If there's no one beside you when your soul embarks...
It's customary to have a Wake after the subject thereof dies. Even Loki knows that. But this is a special occasion. Ego-death is coming to his alternate, and the idea of letting him go off to perish alone, uncertain he will even be mourned, is too dark a proposition even for a flawed and callous person to contemplate.
That, and this Loki has been in a melancholy mood since speaking to the spirit of Frigga. He anticipates a dark choice of his own, sooner or later, and where the fates will send him after that, he can't know. Maybe oblivion, although even at that rate there may be worse places.
What's important right now is that no one dies unremembered. And honestly, any excuse formischief a party. The first text rolls out to Harley, an innocent enough invitation to join them for milkshakes. Cricket is next, because it occurs to him that Cricket has plenty of liquor, which is good for a reckless celebration.
Things snowball from there.
As long as they don't destroy too much property, they'll call the night a success.
That, and this Loki has been in a melancholy mood since speaking to the spirit of Frigga. He anticipates a dark choice of his own, sooner or later, and where the fates will send him after that, he can't know. Maybe oblivion, although even at that rate there may be worse places.
What's important right now is that no one dies unremembered. And honestly, any excuse for
Things snowball from there.
As long as they don't destroy too much property, they'll call the night a success.
no subject
And there is Thanos. He never forgets that possibility, which is more of an inevitability as far as he can tell.
They're getting a peculiar first impression of this Loki, then. First throwing around magic gleefully and now looking deeply worried about the state of their universe.
He's pleased they get the reference right away, and he smiles at Blaze again. "There's always something, though, isn't there? Paper covers rock, scissors cut paper, rock breaks scissors, and so on into infinity. Everyone has a weakness, and a strength, and sometimes a battle comes down to whether the hero can dodge the dragon's venom for long enough to get a blow in, rather than how well he is trained in the art of swordplay."
no subject
"Heh. Good question. Sure wasn't a natural disaster. Our true enemy has a will, but I don't know if it's a person the way we think of it. No-one alive knows what it really is. It has armies, worshipers: we've fought those. It has immense power, and we've felt that. But there's little we know for sure about the Darkness itself."
At this stage there's going to be some shock if and when they realize who they're talking to. Blaze leans heavily on first impressions, and she rather likes this guy. He's got a sense of fun, he asks smart questions, he's mindful of signs of trouble in other universes. Trying to reconcile that with a name she knows mainly from Steve Rogers' stories (and admittedly some popular legends back home) is a guarantee of cognitive dissonance, to put it mildly.
She is pretty sure he's an Asgardian though, since Thor's around and she's never met anyone else here who casually references the old tales. Absent a specific name, that buys him some extra goodwill. "Tell me about it. Some battles you're just finding out who's going to get unlucky first. But it helps if you get team-mates with a complementary skillset. Or at least a lot of second chances!"