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deercountry2022-10-07 02:32 pm
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i once knew a man who learned such a thing | october catch-all
Who: Jin Guangyao + select closed prompts + OTA
What: Settling in; an encounter with a draugr; trying to locate some much needed chill; continuing a TDM thread.
When: /waves hands, throughout the month.
Where: Willful Machine, along a nondescript thoroughfare and by the canals; the Pale Sanctuary in Cassandra; the Boardwalk
Notes: If you're keen on threading something, hit me up on plurk @ ragweed and we can figure something out.
Content Warnings: Blood, gore. Allusions to memories of a murder victim. Frank discussion of a child's murder (his son).
I. Cleaning house. (OTA)
The siheyuan has good bones. Whoever built it understood the importance of craftsmanship, though whether there is any prosperous energy in Trench for a south-facing house to welcome is anyone's guess. But someone had lived here before, once; there are height marks scratched into the wood of a door frame, seven of them, one for each birthday celebrated by a child. When Jin Guangyao first notices the marks while affixing spirit-repelling talismans to the walls in auspicious locations, he very deliberately does not think of his son.
With the talismans in place within the courtyard and the rooms themselves, he steps outside and onto the thoroughfare sidewalk to affix a few of them to the gate. Trailing behind him is his omen, a lean steppe fox whose winter coat has already begun to come in.
II. Second Death at the Canals. (Closed to Sasuke)
OOC note: Timing of this event is sometime after JGY snags himself an address, and finishes up his conversation with Mike Enslin (see below).
It is late in the evening, well after what passes for dusk in Trench, when the screams rip through the air near the canals. What follows is an immediate mad scramble of bodies and limbs of all shapes to escape the scene unfolding by the water's edge, where a draugr has pinned a man in pale gold robes to the ground by his throat.
Right now, only two things separate Jin Guangyao from death: the first is the blade of his spiritual sword, Hensheng, which he has thrust through the draugr's throat and embedded in what passes for its spine, and which in combination with his faltering spiritual power serves only to keep the monster's still-gnashing jaws from descending upon him. The other is his omen, who has transformed herself into the menacing shape of a large huli jing, and is harrying the draugr with ear-splitting fox-bark screams and yodels that keep the thing distracted, but not deterred. Every so often it swipes ineffectually out at her with the hand not at its quarry's throat, before she lunges away.
The draugr has taken much from Jin Guangyao over the course of the last month to the point where his outrage and fury over the theft of his memories is only overwhelmed by the sheer terror he experiences when the monster at last manifests itself and forces him to look at its face (and forces him to remember a face he wishes he could forget, dead but still seeing him, still hating him, still suspecting his every decision, hesitation or sideways glance--)
Ichor from the gaping throat wound above him splatters down towards him. Jin Guangyao jerks his face away and grits his teeth, and twists beneath the monster's bulk to edge a foot against its stomach--not because he thinks that he has the power to actually kick the thing away, but because any barrier he can put between the draugr's teeth and himself is better than nothing. Still, this is a grim situation, and his eyes dart about himself in terror and outrage as he desperately tries to come up with an escape plan.
III. Exploring near the Pale Sanctuary. (OTA)
The pale, bloated tree at the heart of the Pale Sanctuary does not look like it should be a place of spiritual tranquility. Jin Guangyao stands slightly out of its shadow and considers it in silence, being sure always to keep his expression as inoffensive and absent of any outside judgment as possible. The thing alarms him, there's just no getting around it, and hearing the murmurs among the nearby Disciples regarding just who this entire district was named for strikes him as doubly inauspicious. No one in the cultivation world would think to name a place of spiritual sanctuary and healing after the Yiling Patriarch, surely.
He doesn't venture near the door that leads down into the sanctuary itself--that's a big 'nope, no thank you, not interested' at least for the moment--and instead takes his time walking the circumference of the tree, being sure to give it as wide a berth as possible as he looks it over in detail, committing what he sees to memory.
IV. Encounter on the Boardwalk. (Closed to Mike Enslin)
[continued from here!]
'Napkin guy.' That's a new one. It's much better than his last nickname. Jin Guangyao's expression softens by a hair's breadth of a margin, and though he doesn't smile--that particular mask wouldn't be appropriate, not now--he makes a sound somewhere between a sigh and a laugh. Then, "Thank you," the stranger says, and Jin Guangyao bends his head in wordless acknowledgement of the courtesy.
