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Grencia Mars Elijah Guo Eckener ([info]jazzchagren) wrote,
@ 2007-09-05 11:40:00

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Here comes the sun, it's alright.
Gren stepped off the wooden planks of the path and into the sand. It was a comfortable feeling to walk on land that shifted as he moved across it, even though he hadn’t stepped foot in sand in years. The sun was partially hidden by cloud cover, and the breeze blowing in off the water dropped the temperature a degree or two, but not by much. He estimated that it was about twenty degrees, utterly, regularly pleasant. It was taking a little time, but he was adjusting to the normalcy of this world, which wasn’t as abnormal so much as it corresponded with a different set of people and occupations than he was used to on Callisto.

He trudged out to a halfway point between the dune behind him and the endless water in front of him and placed the pen and paper he’d been carrying down in the sand. Then he rolled up his sleeves and pant legs, and settled down into a cross legged position, enjoying the heat transfer from the ground to his limbs. The warmth worked through him and undid a lot of the tension that had been building in him since his arrival.

Lighting a cigarette, he stared out at the water, forgetting the paper for now. He enjoyed the feel of the smoke in his lungs and thought about what Cesare had said about how cold the ocean here was. He was tempted to try it, just because. But that would have to be later. For now he was tempted to just sit, collect his thoughts, and watch the mix of newcomers and locals who strayed into his view. Half of him wanted to talk, the other half preferred to remain aloof. He came to the happy median that he’d let the people around him make that decision for him.


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[info]shadowcrane
2007-09-06 11:48 am UTC (link)
Anotsu made sure he gave Gren enough warning of his approach by plodding through the sand louder than a herd a water buffalo. Not that he'd been all that keen on company; he had come down to fume a bit over his talk (Hatsumi had insisted on calling it "interview") at the dojo, maybe kick some sand, find some place to work off his anger - but he found himself walking over on impulse.

"Good day, Gren-san," he said, still in formal mode.

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[info]jazzchagren
2007-09-06 01:18 pm UTC (link)
Gren shaded his eyes with his hand and looked up. He gave a slight, respectful nod and moved his cigarette to the his left hand so he could reach out to shake Anotsu's.

Good day. How are you finding everything?


Ngk. Sorry, tags. >.>

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[info]shadowcrane
2007-09-06 02:04 pm UTC (link)
"Well enough, thank you." After bending to take Gren's hand, Anotsu rummaged through his shoulderbag, finally producing a small bottle of water and thumbing it open. "How about yourself? Enjoying a day off?"

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[info]jazzchagren
2007-09-06 02:35 pm UTC (link)
He takes a drag off his cigarette and thinks briefly about what a 'day off' used to mean. Something like...

Every day is a day off here it seems, until I find some work to do. But I don't seem to be healing too bady, so it shouldn't be long before I can look in earnest.

He nods to the paper next to him, now covered in a fine layer of sand because of the slight breeze.

Thought I'd see if I any music would come to me here. How about you, any plans for the day?

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[info]shadowcrane
2007-09-06 03:05 pm UTC (link)
"Do you mind if I sit?" Anotsu plunks in the sand with an amazing lack of grace.

Hatsumi had insisted on a fight in front of his Taijutsu class, and while it had ended in a honourable draw, Hatsumi had made sure they connected often enough, and in a way that was meant to covertly hurt Anotsu's pride. Fine. That just meant he wouldn't have to hold back once they got to Kenjutsu.

"No. No more plans. All done for today." He locks his hands around his knees and, slipping out of his sandals, digs his toes into the ground. "It's a good place for music," he smiles. And it is, with the wind and the waves. He tries to peer at Gren out of the corner of his eye. Healing? Well, the guy is thin, but he doesn't look sickly, and the slenderness of his wrists doesn't have to mean anything.

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[info]jazzchagren
2007-09-06 03:23 pm UTC (link)
Not at all, please.

He looks up the beach as Anotsu gets settled, watching a child run up to the waves and stop just at the edge. Out of the corner of his eye he catches the drop into the sand and finds it comforting that someone who had such a delicate and controlled bearing could be the antithesis of those things as well.

It is a good place. And a new place, which will do wonders sometimes. It's easy to get mired in a usual sort of creativity.

