[ She speaks carefully, unsure whether her honest words will hurt Loki. But he deserves to hear. ]
She came to me, after she met your other self. She said she was disappointed he was not the one she remembered. But she also said she was not the Leah he would have remembered, either.
I created Leah, so they all share the same origin. But I also gave her the ability to continue her story as she chooses, so I know that each variation is a choice she's made.
To my count, there's the first Leah I wrote, who grows into Hela, who eventually breaks off into Leah the handmaiden, who then are at one point charmed to be the humans Leigh and Helen.
The Leah I knew was a refugee of a doomed reality. I know not if her origins there aligned with that of your own. When the multiverse was reformed, Leah found herself in our universe, bound once more to be a handmaiden to Hela. She wished to be free of the future prescribed to her, and so she aided me in conquering Hel.
We lived together for a time, that both spanned many years, and was over in days. In the end, she decided to pursue her own freedoms, and left our care.
[ She pauses, because she knows the next thing she has to say will be hard for Loki to hear, but hear it he must. ]
Leah loved another. A girl who was not reformed into our universe.
No, she's Leah. That doesn't change the fact that Hela was Leah, and I see no reason to blame her for my actions. I'd like to help her, rather. All of them.
I've asked Loki if it would be alright if I didn't return with the rest of you, once we figure out the nature of this dimensional spell, obvi. Instead, I want to travel to the ancient past, when stories were still new.
That's where I sent Leah before I died. She hated me for that... [Despite the subject matter, Loki's smiling as he speaks of her.] But I thought, if I went back with her, even if I couldn't be Loki anymore, at least she wouldn't be alone.
You would give up your place in the larger story for her?
[ It's the kind of hopelessly romantic thing that perhaps she should expect from a child. But then, isn't his role in the story over and done with at this point? ]
[His expression is serious and resolute, a rarity for Loki. But it’s clear he’s telling the truth and though he has the stories to prove it, he doesn’t feel the need to ramble on as he usually does. His word should be enough.]
[ It's very romantic, and earnest. But Angela worries about a boy so young devoting himself so wholly to a girl, that he would abandon all other freedoms for her. ]
And if you arrive in the distant past, and she does not care to see you? What if she does not appreciate your sacrifice?
I don't care if she hates me, she has every right to. I only... I want to make sure she's not alone. And I want to tell her that I'm sorry, and that I lied.
And once it does, Leah and I shall live happily ever after as Asgard's Number One Couple!
[He needed to do something to lighten the mood, okay.]
I actually told Ikol this before, but it's not about the kissing at all. Leah and I are... I'm not sure how to explain it. It sounds far too tropey to claim we're the only ones who truly understand each other. Still, we are fiction so perhaps it's fitting that we stick to our tropes.
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She came to me, after she met your other self. She said she was disappointed he was not the one she remembered. But she also said she was not the Leah he would have remembered, either.
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[If he did, he’d care for her the same way he does.]
I’ve met four or five Leahs. I don’t care what story she comes from, but I am a very specific story, I suppose.
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To my count, there's the first Leah I wrote, who grows into Hela, who eventually breaks off into Leah the handmaiden, who then are at one point charmed to be the humans Leigh and Helen.
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We lived together for a time, that both spanned many years, and was over in days. In the end, she decided to pursue her own freedoms, and left our care.
[ She pauses, because she knows the next thing she has to say will be hard for Loki to hear, but hear it he must. ]
Leah loved another. A girl who was not reformed into our universe.
angela i'm so sorry
don't be.
Re: don't be.
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No, it wasn't Karnilla. She is co-ruler of Hel now, having wedded Hela.
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Same as the Thor here is my brother, even if he's a thousand years or so older than the one I remember.
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That's where I sent Leah before I died. She hated me for that... [Despite the subject matter, Loki's smiling as he speaks of her.] But I thought, if I went back with her, even if I couldn't be Loki anymore, at least she wouldn't be alone.
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[ It's the kind of hopelessly romantic thing that perhaps she should expect from a child. But then, isn't his role in the story over and done with at this point? ]
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[His expression is serious and resolute, a rarity for Loki. But it’s clear he’s telling the truth and though he has the stories to prove it, he doesn’t feel the need to ramble on as he usually does. His word should be enough.]
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[ It's very romantic, and earnest. But Angela worries about a boy so young devoting himself so wholly to a girl, that he would abandon all other freedoms for her. ]
And if you arrive in the distant past, and she does not care to see you? What if she does not appreciate your sacrifice?
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This is a noble intention, Loki. I hope that you are able to see it come to fruition safely.
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[He needed to do something to lighten the mood, okay.]
I actually told Ikol this before, but it's not about the kissing at all. Leah and I are... I'm not sure how to explain it. It sounds far too tropey to claim we're the only ones who truly understand each other. Still, we are fiction so perhaps it's fitting that we stick to our tropes.
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But that feels crueler than Angela wishes to be. So it is left unsaid. ]
I do not know what you have been told, but love is not all about the kissing. There is much more to it than that.
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