As for the rest--
"Yes," he replies. He looks away from Mike to allow him the courtesy of tidying himself without a scrutinizing audience. There is so very much else happening on the boardwalk to draw the eye anyway; the masks, the lights, the myriad of different beings and bodies that are as alien to him as that tape recorder, if more frightening. When one being makes sustained eye contact with him for too long, Jin Guangyao is quick to avert his gaze in as non-threatening a manner as he can manage, and turns his attention back to Mike.
"Xiansheng, please forgive this one's lapse in manners. I am called Jin Guangyao." Just in case the stranger felt so inclined to actually refer to him as 'napkin guy,' henceforth.
What: Settling in; an encounter with a draugr; trying to locate some much needed chill; continuing a TDM thread.
When: /waves hands, throughout the month.
Where: Willful Machine, along a nondescript thoroughfare and by the canals; the Pale Sanctuary in Cassandra; the Boardwalk
Notes: If you're keen on threading something, hit me up on plurk @ ragweed and we can figure something out.
Content Warnings: Blood, gore. Allusions to memories of a murder victim. Frank discussion of a child's murder (his son).
I. Cleaning house. (OTA)
The siheyuan has good bones. Whoever built it understood the importance of craftsmanship, though whether there is any prosperous energy in Trench for a south-facing house to welcome is anyone's guess. But someone had lived here before, once; there are height marks scratched into the wood of a door frame, seven of them, one for each birthday celebrated by a child. When Jin Guangyao first notices the marks while affixing spirit-repelling talismans to the walls in auspicious locations, he very deliberately does not think of his son.
With the talismans in place within the courtyard and the rooms themselves, he steps outside and onto the thoroughfare sidewalk to affix a few of them to the gate. Trailing behind him is his omen, a lean steppe fox whose winter coat has already begun to come in.
II. Second Death at the Canals. (Closed to Sasuke)
OOC note: Timing of this event is sometime after JGY snags himself an address, and finishes up his conversation with Mike Enslin (see below).
It is late in the evening, well after what passes for dusk in Trench, when the screams rip through the air near the canals. What follows is an immediate mad scramble of bodies and limbs of all shapes to escape the scene unfolding by the water's edge, where a draugr has pinned a man in pale gold robes to the ground by his throat.
Right now, only two things separate Jin Guangyao from death: the first is the blade of his spiritual sword, Hensheng, which he has thrust through the draugr's throat and embedded in what passes for its spine, and which in combination with his faltering spiritual power serves only to keep the monster's still-gnashing jaws from descending upon him. The other is his omen, who has transformed herself into the menacing shape of a large huli jing, and is harrying the draugr with ear-splitting fox-bark screams and yodels that keep the thing distracted, but not deterred. Every so often it swipes ineffectually out at her with the hand not at its quarry's throat, before she lunges away.
The draugr has taken much from Jin Guangyao over the course of the last month to the point where his outrage and fury over the theft of his memories is only overwhelmed by the sheer terror he experiences when the monster at last manifests itself and forces him to look at its face (and forces him to remember a face he wishes he could forget, dead but still seeing him, still hating him, still suspecting his every decision, hesitation or sideways glance--)
Ichor from the gaping throat wound above him splatters down towards him. Jin Guangyao jerks his face away and grits his teeth, and twists beneath the monster's bulk to edge a foot against its stomach--not because he thinks that he has the power to actually kick the thing away, but because any barrier he can put between the draugr's teeth and himself is better than nothing. Still, this is a grim situation, and his eyes dart about himself in terror and outrage as he desperately tries to come up with an escape plan.
III. Exploring near the Pale Sanctuary. (OTA)
The pale, bloated tree at the heart of the Pale Sanctuary does not look like it should be a place of spiritual tranquility. Jin Guangyao stands slightly out of its shadow and considers it in silence, being sure always to keep his expression as inoffensive and absent of any outside judgment as possible. The thing alarms him, there's just no getting around it, and hearing the murmurs among the nearby Disciples regarding just who this entire district was named for strikes him as doubly inauspicious. No one in the cultivation world would think to name a place of spiritual sanctuary and healing after the Yiling Patriarch, surely.