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[info]shadowcrane
2007-09-06 07:32 pm UTC (link)
Having quite literally bowed out of the offer of a shower at the dojo, Anotsu looks at the water with a faint amount of longing, although he knows how cold it is. Two days earlier he'd come down for fish & chips and, once rid of the fatty mess, had walked to the shoreline to clean his hands and poke his toes in the water.

He squints into the sun and nods at Gren's words. "New perspectives, yes."

It would be too familiar a gesture, he feels, if he laid down here, dropping his head on his bag, but he wants to press his back against warm sand - to ease his screaming muscles and sinews, already in protest against today's work-out.

It's a crazy impulse, but... Anotsu puts his head on his bag and stretches. Closing his eyes to save them the embarrassment of his childishness, his curiosity and lack of tact, he says: "You mentioned you were ailing, Gren-san?"

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[info]jazzchagren
2007-09-06 08:02 pm UTC (link)
Gren looks over Anotsu as he stretches out next to him in the sand. He looks much more muscular than Gren had noticed before, and Gren wonders idly what it was that Anotsu had done before he ended up here.

He keeps his tone conversational, not wanting the other to think that he's trying to pry or be rude.

Rough morning?

He pulls his kness up to his chest, keeping his ankles crossed, and tries not to wince at the protestation by his ribs. It's not actually that bad, all things considered, and he's certrainly been in worse shape before.

Not ailing really. My ship was damaged in a fight before I came here. I'm just a bit banged up from the fall for the time being.

Gren remembers something his mother had said once about little boys being the toughest things found on any planet and gives a small smile down at Anotsu before he realizes the other's eyes are closed.

Be as good as new in no time.

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[info]shadowcrane
2007-09-06 08:56 pm UTC (link)
"Banged up." Anotsu chuckles softly, but with genuine mirth. He's keeping his eyes shut, hiding, going by ripples, not quite trusting himself. "That sounds funny. Sumimasen - I'm sure it wasn't, when it happened, but..."

The warm sand works wonders on his spine, a wave that travels up unseen meridians and makes him curl his toes. "Banged up, yes; I suppose I can say the same." Finally he opens his eyes and looks over to Gren who has folded his limbs like a ricepaper frog. "I applied for a job as martial arts teacher. Looks like I got it." Nevermind I don't want it. "I'm grateful." The fucking ignominy.

Anotsu flips open the tiny Vittel again, drinks, and crumbles the bottle in his hand.

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[info]jazzchagren
2007-09-06 09:18 pm UTC (link)
Realizes what he's just said and joins Anotsu in his laughter.

No, you're right, it is kind of funny when you put it like that.

There's a bit of a weary note in the word 'grateful', but Anotsu's toes are still working in the sand. He looks relaxed, despite it all, and it's not Gren's place to ask.

That's good then. Is that what you did before you came here? Teach I mean?

And then, joking, when he's had the chance to consider it.

Or were you some kind of rogue?

He nurses his cigarette and wishes he'd brought something to drink as well. Looking around he spies a beach front shop that would probably serve bottles of some drink or another and resolves to stop by later.

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[info]shadowcrane
2007-09-06 09:56 pm UTC (link)
Funny, again - he can't even be bothered to flare at the suggestion he might've been a teacher. He must be tired; besides, Gren is offering no harm.

Teachers, stuck up on the uniqueness of their way...

"Rogue?" Anotsu blinks lazily and shrugs against his bag. "No, I don't think so. Although it has a certain ring to it, ne? But this humble person hasn't taught yet, either. It will be a lesson for me." And for sensei.

He doesn't feel like rising anytime soon. He probably should, get washed up and go somewhere where he can kick a tree for another hour, but Gren's presence is oddly soothing. Which redoubles Anotsu's shame in having barged in on him. "How goes the search for a saxophone," he mumbles drowsily.



[I'm off to bed; more tomorrow, if you wish? Mwah!] :D

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[info]jazzchagren
2007-09-06 11:11 pm UTC (link)
He digs the near spent butt of his cigarette into the sand next to him and moves to pull another, but decides against it at the last minute. Instead he picks up the pen and starts twirling it through his fingers. He's feeling too energetic today with no way to let it out. He kind of wishes he could go for a swim, but that idea is out with so many people around. Perhaps when it gets dark. It'll be even colder, but there won't be anyone around to see him, to be repulsed by him.

