i want your potential

Tom Marvolo Riddle

the dark lord
Inactive
Jul 19, 2015
1,892
portland, oregon
mantacarlos.tumblr.com
Pronouns
he/him/his
It was fascinating to Valentine-- how much he'd forced himself to grow, too exhausted with his previous lifestyle. Everything he experienced these days was something new to him, either shiny or discomforting, but he squared his shoulders and pretended it came naturally. No, no, not in a million years. He was artificially grown, but passionately maintained, like a well oiled machine.

He was putting all his current efforts towards setting up the Afterlife Resource Institute, acting as though he'd been born to do this. God, he hadn't, but he'd sooner crucify himself than let that hold him back. There was a certain pride that had to be lived up to, and a need to be someone important. He'd be left behind, otherwise. Twenty-one, and he was already nervous about the younger generation stealing from him! Nobody was going to give him the right to be relevant, so he needed to built from scratch, create a reason for it. Past claiming I'm the Death horseman, the fucking Grim Reaper with little other than an aura and powerful necromancy ability to his name. He couldn't reap, was still horribly sick, didn't have any destiny helpfully laid out for him.

So he was taking shots in the dark. But even without his title in mind, this was something he was dedicated to. Death magic, and showing encouragement rather than shame towards it and anyone involved? He held that very dear. He didn't think of it as a joke. He wanted to bring individuals and their specialties together so they could accomplish more. Manta Carlos was full of untapped potential in this area, currently unorganized where it could be far more. Honestly, he wanted to study everything up close, and this gave him quite the excuse and advantage to do so. To claim it was purely selfless and community focused would be wrong.

It just so happened that Val had decided being respectable got you more places than being an angst ridden teenager with a boner for casual abusive behavior did.

It took hard work to move away from that, and he wasn't about to forget about his origins and play pompous. He'd been reaching out to the people in his field because they were what would help this flourish. A lot were already long graduated scholars, drifting reapers, undead that felt alone.

But today, he was popping in to visit a student. That wouldn't be so unusual if it was a simple case of offering them a place for comfort and growth of skills with peers. And he would be offering that. But he also happened to want to secure this young man for the institute's own sake. Florentin Blanchett. In the top ranks of his classes, with a near silly amount of eagerness to spare. Always trying to make a grab for the best books and whatever the Academy had to offer in terms of necromancy. From what Val heard, he was bright. From what Val saw, he was hardworking. The latter was the truly special quality, not one to be taken lightly.

And not to be forgotten, not by Val's curiosity, he was from a well known line of healers. Most of the riff raff at the school wouldn't recognize surnames or gossip the way Val did, but he'd been born here to a famed, wealthy magical family of his own. He knew. Whenever he heard the name, it was impossible to avoid thinking of. If more had known, they might've been baffled, but Val knew magic like this was two sides of the same coin. Necromancy and healing? Hilariously similar, one just had considerable ambition added, and often took away some of your skills with the lighter pursuit. That anyone would look at them and not connect the dots seemed pathetic. And if Val ever had the chance, he wanted to learn about Florentin's transition. It wasn't something you heard about every day, despite sounding so fitting.

Val had high hopes when he arrived to Florentin's current residence that day, a very pretty villa. He had a bag at his side with information on CARI to look over, and was dressed in his usual professional but not overdone look, sunglasses on, cane at his side. He rang the doorbell, and was soon escorted to a sitting room, casually examining the household as he went. After that, he waited patiently, legs neatly crossed, gloved hands laced together on his lap.

 

Poppy

Well-Known Member
Inactive
Mar 18, 2015
3,930
Valentine Crowther. Any Islander with two ears knew of Valentine Crowther. The rumors that floated a few years back weren't pretty. Every time he heard them, Florentin always felt sorry for the Crowthers for having such disgraceful, pathetic excuse of a son. More over, those same rumors made Florentin feel good about himself. Despite his darker inclinations, Florentin had always been prided as a trophy child. Brilliant mind, pretty looks, perfect manners. The Blanchetts adored him, and other families envied him.

Over the years, their fortunes flipped. Valentine rose like a phoenix, graduated college, found out a magical destiny laid out for him, and, from what he was hearing, was starting a death-related business. Meanwhile, Florentin... fell out of favor. He was now the family disgrace, half-disowned, chronically ill, and stuck in a rut ever since he'd been forced out of the estate.

Florentin was still enthusiastic, but the death magic and the pursuit of it drained and drained on him more. What he had once loved was starting to become a point of resentment. At times, before he slept at night, he wondered if he could have the magic expunged from his system completely. Maybe he should abandon his pride and crawl back to the Blanchetts, beg them to give him another chance. There were no rewards in this life. He wasn't a hero. All it gave him were shaky, bloody hands and a body count that got higher and higher. I'm sorry, I'm sorry, I'm sorry.

