John Havelock: Difference between revisions

From Gnomon Chronicles
Jump to navigation Jump to search
No edit summary
No edit summary
Line 11: Line 11:
<blockquote>These fools come to me, two by two, and they want action now, they've got their beefs all heated up and now I'm supposed to pick one.
<blockquote>These fools come to me, two by two, and they want action now, they've got their beefs all heated up and now I'm supposed to pick one.


Most of the time I have go ahead and do it, because it's better than getting shot or stabbed in the leg, which is usually what they do if I try to put 'em off.
Most of the time I have go ahead and do it, because it's better than getting shot or stabbed in the leg, which is usually what they do if I try to explain why it's a bad idea.


So I do my thing.  I accept the situation.  I let it happens.  That's the only decision: I decide to ''let it happen''.
So I do my thing.  I accept the situation.  I let it happens.  That's the only decision: I decide to ''let it happen''.

Revision as of 12:00, 15 June 2016

Mountain vendetta. The prone figure in the foreground is Havelock, the only person is this picture who survived the event.

Havelock (? - ?) is a retired Superhero (nonfiction).

His superpower involves settling disputes between two other people.

These two others will make a mutual pact which will result in one of their dreams coming true, and the other dream coming to nothing.

The pact requires them to make Havelock decide which dream lives, and which dream dies.'

"Decide" is what people say, but Havelock has always sworn that he does not think, he does not choose, he is not aware of anything happening at all. In a recent interview he said:

These fools come to me, two by two, and they want action now, they've got their beefs all heated up and now I'm supposed to pick one.

Most of the time I have go ahead and do it, because it's better than getting shot or stabbed in the leg, which is usually what they do if I try to explain why it's a bad idea.

So I do my thing. I accept the situation. I let it happens. That's the only decision: I decide to let it happen.

The I usually nod off for a second or two. And then it's done. The problem is, most time, everything is the same. Sometimes one guy's dream comes true on the spot -- pretty often that's one where he kills the other guy then and there, although it plays out in a lot crazy ways.

But usually it takes days, weeks for the effect to kick in, and they don't like that. They want to know on the spot whose dream lives, whose dream dies.

And I can't tell them a damned thing. I have no idea. I agree to play their game, then Fate plays the game.

I ain't Fate, man. I'm a pawn like everyone else.

He is sometimes referred to as "The man who doesn't get killed," because all of the many attempts on his life have miscarried and failed.

Fiction cross-reference

Nonfiction cross-reference