He doesn't venture near the door that leads down into the sanctuary itself--that's a big 'nope, no thank you, not interested' at least for the moment--and instead takes his time walking the circumference of the tree, being sure to give it as wide a berth as possible as he looks it over in detail, committing what he sees to memory.
IV. Encounter on the Boardwalk. (Closed to Mike Enslin)
[continued from here!]
'Napkin guy.' That's a new one. It's much better than his last nickname. Jin Guangyao's expression softens by a hair's breadth of a margin, and though he doesn't smile--that particular mask wouldn't be appropriate, not now--he makes a sound somewhere between a sigh and a laugh. Then, "Thank you," the stranger says, and Jin Guangyao bends his head in wordless acknowledgement of the courtesy.
As for the rest--
"Yes," he replies. He looks away from Mike to allow him the courtesy of tidying himself without a scrutinizing audience. There is so very much else happening on the boardwalk to draw the eye anyway; the masks, the lights, the myriad of different beings and bodies that are as alien to him as that tape recorder, if more frightening. When one being makes sustained eye contact with him for too long, Jin Guangyao is quick to avert his gaze in as non-threatening a manner as he can manage, and turns his attention back to Mike.
"Xiansheng, please forgive this one's lapse in manners. I am called Jin Guangyao." Just in case the stranger felt so inclined to actually refer to him as 'napkin guy,' henceforth.
iv
If anything, this guy's too mannered by half - there's the proffered napkin, the direction of his gaze elsewhere while Mike manages to collect himself into something more of a person, still not sure how he feels about being perceived at all. "Oh. Well, huh. I guess that settles that," into the recorder, before he nods to himself and stuffs the device in his shirt pocket.
As if it settles anything. It doesn't. But he has decided that stuck is the situation, whether it's in his own mind or not is still up for debate, but he doesn't want a debate right now. Out of fucks. Out of battery, as it were.
"Jin Guangyao," he turns it over as he says it - doesn't have the feel of something he'd make up, so it's another vote in favor of ...something. "Okay," this is the second time he'd heard that wording, the 'what are you called' instead of 'what's your name'. Might mean something about this place, might mean fuck all. He's tired of trying to find meaning in each little speck - each mask, the color of each glass eye. So he just goes with it, and it's ...easier. "People call me Mike."
"Napkin Guy" is tempting, and had it not been for the gifted food, it might've stuck. But he's feeling ----well, that's it: he's feeling. He shifts where he's sitting, casts a glance toward a nearby stall and adds, "I was thinking about getting a drink. I mean, why not, right?"
He hadn't thought purgatory (?) to be so hospitable.
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"I was thinking about getting a drink. I mean, why not, right?"
It's a perfectly friendly and courteous invitation, which makes it doubly frustrating when his mind presents him with the picture perfect memory of Nie Sect cultivators wiping off cups of wine he had just poured for them, to remove the stain of a 'prostitute's son' from the crockery before drinking from it. It twists his gut abruptly.
He does not want a drink.
"I would like a drink," he tells Mike, smiling.
He makes space for his new acquaintance to fall into step beside him while they walk towards the stall. "Perhaps they will have rice wine, or something close to it. Mike-xiansheng, have you had it before? Or," a slight pause, and a modest furrow appears between his eyebrows, "is there no rice where you come from?" That would be weird, but this place has trees that bleed and nests of glass eyeballs on the beach, so who is he to judge.
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"It's been a long time, but I've had sake, does that count? Rice beer, too." A brief recall of a different man, a man who was him but not this incarnation, a friendlier, less worn, thoroughly less broken version that enjoyed a night out with his wife - the clink of glasses, the murmur of long past conversations, muffled, dampened by whatever comfort's at play here, the memory just brushes past and then retreats.
The woman tending the stall greets them with a nod and an incline of her head, and does not look puzzled when she's asked for rice wine, but she does pause to ask if they mean to have it hot or ...cold. A bit of a brow lift on that last option, as though it's an odd one to choose. And perhaps it is, because there's a chill in the air.
Chill seems to be a mood, here. Alcohol might help that along. Hopefully.
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"I will take it hot, thank you." He isn't so presumptuous as to order for Mike, and so turns his attention elsewhere until he has made his decision. Then, once he has, he picks up the threads of their conversation with interest.
"Sake is from a country called Dongying, which is near where I am from. Perhaps," he says, hesitant only because something about drawing parallels between his world and Mike's world feels rather like searching for hope where there is none, "your world isn't so different from mine, in that case."