Still learning, even as the one in charge.

Gren smiles warmly and thinks this over.

Though, I suppose as long as one is alive they have to keep learning and adapting. Would probably make it very hard to do anything with that life if they didn't.

He doesn't want to appear anxious, because he likes Anotsu's impromptu company, so rests his elbows on his knees and holds his chin up with the backs of his hands so that they have something to do besides fidget. He smiles out at the water at the idea of having a sax again.

Well, I found one in a second hand shop, which isn't ideal, but will be more than well enough to start. They'll let me have it on credit, so I'm going to pick it up tomorrow. It'll feel good, feel like me again, I'm sure.

He's a little nervous about using an instrument that's already given it's soul to another person. But perhaps that person treated it poorly and that's why it's there. Perhaps the sax and Gren will be just alike in that way, which will make them a better match than he could anticipate.



Always dear. Sweet dreams! *smoosh*

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[info]shadowcrane
2007-09-07 11:24 am UTC (link)
Sheltered from the breeze as they are, the sun still has strength. It finds a spot where Anotsu's shirt has ridden up from his jeans (he can feel the sand trickle in-), and the sun hums on his skin. It would be unseemly to pull off his shirt, so he merely turns on his side and lifts the fabric a bit, a handspan above the lumbar vertebrae.

"Yes," he mutters pleasantly and watches Gren fold, unfold, and fold back up again, "that's the idea. A teacher who isn't prepared to learn from his students should go do something else. Harvest rice, or become a monk. Or something... Just like beginners and advanced students should practice together, I think - beginners still react on instinct, while your master classes tend to think too much."

As philosophies go, that's not exactly deep, but he doesn't feel like going into other bones of contention. Like the way Hatsumi had quoted Itto sunawachi banto back at him, dripping sarcasm. One sword gives rise to a thousand words. It's still true.

The sun tickles his back, and he idly scratches his spine, listens to its quiet, contented shifting and popping.

"Ah, I'm glad to hear you've found one," he says. "Sometimes we do need these..." - his fingers twitch in the air - "extensions."

You kenshi, Rin had yelled, you can't do anything without a sword! But look, O-Rin-sama. I'm proving you wrong.

"Do you think they'll let you practice at the inn?"

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[info]jazzchagren
2007-09-07 12:22 pm UTC (link)
Gren sees Anotsu shift and raise his shirt and realizes that the sun is starting to seep it's way into his clothing and warm him a little more than he was prepared for. He'll have to buy some new clothing sooner than later if he's going to frequent outdoor places. He pulls his hair back off his shoulders and winds it around itself. Then he shoves the pen through the whole thing, hoping that it stays up.

There's an idea. I don't think being a monk would be too terrible. Haven't seen any around though.

Smiles, remembering his trip to the store.

Well, there was the one, but he's not exactly what I would envision if I were to consider going into a brotherhood of any sort.

It's funny how these extensions become us.

He lapses into a moment of silence, trying to pin point the moment in time when he turned into a saxaphone player, instead of just being someone who played the saxaphone.

I hope so, I hadn't thought to ask. I imagine if I don't bother any of the other guests it shouldn't be too much of a hardship. I can do it quietly in my room at the very least.

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[info]shadowcrane
2007-09-07 02:34 pm UTC (link)
It's funny how these extensions become us. Anotsu was about to close his eyes, but that remark makes him look up.

Do they? Did they? Now a flippant remark came back to bite him.

"But what if that extension is your part of your calling, Gren-san?" he asks quietly. He watches as the pen slips out of Gren's hair and falls tip-forward into the sand, sticking up like a miniature sword rammed into the ground. "Then you wouldn't give it up unless someone made you." Or it fell away from you, just like that, a crutch no longer needed.

He hesitates for a moment, stumbling on the verge of another thought, but then he shies away from it.

Instead, he says, "I guess you're right; being a monk is a path well worth following." Shading his eyes from the sun, Anotsu reaches for the pen with his other hand and passes it up to Gren. "Maybe I'll consider it," he smiles, his lids drifting shut.