Of course, Florentin was bitter. All Valentine had to was patch things up with his mother just a little, and he got a shiny business out of it. Valentine didn't even graduate with any related magic degrees. He took Politics. Even with Florentin being the one actually taking Necromancy, he just knew Valentine's star was going to shine bigger and brighter than his.

Regardless of his bitterness, he was going to welcome him. Connections were connections, and in his current state, he couldn't afford to turn him down. He had to do this. He needed some leverage. Florentin was born on top, and he could barely stand being at the bottom like this. Perhaps if he sucked up to Valentine, his research would take a turn for the better, return that initial zeal he had for it.

When Sasha informed him that Valentine was already here, Florentine finished dressing up. He wanted to wear a suit at first, but found that he looked awfully juvenile in it. He settled for a loose fitting white button up paired up with slacks and an adorable black ribbon.

"Hello, Mr. Crowther," he greeted him with a smile. He sat down at the couch, gesturing for Sasha to get them some tea. He folded his hands into his lap. He couldn't melt into the role of a charismatic host, wasn't in the mood for it, but he could do polite and gracious. "Thank you for visiting me. This is about CARI, is it not? I would like to hear your proposal."
 

Tom Marvolo Riddle

the dark lord
Inactive
Jul 19, 2015
1,892
portland, oregon
mantacarlos.tumblr.com
Pronouns
he/him/his
It'd been a while since Valentine had been in school, around half a year, and he'd hardly ever had the chance to take a closer look at Florentin even back then. Val wasn't known for his history of a rich Academy social life, focused more on getting in and out, and before that, being a gloomy, prickly little jerk. What recognition and watchfulness he'd had in terms of other warlocks was done from the quiet sidelines.

He took the opportunity to do so now, instead, giving the younger boy a once over and feeling at the magic around him. He had a very solid aura, Val found, similar to his own. That was promising. He couldn't count the times he'd come across individuals that claimed talent for his field, but who felt as pleasant and unthreatening as a fucking flower garden. Doing or being made from extensive death magic was likely to have a toll on you, physically, mentally, or in terms of how you interacted with the world around you. It was morbid, but that was what you signed up for, and Val was personally more likely to take people seriously when their existance responded realistically to what they'd undertaken.

Now, entirely petty and unrelated to anything else, Val still happened to be a recent twenty-one year old, and that meant he put aside a moment to let his heart skip a beat at Florentin's appearance. Pretty, pretty thing, highly reminiscent of the delicate girls he chased after as a teenager, distracting himself between their thighs. All features were ideal, the bow was undeniably endearing, and Val swore he could smell what seemed to be lilies. On a more significant note, Florentin's eyes left the slightest jarring impression, especially in comparison to all that. What a color. The artist in Val was absorbed in it immediately.

He pushed the musings aside, deciding to experiment with mixing his paints later. Val was very about professionalism, and not about to waste Florentin's time away by dragging out leering at him, despite being careful not to show it. He was stoic enough to get away with these things, but that didn't mean he should. He nodded amicably to Florentin, ghost of a smile on his own face, which was considered the epitome of friendly in Val's book. "Good afternoon, Mr. Blanchett, I hope your day has left you well thus far? Now, pleasantries aside--" He murmured a quiet thank you to the help when given tea, then returned his attention to Florentin, intent. "You've heard of it, then? My work must be paying off. Yes, that's an entirely correct assumption."

Val paused and tapped his lip before he went on, inhaling as he prepared himself to sell this to Florentin. "I'm of the opinion that my organization would strongly benefit from your presence. You're at the top of your classes in the Academy, and the teachers I've recently checked in with speak of you with excessive praise, in terms of your intelligence and dedication to your major. You've had papers published already, despite being an undergrad, which I've read."

He took a sip of tea. "I'd like to offer you a position and research funding at the institute, if you're open to the concept. Details can be discussed, and while being a student means you'd have a part time spot with us currently, I don't have a doubt we'd welcome you full time after graduation. The research and necromancy departments are my main interests for you, though you'd be starting with research. Thoughts?"
 

Poppy

Well-Known Member
Inactive
Mar 18, 2015
3,930
Florentin picked up the cup of tea and took careful sips as he listened to Valentine talk, watching him carefully. Idly, he thought about Valentine's appearance. Last time he checked, Valentine wasn't much older than him, but with his current look, he appeared much older than him and Sasha combined even.

He had some disillusionment, it was true, but he wasn't surprised to hear that his professors spoke well of him and recommended him to Valentine. He wasn't as fancy as a reaper or a horseman, but that was why he fought harder than the others to get where he was. Often, he found them too complacent in their positions. It repulsed him, really.

