Re: [In-person: Damian/Misha]
Damian found this impostor he had played worthy of outright disdain, yes? (Why did 'disdainful' not work in this instance, if 'pitiful' would? English was a terrible language.) The boy—and he was a boy, rather than a man—was a fool to the extreme, who clearly suffered not from neither pride nor dignity. He sought only to be the shiniest of baubles in a scene. He sought to entertain himself and nothing more, nothing deeper. So, yes, Damian did insist upon scowling as scowling was due. He was not thinking upon punishment forthcoming. Instead, he sighed and shifted, expressing his utter distaste for the occurrences unraveling before them.—Of course, he knew Misha would endure a bout of jealousy at the kiss itself. It was expected. He would have suffered similarly, if not worse. But, Damian did not see the intimacy, as he had been the one administering the kiss, and as such, he knew what it was.
Thus, Misha's comment came as a surprise. This registered still upon his face as the scene changed in a blink, and Damian's curiosity did not even distract him from his newborn outrage. "You will not," he told Misha and not kindly.