and discovering other peoples' weaknesses.
Patience. While Mercury certainly had her lines of frustration and temperament, she liked to think that her ability to be painstakingly patient was one of her best honed skills. She knew how to wait, how to sew seeds, how to misdirect and play the game without tipping her hand. However, it had been some time since she’d ever tested such skills against an opponent like Maker, if she ever had before; one who could keep up with her in nearly every aspect. Every move she made had to be done with careful precision in order to not lead him on to the fact that she wasn’t quite who she said she was. Thankfully, she was fairly confident in the behavior that Maker expected of her. That was to say, she knew that he expected her to get into some trouble and to test her limits, and he also expected her to be able to pull the occasional fast one over him sooner or later. The hardest part about her mission was keeping him feeling like he was the one in control and finding subtle ways to let him believe that he had been able to keep track of everything she was doing at any given time, while also believing that she was completely unaware he was doing so. Mercury knew that he had ways of monitoring her clone while she was in his bunker. He had several layers of security throughout the building, some of which were rather elementary – at least by their standards. The average Earthlander would likely have a hard time finding all of them, but someone with the technological aptitude of Maker and Mercury could track them down in their sleep, and as such she knew he expected her to be aware of those. However, he had several other measures of security that were hidden behind many other layers of encryptions, ones that were so heavily protected that she was confident he felt she would never find them. And it was with this platform from which she started laying the groundwork for earning his trust. Or rather, letting his trust in his ability to control her completely solidify. Mercury had played along thus far with the errands and tasks he asked her to run, collecting this and that at his behest or assisting with projects here and there under his watchful eye. However, as the months went on he continued to loosen the slack on her leash more and more, at least in terms of while she was inside the hideout. He knew she would snoop; in fact, she knew he was counting on her to do so, wanting to see where she would poke around and likely not altogether concerned with what she might find. As she came to understand as time moved along, anything that he truly wished to hide he simply had not kept at this particular location, especially Knowhere and any evidence of the mysterious power he had used to destroy Vandrad’s magical core. But, that didn’t stop her from looking. If anything, he would likely be more suspicious of her not snooping for such things. Thus did she allow herself to test the limits of what she could get away with further and further as the days went by, seemingly growing more confident in her ability to peek around when she supposedly thought he wasn’t looking. Before long there were even times that he would leave her within the confines of the bunker by herself for extended periods, and it was during these times that she laid the heaviest ground work: there were times he would observe her poking around and being pleased or even smug about her results… however, there were also times where she allowed herself to be seen as frustrated, angry… even morose. She needed to help him build an idea of who she was when she felt he wasn’t looking, and if she was going to take steps at all to convince him that he was in complete control, then more than anything he needed to see her vulnerable – something she allowed herself to be with increasing frequency, to the point that when she was alone she would seem to be… disinterested in most things. Hopeless. Resigned. It had been going well enough for a while now, or so she felt, but the time had come to take another step, to shake the cage just the smallest bit to see what the fruits of her labor would loosen. Maker – or rather Eriladar, as she had recently come to learn – had left her unsupervised for a while that day, and it would be the first day that Mercury simply didn’t even attempt to poke around while he was gone. Instead, once she had finished up with the small handful of tasks he’d given her, she passed the time on a couch in one of the few lounging areas of the bunker that was designed for at least mild comfort rather than work, where there was a television that had access to a small selection of movies and shows. She spent an hour or two flipping through streams, never staying on one long enough to fully get invested. Finally, with a sigh, she simply turned the device off and sat there for a while. After a few moments of uneventful silence, Mercury stirred once more and this time she did something she hadn’t done since being brought back to life: she used her magic. Maker had never removed the wristbands that had supposedly kept her magical abilities suppressed, and she’d never shown any signs of removing them or canceling out their abilities. Today, however, she stood to her feet and moved to an area of the room that had a bit of open space. With the flick of her wrist she conjured an electric keyboard piano, the instrument materializing along with a metal bench for her to sit on and a small floor speaker for the sound to play from. She sat at the bench and idly played a few keys, not really creating any kind of tune rather than just hearing the instrument’s sound. It had been close to half a year since she’d played. Technically longer than that, if one counted the near year that she had been dead before her resurrection at Maker’s hands, so she allowed herself an almost tender moment to reacquaint herself with the musical device. After a moment, she straightened herself out and began to play for real, pulling out a song at random and playing, the tune rather orchestral in design and of intermediate complexity. It was only after she’d been playing a couple of songs for several minutes that she shifted gears. Picking a single note, she began to play it in a steady rhythm until her voice finally joined the ensemble. ♫“I will have to die for this, I fear There's rage and terror and there's sickness here I fight because I have to I fight for us to know the truth There's not enough rope to tie me down There's not enough tape to shut this mouth The stones you throw can make me bleed But I won't stop until we're free Wild hearts can't be broken No, wild hearts can't be broken This is my rally cry I know it's hard, we have to try This is a battle I must win To want my share is not a sin There's not enough rope to tie me down There's not enough tape to shut this mouth The stones you throw can make me bleed But I won't stop until we're free Wild hearts can't be broken No, wild hearts can't be broken You beat me, betray me You're losing, we're winning My spirit above me You cannot deny me My freedom is burning This broken world keeps turning I'll never surrender There's nothing, but a victory There's not enough rope to tie me down There's not enough tape to shut this mouth The stones you throw can make me bleed But I won't stop until we're free Wild hearts can't be broken Wild hearts can't be broken This wild heart can't be broken”♫ As the song continued on, the passion in her playing and singing increased. Yet, despite the determined words of the chorus, there was a melancholy to the way she sang. And as the piano’s notes faded, however, Mercury’s expression drifted into something more neutral, perhaps even stony. Her internal sensors had picked up the moment that Maker had walked into the room, though she had not stopped playing, nor did she now turn to look at him. “Did you need something?” she asked, the slightest touch of irritation in her voice. |