread out and she found herself unable not to look at it.

She did not miss any of his words, though.

“How long have you been practicing all that? You think about it before you go to sleep, I imagine, hiding wherever you’re hiding. That’s sweet. In a way, we’re sleeping together. I think about you, too, you know, at night. When I’m alone. But not all that. Not so mean. I just want you to come home.”

“You’re… you’re evil.”

Merlinite was not sure she even heard herself, most of the time, when she was speaking like that. He had seen her get into this kind of state before, quiet and vicious. Speaking in an almost normal tone, but there was nothing kind or gentle in her. Any moment she would snap, and she would attack him without restraint or regret. She was teasing him, pulling at his emotions, saying all the right things to send his emotions reeling.

She was under his skin.

He leaped off the roof, his muscular legs pushing him an impressive distance before he fell to a lower roof, some distance down the block. She teleported after him, cutting the length between them in a heartbeat, and appearing beside him. He snarled and turned on her, like a cat, down on all fours and coiling his body in a purely animalistic way. He lashed out at her with his massive claws.

Painite was surprised by his ferocity, not expecting it. He had always been a little on the cowardly side, after all, and he never had the guts to stand up to her when he was a Captain. Now, as a youma of her creation, he decided to get some balls and fight against her? She would never understand him, and had no real desire to anymore. He was just another target, though he deserved the worst she could give him. He might have been her number one target, but he was still just another face in the crowd now.

Well, not literally.

He would be pretty easy to spot.

Painite teleported again, managing to avoid his swipe, reappearing on his other side with her spear in hand. She let out a screech as she hauled her spear up, gripping it in both hands before she stabbed it at him. He hissed at her, moving with surprising speed to curl around the spear head, avoiding damage from it and cutting his own path closer to her, instead of running away. No, this was a fight he needed. Maybe he had been wanting it, without even knowing. Whatever the case, he was not going to run away from it now.

Leaping up at her, Merlinite raked his claws forward and grabbed on to her shoulders, digging the claws in as he hauled himself up and brought his one clawed foot forward. He managed to land a solid kick to her midsection as he continued with his forward momentum, hauling her backwards and off her feet even as she wanted to double up and fall forward instead. She slammed into the rooftop hard on her back, Merlinite landing on top of her. He sank his claws into her shoulders, but it was his clawed foot she had to worry about most. He slammed it down into her gut with the force of their landing, clenching his toes in preparation of ripping her open.

If he was doomed to be a youma, then he was going to at least fight her like one. Show her what she created.

His foot slammed into solid roofing, though, just as he clenched his claws and dragged them across what should have been her body, managing to create a deep line in the rooftop and even set off a few sparks from the contact. He was no longer holding on to her shoulders, instead standing alone on all fours, looking around wildly for his prey. She had teleported again, but this time she did not reappear, and he could not feel her aura.

There was no way this was over. She had to be biding her time, hiding from him: he knew her too well to expect anything else. He remained tense, snarling as he sniffed at the air, straining his ears and eyes, searching for any sign of her coming attack.

And he knew it was coming.