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Magic The Gathering


Thalia

    Thalia from Magic The Gathering
    Personally I wish they would never go back to Innistrad again. If they hadn't gone back this time, I never would have read the Blessing of Blood story and I never would have read the other Thalia stories, and I never would have started having feelings for her, and end up avoiding Magic entirely to try to stop thinking about her. She's so beautiful, her sky-blue eyes and silken hair, I imagine her voice is like an angel's. Sometimes my chest aches thinking how badly I would like to be in her presence for just a few minutes. It only happens a few times in life, to come across someone who makes you wish you were better, more than you are. I would do anything for her. I so badly just want to hold her. I feel like after all these years of defending Thraben and all the friends she has lost or had corrupted, she needs someone to lean on. I wish I could be that for her. Not as some sneaky way of exploiting her, I just want to help her. I wish she loved me back but I know that will never happen. I can't even play magic anymore because I feel so worthless playing it, and when I drive home alone I feel so empty. Even my walks in the forest, I keep imagining she is with me, in a soft white cotton dress, sometimes I imagine her smiling at me. It is autumn which I think would be her favorite season. And so I don't go on those walks quite as much anymore.
    
    I don't think I'll be able to cope with the next Innistrad set. They're going to show her being married and having children, it'll be another time skip and she'll be married and have two children on a little farm. God I wish so desperately that was me there with her. i won't be able to even look at anything related to MTG because I'll be scared to see it. of course I'll be happy for her, but I am pathetic and petty and jealous and I will want it to be me there with her. I read a story where a man was dumped on his wedding day for another man and was beaten senseless by the priest for pretending to love his wife-to-be yet being angry she found someone else who made her happy. That's true. I am such a disgusting creature I cannot even love someone properly, because deep down the fact that I can't be with her makes me so sad, I feel a cavernous emptiness and yet also a leaden pit in my chest, sometimes I feels like physical pain. I wish i could be good enough for her but I never, ever, ever will. There is no one else in this world I want to be with besides her. I keep trying to forget her but I can't.
    At least it wasn't Thalia. I'm still scared what will happen to her in the next set. She's so brave and beautiful, she deserves to live. I think if she dies I will actually cry. I wish I could protect her. At least I could give her time to escape while the Phyrexians were ripping me to shreds. That'd be horrible but I would do it for her. I would do anything for her. Usually when I wake up I think of her within a few moments. Then I get into the bathroom to shower and see my face in the mirror and how ugly I am and how Thalia could never want someone like me. It's so stupid that someone like me is in love with someone so beautiful, I am so shallow with no ground to be so. But I can't help it, I can't stop thinking about her. I sing her name to myself absentmindedly sometimes. Then I remember how I can never be good enough for her, no matter how much stronger I get, no matter how much money I make, I can never be the right one for her. I was hoping they'd never go back to Innistrad again, because I didn't want to see Thalia being married to someone else, even though i could never be with her anyway. But I would rather see that than see her being hurt or killed or turned into some Phyrexian abomination. I would literally be a servant in her mansion with her husband, every day having to see them together, in love, knowing my feelings will never be returned, seeing her happy with her husband and each sight like a knife in my heart even though I should be happy for them. I would see that every day of my life if it meant she was safe and alive. Sometimes my longing for her hurts in my chest, and I pinch my own arm or just squeeze to make it go away. I wish it would go away forever. I wish I could stop thinking about her. I've tried so many things but nothing works. I've tried to think hateful thoughts about her, to make myself stop wanting her, but I just end up feeling like I want to cry, because I don't hate Thalia, I love her, I could never be angry or bitter toward her. I just hope she survives. I would do anything for her. I wish I could be there for her when she needed me. I wish I could be by her side, defending her against the Phyrexians until she was safe. Sometimes I imagine her and I at a harvest festival, in a tent dancing together, her cathar uniform replaced by a long willowy dress, twine bracelets dangling from her slender wrists, the orange light from the paper lanterns tinting her pale face and hair, seeing her smile and laugh as we spin about. Or else sitting up on the hill overlooking the festival, the distant shouts and screams and laughter barely filtering up to us, easily covered by a twilight breeze that rustles the grass, her leaning her head on my shoulder as we watch the pink sky fade into purple. Sometimes I look at the Innistrad land art and imagine Thalia and I walking through those places, a wagon following us as we bring our supplies out to the wilds of Kessig to build a new farmstead for us both to share so she can finally escape from Thraben. Or just travel there in general. It's such a stupid thing to dream about, because none of it will ever happen, but I can't help it. I hate myself for thinking such jealous thoughts, when all that matters is that she survives. If she dies in this set I feel like something will break inside me. I just want her to be okay.

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    Platinum Angel

      The big story of the Honolulu Pro Tour wasn’t Kazuya Mitamura’s $40,000 victory in the finals. The big story happened in the first round, where a young boy known only as Hans did something that is causing many to call him a hero.
      