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[info]jazzchagren
2007-09-07 02:51 pm UTC (link)
He draws his knees into his chest slowly and lowers his chin onto them. What if it was? Or what if you created a calling out of something that had become comfortable to you? That would make a calling a misnomer then, but did it really matter if the end result was the same? The pen slips out of his hair, spilling it in a long twist down his back, and he sighs and considers cutting it again.

No, of course you wouldn't. It would be more important to you than your life, I imagine.

And then, more to himself...

Would that be the way to tell a calling from a lifestyle, or even from a passion?

Gren smiles and looks down at Anotsu.

If you don't mind me saying, you seem too dynamic to make a proper monk. That probably just goes to show how little I know of either subject though.

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[info]shadowcrane
2007-09-07 09:39 pm UTC (link)
Anotsu barks a laugh, short and good-humoured, although it sounds a bit like he's closing a book. "It is", he says. "It is more important than my life."

Calling or crutch - it's been passed down his line, from his grandfather to his father to himself, all bent and broken by the same rod.

"You're giving yourself too little credit." His hands are drawing small circles in the sand, digging up shells and aligning them in a single kanji sign. Glancing up at Gren, he buries it, and says: "I would like to hear you play one day. If I may."

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[info]jazzchagren
2007-09-07 11:17 pm UTC (link)
Gren smiles. Perhaps it's one in the same with passion after all.

And what is your extension?

He watches Anotsu's fingers as they trace in the sand, and remembers countless other hands in succession doing close to the same thing, but without the relaxation of the ocean in the background, and often with much cruder results.

You may. I would like that, actually. It's been a long time since I played for someone I knew.





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[info]shadowcrane
2007-09-08 10:26 am UTC (link)

"Thank you," Anotsu nods. "An honour. Just let me know when."

After another minute of lazy wiggling, he chuckles "extension" and blushes, because even if he said it first... only now does he notice the potential for double-entendre. Thank Kannon Bosatsu Gren hasn't picked up on that.

Folding his arms behind his head and gazing out at sea, he chews his lip. "The sword, you could say. As a generic term." In his peripheral vision, Gren seems to start, then stills, and Anotsu curls over to regard him. "A Nepalese axe, actually. No way to get that through customs."

He'd acquired a half-way decent bokuto, first thing in London, not sparing a glance for what those idiots were selling as "katana".

"So," he smiles, spreading his callused fingers, "you catch me empty-handed."

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[info]jazzchagren
2007-09-08 03:37 pm UTC (link)
Gren catches the blush and laughs lightly. What a term to be using. He has to hand it to him though, it was apropos before they started to think about it. He laughs a little harder, remembering games the men would play in camp when they were bored, changing the meanings of words by virtue of just saying them enough times.

I will do that.

The chuckles die out and he starts a bit at the knowledge that Anotsu was a swordsman. Steel flashes in his mind and he chews slowly at the inside of his lower lip. He shouldn't be surprised, Anotsu looks like someone who had spent lots of time practicing or sparring. Tight musculature, probably very agile, hands rough from the tsuka. But it doesn't mean anything, not really. All swordsman are the same in the same way that all sax players are the same. It's whoever is behind the sword that matters. And so earnestly, honestly, he tilts his head a little.

Ah, but I'd like to see that sometime as well. If there was ever a time when you were not empty handed. I'm not familiar with the Nepalese Ax, but I used to know someone who was proficient with the katana, and watching him practice or fight was always something of a wonder to me, since the only weapon I ever had practice with was my gun in military training. Always interesting, how something so graceful could kill you so quickly.

And he realizes he's babbling now, which he feels is probably ok, but he doesn't want to subject Anotsu to it.

Is that what you're going to be teaching?


Sorry, apparently I've forgotten how to spell. >.>

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[info]shadowcrane
2007-09-08 06:51 pm UTC (link)
"To kill quickly?" No. Yes. No. Hatsumi had made sure to rub in that Anotsu had neither a belt nor taken any of the accepted exams. Oh, of course, he'd insinuated, with his skills he could always fast-track it, but until he had the official qualifications and was approved by the Association... So sorry, Kagehisa.