Now, for this proposal. Florentin gave it some thought. Truth be told, he never imagined Necromancy as a career. He'd always been raised as the Head of the Blanchett estate, so he thought about Necromancy as nothing but an engaging hobby, but now he wasn't so sure. It was more likely he wouldn't even be a Blanchett at all. He deflated for a bit, settling his saucer and tea cup on his lap. "That's quite the offer. I apologize for this reaction. It is... purely a personal issue, I assure you. I've been feeling under the weather lately. But all of this sounds very lovely, and something I believe the island sorely needs."

Necromancer and researcher. Full time. It wasn't going to pay for his indulgent lifestyle, but it was surely preferable to most jobs here. Florentin had to remind himself that CARI was still new... and that Clarence was Head of the Crowther Estate, not Valentine. Valentine didn't have the best reputation up until this point. Surely, he wouldn't begrudge Florentin for having his suspicions. He was in danger of getting conned or, worse, bumbling incompetence.

Still, research funding sounded promising. Even with his money, he'd rather have money and facilities specifically allocated to help with his work. He flashed a smile at him. "I would like to see how the facility functions and do some work as a part-time researcher for now. If I am satisfied with how things are being ran, I will tell you, and perhaps take on more work. I apologize for the wishy-washy response. You understand, CARI is still fairly new. I haven't seen enough to deem it a desirable workplace."
 

Tom Marvolo Riddle

the dark lord
Inactive
Jul 19, 2015
1,892
portland, oregon
mantacarlos.tumblr.com
Pronouns
he/him/his
Valentine nodded patiently, not looking to pry into Florentin's personal matters. "Ah, I'm sorry. Illness is hardly ever pleasant, especially when you're hands on in our work." He sipped at his tea again while waiting for any signs of approval or disapproval, gaze steady. It was possible Val would never adjust to this. Proper scheduled meetings and serious adult talks. It was very far from the little cursed boy indeed. Perhaps he should stop lingering on it, clear oddity or not, but that was still difficult. If not adjust, he needed to be able to shrug it off, never show his clumsy side.

He sighed lightly and smiled back at Florentin, admittedly both relieved and pleased by his reply, and being mindful to show gratitude. "Thank you so much for considering it. I'd be happy to give you a tour myself. Please, there's absolutely no need to apologize, that's all quite understandable. I wouldn't expect anything less, and I'm welcome to any observations. At CARI, if there is anything I can do to help accommodate you, simply say the word and I'll do my best, within reason. If you have questions currently, as well, I can answer them."

With a short pause, Val realized they'd nearly run out of business to discuss, and would soon return to the pleasantries. Instead of ordinary small talk, he preferred the topic of Florentin's magic. "I think… I am very interested to see you assisting with active necromancy related projects, rather than only schoolwork. It can make all the difference. And I find that coordinating the studies in groups tends to be better outside of school." He snorted. "The people aren't as… sullen? How do I put it… No offense to your classmates, of course, but even in college, the atmosphere was different than that of something like CARI."

"My point being, you should shine the most around those as bright and invested as you are, and when being fully encouraged." He tapped his lip. "The teachers are lovely, but you could be bigger than a classroom, even now. No need to be trapped there."
 

Poppy

Well-Known Member
Inactive
Mar 18, 2015
3,930
Florentin stared at him with his head tilted, as if trying to make sense of what Valentine was saying. It was, no doubt, a gracious response, but it was too gracious for someone of Florentin's standing. What did it mean? Was CARI so understaffed that the CEO had to go out of its way to accommodate an undergrad? That made Florentin nervous. He gave Valentine a wobbly 'maybe', but right then, it felt like a 'maybe not'.

Then again, perhaps it would go well. There was a noticeable demand for a death resource researcher, and Valentine... was not known to be socially adept. Valentine was a scholar. Florentin knew, because his professors viewed him with admiration. But running a business? This was entirely out of his known capabilities.

"Right." Florentin smiled, as sweet as he looked. "I'll let you know if anything comes up, Mr. Crowther. Or would you prefer boss?"

At the next line of conversation, Florentin covered his mouth and coughed a laugh. "Perhaps I could intern at the necromancy department, then. I certainly need it before I graduate. As for the rest... while I'm thankful for your confidence in my skills, I'm hardly qualified to be working as a legal necromancer, considering I'm an undergrad. I know you're talented yourself, but you must understand that the rest of us here need to complete their studies before playing around with those things. You should be aware of that, because it could save you millions of dollars from a potential lawsuit." Was that a too sharp? Perhaps. But this was business, and Valentine shouldn't play around with it. A little harshness now could save him later.

