Kennedy & Tiar | Day 2, Late Night
Tiarnach hadn't expected Kennedy to actually begin to tell him what she was being asked to do. He was just so used to the siren railing against whatever he asked her to do; this mode of being forthcoming was a little shocking. All the more reason that the young man didn't interrupt, or comment in any manner. Kenny was sharing; and that meant a lot.
The merman had not been near the main hall, or any of the other high traffic areas that the attackers had hit during the last blitz. He'd heard the various rumors though; Etty always knew Veil gossip. People had seen what Kennedy had done, and were freaked. It sounded like they weren't the only ones disturbed by what the siren had done.
When his companion explained what she'd 'done' to them, Tiar felt no repulsion, or fear. They'd attacked her; attacked and harmed her sister. Those monsters would have killed them in cold blood if her Elemental powers hadn't kicked in. What the young man didn't care to hear was the way that Kenny seemed to think of herself for what she did.
Of course, hearing that this chaos game wanted her to do it again, confused the fuck out of him. Chaos was just that...chaos. In and of itself, it wasn't evil. So why was it wanting her to 'kill'? There was a look on Kennedy's face that spoke words that were as yet unsaid.
She wasn't going to do it.
Stepping forward, Tiar wrapped his hand around her upper arm and turned her toward him, "Hey, look at me." When the siren did, the merman continued, "Don't you dare be ashamed of what you did, or what you can do. Those scumbags wouldn't have felt one iota of remorse watching you bleed out on the floor, Kenny."
For a second the young man got a look on his face, before his head cocked at an angle as if he were thinking deeply on something. Chaos theory was something they studied there at Veil. It was important, because for some of them, it was intimately tied to their nature. "Something isn't right. Nothing about the players at ground zero makes me think this is true evil; and that's why it doesn't make sense that the 'game' would require something with such finality."