That had been when he'd nearly snapped.

Makie would be proud of him. Or maybe she'd laugh at the way he'd sat on his heels, white knuckles pressed to his knees, staring at a spot on the wall behind Sensei.

"I don't think so," he says with a low laugh to dispel some of Gren's visible -and audible- unease. "But if you've seen what a katana can do... An axe is different in the way it distributes weight; different centres of gravity, better suited to defence than offence, I guess."

He shifts and jams his left elbow into the sand, watching Gren a little closer, trying to fathom if there could be a gun on him now.

"Martial art teachers will always tell you that an attacker is at a grave disadvantage. That the act of aggression sets him back. I do not necessarily agree, but... with an axe, that's correct." And so? You force your opponent to make the first move.

Flopping back, he huffs, then says: "Not that they'll ever let me use one in the dojo."

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[info]jazzchagren
2007-09-08 09:53 pm UTC (link)
Perhaps not to kill quickly. Perhaps not to kill at all in most people's hands. But had different ideas. It was always so fast. I used to chalk it up to light and reflection, but even when he practiced with bones he found it was the same.

Nods as he listens, trying to picture Anotsu with an axe, blood clinging to his clothes. The visions of his imagination clash greatly with what he has seen of the man so far.

I think I'd agree to some extent, about the defence having an advantage. We spent a good amount of time learning what to do if we were attacked, but there were only theories about offence. In that particular kind of battle anyway, where the enemy wasn't really a person, but a collection of unknowns. A lot of if's were involved, and if's don't really instill confidence in an assault.

Not among men who hadn't slept in three days anyway. Not from people who were still healing and recouping losses from the last time they were asked to take on an unknown enemy. No, he much prefered defence, in most areas of his life. Perhaps that could change here though.

No, I suppose not. Not if there are children around. I don't imagine they've got much of a use for a skill like that in a place like this. Do they do kendo, or anything of that sort there? That might be interesting to see.

Or to learn, now that he thinks about it. Perhaps he should ask if they teach classes of people his age there. If he was really going to settle in and start anew, he may as well learn new things.

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[info]shadowcrane
2007-09-10 02:11 pm UTC (link)
Anotsu's back to cracking his spine in the sand. Maybe he should look for a shiatsu practitioner in town... though he doubts he can presently afford one. Then he hears "bones" and frowns a bit. Tameshigiri, test cutting on cadavers - he's always found that distasteful.

Folding his hands on his stomach, perfectly still in repose, if not in mind, he says: "I wouldn't know about fighting large bodies of unknowns; my school - if you could call it that - believed in testing skill one on one. And while you might not know your opponent by name, you'd still know him by strength." He doesn't go on to say that this point became moot with the introduction of firearms.

A fly is scuttling up and down his arm where it's bare, and he watches it distractedly. "They have kendo classes, yes," he murmurs, then cranes his neck. "In what army did you fight, Gren-san?"

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[info]jazzchagren
2007-09-11 02:43 am UTC (link)
Gren unfolds so that he's just sitting cross legged again. The other posture had started to hurt his ribs, and he really couldn't remember why he was sitting that way anyway. It wasn't as if he was shoved on a ship with 100 other men, he had the whole beach to stretch out on.

The Martian Initiative. Initiate being a kind word for invade. We fought in the Titan War II, but we didn't really belong there. The people on Titan have been at war for ages, almost since they landed there to begin with. Everything was so scattered at the beginning of emigration that no one really knows what it is that started them off against each other, but there are certain groups in the solar system who feel like it's there job to take care of it. Lucky for me one of them was the Martian government.

He pauses to fiddle for his pack of cigarettes and pulls one out and lights it. Something about talk of the war makes him long for smoke in his lungs. It's probably a learned response, and it probably gives away everything about him, but now isn't the time to unlearn it.

It wasn't anything like they said it would be, and I almost envy you your knowledge of your opponents. It was just going to be a quick tour, and then they'd pay for your schooling, which was nice because the music school I wanted to go to was more than I could afford. But then it went on, and on. Even our allies resented us.