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Fuck it, Mike can be a follower today - it's hot for him, too. Too chilly out here, and the warmth of it goes nicely with the little hit of acidity and something ...else? This isn't the sake he remembers, but that in and of itself causes a small laugh.
They both know what sake is, though. That's a start. And, yes, in a place where the beaches are full of prosthetics, and the sea is full of squids who are also just like them and yet to wake and be handed a bag with a random assortments of painful memories in them (or is that just him?) ...maybe it's the best start they can hope for.
No tape recorders, but sake. And beer, probably. He didn't get a weird look when he'd mentioned that. "Maybe not as different as ...all this." a general nod around the boardwalk - the mishmash of styles and people and if one looks closely ...things that might be classified as creatures. He's trying not to dive into that, and treat it like a head injury induced Renaissance Festival? Outdoor convention with a small side of Halloween?
It's easy enough to find a bench to sit on, even one with a table if that's desired. Where he hesitates is if he should put his back to the ocean or to the better part of the boardwalk, and eventually will settle on the latter. "Maybe another couple of these and I won't have to think too much about this. It's very..."
The writer has just run out of words for what this is. Nothing quite cuts it.
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i!!
So while he's out amongst his errands in the neighborhood, it's the back-of-his-mind thought of new Sleepers, mostly, that draws his attention to someone unfamiliar out front of a house he recalls has been empty for a decent while. That, and— hm! He's only mildly familiar with the concept of cultivation, having met a fascinating spiritual weapon and her beleaguered master, but it's enough to make him curious about those talismans. He makes a beeline over to the yard in question, not coming right up to the gate because he's not rude, but he is also the type to come bother strangers at their homes.
"Good morning," he says, after lightly clearing his throat. Hi. "Do you need a hand?"
Reaching the top of the gate, that is... ahem. He nods at the talismans, and by way of explanation, "I've got a vested interest in the stability of wards of all shapes and sizes; it's a good idea, what you're doing."
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But then: "Good morning. Do you need a hand?"
The tension goes out of his shoulders at the greeting, and the explanation that follows, and something that might even be called a smile settles at the corners of his mouth. The fox's ears also relax, though she stays put by his feet. Jin Guangyao dips his head once in acknowledgement of what he has heard and turns over one of the warding talismans in his grasp, examining the careful calligraphy he has placed upon it with cinnabar. "This one still has much to learn about the resentful energies of this place, and what will or will not work to deter them," he says--'this one,' evidently, referring to himself.
He rounds his arms and performs a precise bow; not so low as to be obsequious or mocking, but enough to acknowledge the generosity of such an offer from a stranger. It would be pitch perfect in Lanling City when coupled with self-deprecating courtesy language--but he has already miscalculated once in his initial meeting with another newcomer. He adjusts. "Your offer is very kind, xiansheng. I would not wish to impose." But the top of that gate is very high, and he's super short, so he's not going to say no outright.
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So; this one, the new Sleeper says, and Palamedes recalls the, ah, magic sword called herself something similar, so he does not miss a beat and nods politely in response, tilting in a bit closer so he might peer at the talisman. Frankly, the calligraphy means nothing to him, beyond the general sense he can get from his own type of wards that the strokes have a specific meaning and purpose. It seems pretty elegant from here...
"Xia— no; don't let me butcher it. I don't know what that means, I'm sorry." He shrugs, offering another brief half-smile as he looks up. Now there's a bow, and oh, that's not necessary, but alright-? "My name is Palamedes, and it's not imposing at all. I came up to you, after all. May I?"
He holds his hand out for the talisman, gaze darting up further to the gate. "In the center, or...?"
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He takes a half-step back, ostensibly to provide guidance of the 'a little to the left,' or 'further to the right,' variety, but also uses this opportunity to assess Palamedes while his focus is elsewhere. Is he armed? Does he carry himself like one who is accustomed to combat, or is he more of a scholar? Naturally, each time his new acquaintance looks at him, Jin Guangyao affects an appearance of harmless affability.
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So he's clearly never thrown a punch in his life, let alone been in real combat. He is mostly blue-grey dusters by composition (at least two of them, it's cold out!) and only armed if a scalpel in one of his pockets counts. He remains unsuspecting of Jin Guangyao's observation insomuch as he assumes, as a baseline, that his fellow Sleepers will size him up as a threat or not sooner or later; it's fine.