Still, Florentin wasn't that cruel. It was obvious Valentine was interested in his work. Florentin welcomed every opportunity to ramble about it to people that understood what it was.

"I can show you the research I've done in my spare time. Please hold on." Florentin stood up, nodded at Valentine, and made his way to the basement. He returned shortly with a pile of folders, sitting next to Valentine now rather than across him. "I haven't done any real raising myself, but I've done a lot of research. This is for changing organs into instruments, this is for bounding the soul to inanimate objects, this is for switching bodies should the original host body be badly damaged. I think opening up options aside from the original body could greatly diversify and benefit the art. Please — feel free to peruse."
 

Tom Marvolo Riddle

the dark lord
Inactive
Jul 19, 2015
1,892
portland, oregon
mantacarlos.tumblr.com
Pronouns
he/him/his
[tom=http://i.imgur.com/OxKuqIp.png, #483d8b]"Mr. Crowther or Valentine is fine," Valentine said, then quieting again with an intent stare as he listened to Florentin. Now, he wasn't exactly changing his tone, but Val would have to be an absolute idiot to miss the warning. He knew this sort of doubt would come up, so he didn't shrink away.

"There's still more you can see and learn out of class without stepping on legal toes, Florentin," Val noted with a hum. "You can't raise any corpses at random, no, certainly not, but that isn't the only way you can be of assistance to these things, and you'd be fully supervised." Considering Florentin with a neutral gaze, he debated saying more. No, he wasn't that person, or at least… he didn't need to be.

The part of him that craved confrontation, not allowing others to pull shit with him, was to be left for special occasions. Reacting with his own sharpness wouldn't show leadership, it'd show insecurity. This wasn't danger, this was something he was going to be hearing a lot of, and he needed to get used to deflecting without acting like a huffy spoiled brat. If it were to escalate, it'd be a problem and he'd keep an eye on that possibility, but currently, the only reason it'd make Val nervous was… because Florentin was his age, Val wanted to win him over, and being condescended to with both factors in mind to was embarrassing.

Some things were more important than minor embarrassment, and he was sure he would've shown similar doubt if approached with this offer while in school. Swim or fucking drown, Valentine Crowther. "Thank you for your concern, but it shouldn't be an issue, and I think seeing how we work in person will reassure you," he told Florentin, tone smooth and unthreatened, not inviting additional comments.

Personal research. That was a relieving switch of topic, and something Valentine was highly invested in. What a necromancer did on their own time was highly informative of their abilities and intentions. He flashed a smile at Florentin when he came back and sat beside him, then focused his attention on the folders, nodding along with the explanations until…

"That one," Valentine said, a little breathless, reaching out to tap the folder on body-switching. "I'd like to read it, I mean. Necromancy is already such a complicated magic, and introducing a fully unfamiliar container into the mix is something most are very clumsy with, not to mention afraid of. But I agree. The benefits can't be ignored." He took the folder from Florentin to open and check out, instantly absorbed. "See, this sort of bravery-- that's what I like. We can't move anywhere without it."

He laughed quietly. "I value tradition, as well, but... magic isn't stale, nor completely separate from science. Plenty of people think it is, and don't care to consider anything else." His voice had grown softer, more talking to himself on the last note.[/tom]
 

Poppy

Well-Known Member
Inactive
Mar 18, 2015
3,930
Florentin had many more notes and papers he accumulated from his research as The Mad Doctor, but it looked like Valentine found one that interested him. That was a good one. Successful. When Logan came to his house that night, he asked him for a favor, and Florentin was then paid with inspiration. The Butcher's container was an overwhelming success.

Florentin stacked the rest of the folders to the side and leaned on the arm chair, peeking into the contents and checking if anything was out of place. He had nothing to fear from the folders. These were the ones he planned on incorporating into his more formally academic research. Knowledge had no morality! The folder had no mentions of Billy or Logan, or the gruesome state Billy's body was in. They were simply spotless deductions on a hot topic in the field of Necromancy.

"Please. It's yours if you'd like. I have copies of it on my laptop. I put them in folders for backup and accessibility purposes." He nodded with regards to the rest of Valentine's statement. "I agree. Saying magic is an unchanging art from the Middle Ages would be like saying science from the time still holds truth. Necromancy is morbid, I admit, but it's not necessarily evil. It's a field of study, just like anything else. If more mages decide to treat it as seriously as healing or love potions, then Manta Carlos's medical system would be far more impressive than what it is today. Who says life has to end with death?"

Ah... he got a little passionate there. He blushed. "Forgive my ramblings. The Blanchetts, my family, have no respect for my studies, despite the glowing reviews of my professors. I suppose I got carried away now that I know someone actually puts a value to it."