He takes a large drag and blows it out slowly, trying to blow his thoughts out with it in a steady stream so that he can see them all lined up in a row, and maybe even make sense of them.

There's something to be said for brotherhood though, for comradery. We didn't know each other going in, but we were near inseparable coming out. Most of us anyway.

Then, as an afterthought. I'd like to try that I think. The Kendo I mean.</i>

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[info]shadowcrane
2007-09-11 01:01 pm UTC (link)
"Initiative," Anotsu snorts softly, with palpable contempt. Not that he'd ever seen one, but at least the daimyo had called a battle a battle. "I haven't lived through a war yet. You must be very brave."

He says that in all seriousness, numbed by the sheer pointlessness of the battles Gren describes. Behind closed eyes, there are images of Sekigahara now, woodcuts and ink, and Anotsu remembers the tales he read as a boy. Sekigahara had been a slaughterhouse, too; nothing, nothing noble about it. Yet samurai had died and continued to die for their lords, blinding themselves to the fact that those lords were debased and worthless. The one time he'd asked his grandfather why those samurai hadn't turned ronin, his grandfather had beaten him senseless.

Comrades. As for Itto-ryu, the point is moot now, but... yes.

Gren grips his cigarette like a drowning man clings to an oar, and Anotsu looks away in order not to embarrass him.

"They might not let you start with kendo, though," he adds, reasonably. "You'll need to learn how to fall first, so... you might want to give your ribs some time."

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[info]jazzchagren
2007-09-12 01:07 am UTC (link)
He tilts his head to the side and lightly knocks the ash off the end of the cigarette, watching it mix with the sand as it falls.

I don't know that I'm brave so much as I'm gullible. But once you're there you do what you have to, you know? It wouldn't have done at all to have deserted or been killed, so you push through.

You push through because, even if you do desert there's nowhere for you to go on a desert planet, dressed as a Martian soldier. Because the memory of the other men's eyes would haunt you forever if you didn't at least hang around to see them light up once in a while. Because a unit is only as strong as it's weakest point, and that isn't you damnit, no matter what he says.

He nods his head. You're right of course, I didn't think about that. The end result is so tempting, and the work to get there still seems daunting at times.

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[info]shadowcrane
2007-09-12 04:41 pm UTC (link)
For a fleeting moment, the smoke curls around Gren's fingers before it's dragged away by the breeze, and Anotsu surprises himself by wanting to snatch at it. Then he shakes his head.

"You're right. You push on through," he says. "They burden you with a task, and you shoulder it." He's had this talk before, well, not this one, but similar, and he remembers it well. The louder it had got, the more he had to quell what was left of little Kagehisa, a small boy balking at the task he was set. He had talked himself into a rage, yelling at the poor drunk woman that a parent's words were sacrosanct.

And now he's lying on a beach in Margate, no matter what his ancestors may have to say about that. Slowly he peels himself from the sand and sits up. "So, this store you mentioned the other day? I passed along High Street, but no rice cookers. There was a Japanese restaurant, though. Are you hungry?"

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[info]jazzchagren
2007-09-15 06:15 pm UTC (link)
Gren takes another long drag on the cigarette before stubbing it out next to the previous one in the sand. It's warmer now, but the light breeze makes it comfortable and he reflects for a moment on how lucky he is to be here at all and not dead in space, frezen with his ship's engine.

Actually, yes. And it's been a while since I've had any good Japanese food.

He stands and tries to brush the sand off his pants, but gives up when he sees that he's just not going to get it all. At least here he doesn't have to be permanantly coated in it, can just go back to the inn and wash himself clean. He bends over to retrieve his pad and pencil and holds a hand out to help Anotsu up.

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[info]shadowcrane
2007-09-16 08:04 pm UTC (link)
Anotsu needs a moment to place the gesture - the easiness with which Gren reaches out to him. He's been brought up to be self-sufficient, self-contained at all times, to hide what he's thinking, to let cool reserve govern his actions. He can't tell if he would have taken Magatsu's hand, if offered like this... with a glare, probably.

This isn't Edo, he reminds himself. So he reaches up, face carefully blank. "Thank you."

"I wouldn't know if it's good. But we're close to the sea, so there's a chance the fish is fresh," he says, grabbing his sandals.

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