What he lacks in physical ability he makes up for in chattiness, as he has been rambling somewhat about Wards And Such since first taking the talisman, and has yet to stop: "—and that's why the curvature is one of my favorite areas of study. I've fiddled with a few obscure designs evocative of the ulna and the radius, for the subtlety of the bend— just wait 'til I get going, it's something to behold. D'you know how many bones are in an average bird wing?"
This may continue. Please, do the spiritual power.
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ii.
So when he hears the screams, he's quick to move in the direction of them, pushing by the people running away from the scene so he can get a better look at what's going on. The monster is awful to look at, but it's even worse to see the man beneath him struggling. He doesn't pull out his sword right away, despite knowing that he needs to start to dismember the draugr, wanting to get an idea of just how quick and strong they are before he tries. It wouldn't be helpful to swing his sword, have the thing move, and instead slice into the very victim he's trying to help.
Sasuke makes sure to encase his arm with the blue electric charge of his chidori, the sound of something like a thousand chirping birds filling the space. He goes to charge at it, aiming to get the monster off of the other, even if he doesn't make contact.
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Jin Guangyao uses its momentary distraction to his advantage. With a grunt of effort, he uses the foot pressed against its midsection to leverage it up, then frees one hand from Hensheng's hilt to deliver a startlingly powerful blow directly to where, in a normal human or cultivator, the dantian would reside. It's a strong enough hit imbued with enough power to push the draugr up, and--hopefully--directly into Sasuke's path of attack.
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It's still off the other man and stunned momentarily. Enough time for Sasuke to position himself between the two so that he can protect Jin Guangyao while he either takes in how badly he's injured or the other man manages to gather himself enough to get to his feet. He lets his head turn slightly back in his direction, though doesn't take his eyes off the monster.
"Are you hurt or can you fight?" He doesn't think he can't take the draugr himself, he just would find it a lot easier with another person.
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This much he hasn't forgotten--how to fight, how to survive--even if he cannot remember how he knows these things, even if that yawning gap in his knowledge is wreaking havoc on his mind--
The alarming-looking omen bounds to his side, and whatever exchange passes between them is something felt in their hearts rather than shared aloud. "I can fight," Jin Guangyao tells Sasuke quickly, and moves to flank the draugr before it can regain its senses. He sheathes the sword quickly and reaches instead for a loop of what looks like wire, loosing a substantial length of it into his hands. Then he looks to the draugr and seems to be assessing the best angle of approach for getting this wire about its head like a garrote. "If you can hold its focus, gongzi, I can get this around its neck while it's distracted."
And then, he hopes goes understood, they can rip its fucking head off.
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cw blood and gore and decapitation
cw for mild eye trauma
III
So it isn't surprising that he is wandering past the Pale Sanctuary. He has long gotten used to the appearance of the tree but he doesn't usually go inside of it. He has learned that it is often unwise to travel into certain places because the world likes to play games. And the last thing he wants is to get stuck inside some sort of blood tree. No matter if they call it a sanctuary.
But this time as he wanders past the tree there is a familiar figure studying it. He stops in his movements and observes for a time. It has been a few years since he has seen the face of Jin Guangyao. Not since that fateful night in the temple. A night that he had hoped would be the last time he would put his eyes on the man that basically turned the cultivator world upside down with the tricks that he pulled. Of course, the same could be said about himself.
"You're going to see far more interesting things then this tree while you are here."
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Jin Guangyao turns quickly at the sound of Wei Wuxian's voice, his eyes gone very wide. In truth, his reaction could have been worse, and likely would have been were he still navigating the deadly pitfalls of Jin Guangshan's court. But this is Trench, and though the last he'd heard of the Yiling Patriarch was his death in the Burial Mounds, he at least knows enough of this place to know that anyone from his past could turn up here.
"Yes, Yiling-laozu," he agrees, polite even while is stare is sharp enough to cut glass. "That he stands before this one now is proof enough of that."
(He is afraid. In an outright fight, he knows he stands no chance at all, and even understanding that this place will vomit him right back up onto the beaches does not reduce his instinctual fear of pain and death. He takes a few small steps away from Wei Wuxian, trying to extrapolate the best avenue of escape from this confrontation, just in case Wei Wuxian goes for Chenqing.)
