Anesthesia had elected to take a boat to the tournament. This allowed her the luxury of a cabin, and some privacy. She did not, however, sleep, as she had not felt the need to do so for nearly a year; it was an aspect of her abilities that she did not understand, even at a basic level. This did not frustrate her; it had been a long time since she had felt anything negative.
Instead of sleeping, she took time to remember. For her, introspection had immense practical benefits, in addition to being a source of inner strength as it was for more ordinary individuals. And so she thought back, thinking to the last of her murders, to the time before.
She had meant it to be a murder-suicide, her final act. Two syringes of morphine, one for the victim, an elderly man she had been taking care of for almost two weeks, and one for herself, for she had finally realized just what she had become, how harmful her nature was to those around her. And she succeeded, in a way. She used both syringes on their intended victims.
But not everything continued according to her plan. Instead of dying, she had simply begun to feel nothing; at least, nothing negative. Physically, her attempted suicide had rendered her immune to pain of any kind; she proved this to herself almost immediately through a series of escalating field tests, culminating in scalding her feet with boiling water. She felt nothing.
Mentally, the experience had been even more strange. She began to feel happy, enlightened; she found herself smiling, and incapable of stopping. It had been a long time since she had smiled before then.
It took her longer to realize that she no longer felt anything negative about the world. Frustration, anger, all such emotions were gone; even less obvious things, such as jealousy, were lost to her.
The first truly clear memory after leaving the house of her last victim was that of renting a room in a hotel and attempting to fall asleep. She had stayed in the room for almost three days, leaving only to pay the receptionist. Still, she could not succeed in sleeping, even for a few moments. But she was not worried. She could not do that, either.
It was several weeks before she realized that she could effect others with her state through proper concentration. It was then that she decided that, maybe, she could help people. She took on another job, this time assisting an elderly man with chronic pain issues.
There, for the first time in a long while, she felt useful, a benefit to society. The old man no longer complained about his pain. In fact, he no longer complained about much of anything. Still, he kept her on retainer, allowing her to stay close, to keep him peaceful.
One day, about a month into her work there, it all ended. She was with the old man, keeping him free of his burden. It was then that she began to leak, randomly shedding pain into the only nearby vessel equipped to receive it. The old man received so much pain at one time that his death was nearly instantaneous, his mind closing and his heart finally giving up.
Anesthesia did not care. The release of the pain gave her something, something that she needed. It was more important, more powerful, more gratifying than, at one time, the act of killing had been. More than that, she saw, heard, felt everything. When she moved, she did so faster, with more purpose, than she ever had before. So quickly that, when she turned to run, she was outside of the building almost before the old man had died.
It was then that she reasoned with herself. She realized immediately that she was addicted once again, to meting out pain as she once had been to killing. But here, she believed, there was a difference. Pain was a punishment. She took it away from those who felt it needlessly, and gave it to those she judged deserved it. This was justice. And that was why it felt so good, why it gave her such strength, such speed. More obvious still, because she could not feel pain, her decisions must have an inherent correctness to them. Only if a decision caused her pain was it an incorrect one, an unjust one.
She began to experiment after that. She learned many methods of inflicting pain, so she could take it away, store it for future use; this was just, a payment that society gave to her willingly so she could carry out her function. She learned the limits of the strength and speed granted to her when she gave others of others pain, learned that the more pain a person was given, the faster, the stronger she became. She found no real limits, merely practical ones.
Anesthesia discovered, also, the other side of her ability, one connected to her inability to feel negative emotions. She found that she could give and take of these as well, although it was much more difficult than the more physically oriented half of her ability.
However, the few times she gave others emotional pain, she found her mental abilities enhanced. While she could not read minds, she could judge body language to create an accurate picture of a person's emotional state. She could predict movements of individuals and large groups accurately up to around five seconds into the future. She even, during one particularly interesting test, proved that she could memorize several books in only a few minutes, as well as solve particularly difficult logic puzzles in moments.
The final portion of her experimentation had been the study of pain without her ability. She learned the art of knives and the sword, and especially how to use them with her physical abilities properly enhanced. She became an expert at torture, although it was questionable as to whether or not the causing of pain without any particular goal in mind actually was torture.
It was less than a year, but when she got word of the Carnivale and its reward, she knew what it was she would do. It was outside of the realm of possibility that any could defeat her, even with her knowledge of her own abilities so restricted. And it was then, while she was beginning to narrow her search within her own mind, that the boat landed. She left, quickly.
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OOC: Again, not quite top notch. I'll make sure to actually go through and revise the later stories, especially when it comes to diction.
A suggestion, though, is that you allow for battles to come to a sort of draw, in which one or the other contestants loses but makes a proper retreat and is capable of continuing fighting. It will make things longer, but I hardly see a problem in that.
