If it would make you feel any better, feel free to fictionally ruin the lives of a few of my characters.
Raiker Venn was bored. He wasn’t through writing tragedy, of course. Not by a long shot. But sometimes, when you live as long as Raiker Venn had, you need to do something to alleviate the tedium. Today, it was a coin flip.
“And that’s all there is to it?” She asked him, her eyes quivering a bit.
Raiker smiled. “That is all. I flip a coin, you call it, and we see what happens.”
“I don’t know,” she said glancing to her side.
“I will not use magic,” he assured her with a smirk. “And the coin is true. You may inspect it yourself, if you wish.”
He flipped her the coin, and she examined it carefully, running a discerning eye over every measurable span of its golden surface. It was real. She sighed, and tossed it back to him.
“So the deal is…”
“You know the deal,” Raiker interrupted, mildly annoyed. “If you win, I open up a portal for you, to anywhere you wish. If you lose…”
Raiker Venn let the words hang in the air, and she didn’t do anything to break that silence. She knew what she was risking. But she just couldn’t live like this anymore. And if she lost, maybe she could defend herself. Maybe she could defend them both…
“What do you get out of this?” She asked suddenly.
Raiker considered this question. He took longer than he meant to. “If you lose the flip, I get a profoundly tragic poem.”
“And if I win?”
Raiker glanced to the side, to the same spot where she had glanced moments before. “Let us simply say that even I do not wish for everything to be tragic.”
She didn’t know why, but something in his voice rang true to her, and profoundly so. A tear came to her eyes, but she blinked it away. “Okay, Raiker. It’s a deal.”
Raiker nodded, but didn’t smile. Solemnly, he flipped the coin.
“Tails,” she said.
Raiker caught the coin and immediately turned it over onto his wrist. For a very long moment, he stared at her, and she at him. He didn’t lift his hand, or drop his eyes, he merely stared into her eyes. Finally, slowly, he raised his wrist up, shifted his hand, and looked. Then he stared again, this time at the coin, which was blocked from her view by his hand. Her heart stopped beating as she waited for him to speak. After an agonizing moment, Raiker lifted his eyes and met her gaze again, then scooped up the coin in his hand.
“Where would you like to go?” He asked flatly.
She grinned, broadly. “I won?” She said, barely daring to believe it.
Raiker paused for a moment, then nodded once. “You won.”
She immediately fell to the ground and wrapped her arms around the little girl sleeping soundly in her bed. After a long, long moment, Tryst looked up at the Poet, joyous tears in her eyes. “How can I ever thank you?”
Raiker looked down at the little girl and swallowed. “Thank me?” He thought for a moment, and then shook his head. “Never tell her about me.” Tryst looked up at him, confused. “Never mention me. Never tell her my name. That is more than enough thanks for me.”