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The flute that the other man is so nervous about it very obviously tucked into his belt. If he desired to use it then he certainly could, but he has no intention of attacking. It wouldn't do them any good. Wei wuxian isn't as impulsive as he was in his youth and his time in Trench and Deerington has tempered him. He might not like the man that stands before him, but he knows that they are stuck together in this place and there is little they can do about that.
But he also knows that he might have to defend himself. The Jin Guangyao he knows wouldn't hesitate to strike if he felt he was threatened. The burn of a sharp string across his neck is easy to remember. The last thing he is going to do is let this man get the drop on him.
"Seeing me alive will be the least surprising thing you will encounter once this world really starts to make itself known. A full year has been spent in this place and still new things appear all the time."
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He smiles, though no part of the expression reaches his eyes, which is to be expected under the circumstances. He continues taking small, careful steps backward from Wei Wuxian, marshalling his courage to keep his fear well contained. "I have had enough surprises to satisfy me for a lifetime, Wei-gongzi. I have no further quarrel with you that was not ended with your death in the Burial Mounds. Even if I did, I have no means of achieving it here, do I?"
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cw discussion of a child's murder
Re: cw discussion of a child's murder
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Closed thread -- Unmasked (What does the fox say?)
"Jin-gongzi!" he says, loud and cheerfully. "A-Jin? Jin-gege, were you waiting long? You shouldn't have been, I walked as fast as I could!"
He's far more exuberant than he was the last time they talked -- and even odder than that, he's sprouted two large, red fox ears from the top of his head while three fluffy tails twine poke out from beneath his robes, all three of them wagging happily.
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"Shen-gongzi--" Jin Guangyao begins, startled, but before he has a chance to finish the incomplete thought, he finds himself at least partly captured in the affectionate loop of Shen Yuan's arms. His eyes, which were already quite wide, having noticed the ears protruding through his hair and the tails that flick with a life of their own, widen further at the unexpected contact, but he doesn't pull himself free. (It's too late for that, he's been caught, and that would be rude.)
He tries instead to reach for a smile, but it doesn't quite happen, because this is too bloody peculiar to be brushed off. "No, Shen-gongzi," he tries instead, "I wasn't waiting long, but..." He can't stop staring at the ears. "...those are very life-like."
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And then he's bodily dragging Jin Guangyao over to the booth with the beer before he can comment or protest. The vendor doesn't seem to see anything especially alarming about the ears, at least. Her eyes widen as she looks Shen Yuan up and down, but she doesn't choose to comment as he orders beer for them both -- at least not out loud. The look she throws Jin Guangyao's way is sympathetic, in an amused kind of way.
The beer comes in red wax-treated paper cups; a fact that Shen Yuan seems to find hysterically funny for some reason. "Solo cups!" he yelps with delight. "Oh my god, gege, it's like we're in an American college movie! Drink up, drink up!"
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He staggers a step or two once they reach the beer stall and reaches up hastily to ensure his hat hasn't been knocked askew and, once certain he still looks presentable, begins to thank the vendor. And he gets about as far as, "Thank you," before Shen Yuan's effusive delight over the serving cups bubbles up out of him in the form of a fox-bark yelp of delight.
"Yes, yes, all right," he assures him, gives the contents of the flimsy cup a suspicious sniff, and takes a sip of it. He immediately pulls a face and decides, "I don't think I enjoy crunk." That's what is in the cup, right?
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runtime error! program c:\trench\comphet\jinguangyao.exe
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I
He pauses there, this time for longer as he pulls the black hood off his head, revealing the decidedly not-human visage beneath it. He stands there, completely silent, watching as the man affixes his talismans to the gate. It's hard to tell just what Maul is thinking given his face always has a slightly murderous expression upon it.
fffff so sorry that I missed the notif for your tag!! mea culpa :c
in his defence you are pretty terrifying upon first blush dudeHe holds the sword up at an angle defensively, but makes no move to attack, clearly trying to think past his pulse rushing in his ears whether he's in any danger, or if this guy is just--weird about boundaries. He hesitates, then says, "It is considered polite to announce oneself," and sounds rather courteous about it, all things considered.
It's all good!
"You must be a new Sleeper," Maul says. It's not a question, merely a confirmation. The man has that sense of 'other' about him that all Sleepers do. "I am Darth Maul."