      Hans’s game was looking unwinnable. He had a negative life total and was kept alive only by his Platinum Angel. His opponent had just cast a Molder Slug, threatening to remove the Angel — Hans’s only artifact — at the beginning of his next turn.
      
      But when it got to that next turn, Hans would say a word that would put the whole series of events in motion. A word that would send ripples throughout Magic history. A word that would cement Hans’s legendary status.
      
      Hans stared at his opponent and said, “No.”
      
      His opponent was taken aback. “Judge!” said the opponent. “He’s refusing to follow my Molder Slug’s triggered ability.”
      
      “Refusing?”
      
      “Refusing.”
      
      “Is this true, Hans?”
      
      Hans nodded.
      
      The judge said, “I have to issue you a game loss, Hans.”
      
      Hans pointed to his Platinum Angel. “I can’t lose the game,” he said. And with that, he proceeded to his draw step, undaunted by the judge’s ruling. Then he skimmed through his deck for marked cards and put those into his hand as well.
      
      “You’re violating multiple game rules,” said the judge, “in addition to ignoring my ruling, and I am issuing a game loss to you.”
      
      Hans, his finger still stuck to the Platinum Angel, like a modern day Little Dutch Boy with his finger plugging the leak in the dike, said, “You can issue all the game losses you want, but with my Platinum Angel in play, they have no effect.” Hans proceded to the attack phase and swung for 4 with his Angel. He then looked at his opponent’s face-down morphs, referred to outside notes, and substituted cards from his sideboard.
      
      The judge stood before him, flummoxed. Without saying a word, Hans merely looked at the judge while pointing to the Platinum Angel.
      
      It was when Hans cast a Demonic Attorney that the head judge was called over. “Ante cards are banned,” the head judge said. “That’s a complete violation of the rules.” But when he saw Hans’s Platinum Angel in play, he was quieted. He knew he was defeated.
      
      Hans said, “Since the Demonic Attorney’s in the game, we have to do what it says.” He proceeded to put the top card of his opponent’s deck into his trade binder.
      
      The head judge frowned in disapproval. “He’s right.”
      
      It was a matter of hours before Hans owned his opponent’s entire deck, as well many other cards from his opponent’s collection, thanks to a Mindslaver and Ring of Ma’rûf. Each time judges tried to issue Hans a game loss for casting cards without mana, or playing cards in his graveyard, Hans merely pointed to his Platinum Angel.
      
      The cards Hans didn’t want to take from his opponent he tore up, due to interactions involving Chaos Confetti, March of the Machines, and Cytoshape.
      
      Having by this time gathered quite a crowd, Hans produced a folded and wrinkled copy of the DCI Infraction Procedure Guide from his pocket and began skimming it for ideas. He noticed that kicking an opponent’s chair out from under them was listed under “Unsportsmanlike Conduct,” so he did just that. He also kicked the chairs out from under several other nearby players and spectators.
      
      The sun was starting to set. The judges had not even attempted to give Hans a game loss for stalling. One by one, they had hanged their heads and walked away, resigned to their powerlessness in the face of the Platinum Angel. Then one of them hatched a plan. “I know who we can call,” the judge exclaimed.
      
      The next morning, Hans was woken by a voice blaring across the room from a police loudspeaker. “Hans,” the voice said, “this is your mother. I love you. Please sacrifice your Platinum Angel to the Molder Slug’s triggered ability so this can all end.”
      
      Hans lifted his head, looked around the room, and kicked his opponent’s chair out from under him once more.
      
      “Hans,” his mother said, “we miss you. We just want you to come home.”
      
      Hans yawned, cast the Unglued card Handcuffs, and ordered his opponent to touch his hands together.
      
      It was Day Four of the standoff when another voice blared across the room. “Hans,” the voice said, “this is your fiancé. There are only two more days until our wedding, honey. Don’t you still want to get married? You have to end this game now, Hans. Please just sacrifice the Platinum Angel to the Molder Slug. We love you. We’re worried about you.”
      
      Hans’s mouth hung open, agape. A tear came to his eye. “Marcia,” he said. “I love you too.” He looked about him, seemingly aghast at what he had done. “I…” he paused. “I concede.”
      
      A flurry of applause burst through the room. Judges began high-fiving each other and giving Marcia hugs. “Unfortunately,” Hans said, “the concession has no effect since my Platinum Angel is still in play.”
      
      It was two weeks into the game when the military showed up. “Hans,” came a voice from a helicopter. “We have you surrounded. If you do not concede immediately, we will open fire.”
      
      Hans looked up at the helicopter, over at the tanks, and across the street at the snipers. He was still pointing to the Platinum Angel, as stoically as ever.
      
      To this day, a sleeved Platinum Angel remains embedded in Hans’s tombstone. Hans may have lost his life that day, but he never lost the game.