youwill: (who's hungry?)
Hannibal Lecter ([personal profile] youwill) wrote2014-02-26 02:14 pm

🍴 ( 009 ) Video

[Hannibal is seated at his desk, the camera balanced against something there: he is dressed in a tux, legs crossed, a glass of champagne in his hand. He sips it gracefully.]

Consider the ortolan.

[He smiles faintly, as if it's a joke he knows no one will realize.]

It was the practice of certain gourmets to eat these small birds for centuries. A rite of passage, of sorts, where one must hunt but not kill. Capture it alive and keep it so, for a time. It was best to blind the bird, placing it in a small cage filled with grain. Its reaction to the darkness is to gorge itself. If you were particularly thoughtful, you would add oats and figs to this diet as well. Once it had fattened itself, these gourmets would drown it in brandy - Armagnac, preferably. On high heat, roast it whole for six to eight minutes.

There is a tradition for consumption as well; of course there is. You would place a cloth over your head, to contain the aroma, to make it last, but also to hide your soon-to-be atrocity from God.

[He smiles again.]

Place the bird in your mouth, with only its beak escaping your lips. Bite down, and place the beak in your place. Chew slowly. Savor it. There is the sweetness of the flesh and fat, the brandy and the fig you have forced it to eat: this is God in all His wonder, from whom you must hide this act. I wonder if they tasted shame, too. Next there is the bitterness of untended innards, of organs uncleaned: this is the suffering of the Son, His blood on your tongue. It will soon be joined by your own, as your teeth crack hollow bones, as those bones slice your gums. Your blood, the sweetness, the bitterness - this is the Holy Spirit, and the Trinity come together in one mouth. A rite of passage, a mystery revealed.

It is terribly cruel. And terribly delicious.

[Spam for Ned]

[Shortly after his post, Hannibal heads for the pub sans champagne but still wearing his tux, and knocks at the door. He's already begun the set up, but there is one thing he still requires.]

[Open Gallery Spam on the Deck]

[Hannibal has been hard at work. With little to do between death tolls and less to occupy himself, he has been drawing. Mal was kind enough to supply him with tools enough for his art, though his pencils are never quite sharp enough without a scalpel to do the job. When he has finished, there is only one thing to do with his art.

Setting up takes time, but he goes as quickly as he can manage: Mal requested presentation dividers, which makes it feel just professional enough to satisfy Hannibal. The sketches and portraits are spaced out on the deck, providing plenty of room to walk around and observe. There is a small table near the pub entrance with glasses of champagne, and a very serious pie maker making certain that nobody does anything untoward to the champagne.

Hannibal himself can be found wandering through the little corridors he's made, observing his art on occasion but mostly observing those who have come to look.

It's opening night.]



(Hannibal is paraphrasing from Brendan Kiley's The Urban Hunt.)
fridgetothefire: (professional)

[personal profile] fridgetothefire 2014-03-04 03:56 am (UTC)(link)
It was awful.

[Frank, not maudlin.]

Did you expect something less monstrous?

[personal profile] gard 2014-03-04 03:57 am (UTC)(link)
No. I expected something less honest.

[ She's impressed him. ]
fridgetothefire: (intense)

[personal profile] fridgetothefire 2014-03-04 05:58 am (UTC)(link)
Learning to be honest with myself was - one of the hardest parts.

With other people it's just keeping up good habits.

[personal profile] gard 2014-03-04 07:41 pm (UTC)(link)
I understand.

[ He does, actually. Honesty with himself is the only thing he's ever reliably had: he sure can't be honest with anyone else. ]

It's a rare skill.
fridgetothefire: (precision)

[personal profile] fridgetothefire 2014-03-04 08:50 pm (UTC)(link)
It's less painful than the alternative, in the long run.

[And she's a pragmatist.]

[personal profile] gard 2014-03-05 04:22 pm (UTC)(link)
Kind of a cynical way to phrase it.
fridgetothefire: (poised)

[personal profile] fridgetothefire 2014-03-05 05:50 pm (UTC)(link)
How so? Honesty hurts.

The fact that it's worth it seems to me not cynical at all.

[personal profile] gard 2014-03-06 04:05 am (UTC)(link)
Well, you say you're avoiding the worse alternative. What I see is you're picking the better one.
fridgetothefire: (scrutinize)

[personal profile] fridgetothefire 2014-03-08 09:55 am (UTC)(link)
Mmm. Life is suffering, as the Buddhists say. But I've gotten attached anyway.

[She swirls her remaining champagne contemplatively.]

I've been deeply cynical for most of my life. I'm not surprised at myself for defaulting to that phrasing, but it isn't - indicative of my current perspective.

[personal profile] gard 2014-03-10 03:20 am (UTC)(link)
It is not suffering. That's like saying space is dark.
fridgetothefire: (conversational)

[personal profile] fridgetothefire 2014-03-10 03:28 am (UTC)(link)
So, it only looks that way when you're going through it?

[She's teasing. Mostly.]
Edited 2014-03-10 03:28 (UTC)

[personal profile] gard 2014-03-10 03:30 am (UTC)(link)
[ A little smile. ]

It's the source of all the light in the universe.
fridgetothefire: (hope at the bottom of the box)

[personal profile] fridgetothefire 2014-03-10 02:57 pm (UTC)(link)
[It's a lovely way to think of it; she thinks of everything she's found here - all the light in the suffering - and smiles soft and pure.]

I wonder if that's true in every world.

Guess we'll have to check.

[personal profile] gard 2014-03-10 05:16 pm (UTC)(link)
Might take a while.

[ But that's the kind of checking he sure does like to do. ]