Gunnar Hydrik (
deathbell) wrote in
zenderael_rl2012-07-26 09:09 pm
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Entry tags:
[Gunnar/Noelle/Anais] - X-DAV Tea Time
Who: Gunnar, Noelle, and Anais
When: Let's say Friday, April 8
Where: X-DAV headquarters
Before/After: n/a
Warnings: To be determined
It was unfortunate that Gunnar had been on his way to restock when he came to this strange new world. The poisons he had with him were precious few, potions even less so, and then there was his tea...
He looked at the remains of tea leaves in his tin canister. It was enough for one pot. Only one. They were plants he had been told were not native to this strange, new world. He barely frowned as he helped himself to the kitchen supplies, having already been shown the ways of the gas stove by Zale. The rogue had his uses.
Soon, the kettle was whistling, and he poured the steaming water into ceramic mugs and their strange little pictures. It was different. Everything had been so different. Gunnar missed his old clothes, too. Jeans were stiff and uncomfortable, and so many of the shirts had images and words on them. His current was mostly black with the word "aggro" written in white. Gunnar had no idea of its meaning, only that it was the most plain one he could find out of what Zale had given him.
He brought the tea in on a tray into the lounge area and set it on the coffee table. "A bit of home," he offered.
But maybe he shouldn't be calling it that.
When: Let's say Friday, April 8
Where: X-DAV headquarters
Before/After: n/a
Warnings: To be determined
It was unfortunate that Gunnar had been on his way to restock when he came to this strange new world. The poisons he had with him were precious few, potions even less so, and then there was his tea...
He looked at the remains of tea leaves in his tin canister. It was enough for one pot. Only one. They were plants he had been told were not native to this strange, new world. He barely frowned as he helped himself to the kitchen supplies, having already been shown the ways of the gas stove by Zale. The rogue had his uses.
Soon, the kettle was whistling, and he poured the steaming water into ceramic mugs and their strange little pictures. It was different. Everything had been so different. Gunnar missed his old clothes, too. Jeans were stiff and uncomfortable, and so many of the shirts had images and words on them. His current was mostly black with the word "aggro" written in white. Gunnar had no idea of its meaning, only that it was the most plain one he could find out of what Zale had given him.
He brought the tea in on a tray into the lounge area and set it on the coffee table. "A bit of home," he offered.
But maybe he shouldn't be calling it that.
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He looked to her expectantly, waiting for a ring or a rumble. (Or a song, as many of them had. Gunnar had thought it a kind of music-based sorcery at first.)
Nothing but silence.
"Perfect," he said.
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"That's incredibly useful." Still, that ear piece... she shifted a little closer to stare at it, frowning. "How well does that stay in place?" Perhaps it stayed better for Noelle, as she was a hunter and not in the direct line of combat, but for a melee combatant like herself and potentially Gunnar, Anais wasn't so sure a simple loop around the ear would cut it. Perhaps Zale would know if there was anything better, though it almost killed her a little to even think about asking him anything regarding this world.
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"But for a close combatant, I cannot say," she added, returning her attention to her tea. "There are different makes. If the shops here are no longer open, you can search them on the internet."
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"... So many," he said, and he closed the browser. "Tomorrow I will search the city." He looked to Anais. "I will let you know what I find."
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"Please do," she said as she handed the ear piece back to Noelle, returning to her mug of tea. Ah, familiarity. "The last thing I want to have to worry about while fighting monsters is something in my ear that goes flying off to who knows where." Especially if said monster was anything like Kharveryos. She had not been present for it, no, but if it had made an appearance, who knew what else might before the worlds got themselves back in order?
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There was a comfortable silence she almost felt hesitant to break before she asked, mug comfortably cupped in her hands, "Have you visited the southeast part of the city? Either of you."
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"I have not," he said. He looked to Noelle. "Bastan." As if that explained it.
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No one had told the paladin?
"A section of Bastan is in the southeast portion of this city," she said, looking at Anais with mild surprise.
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"What do you think it means?"
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"Perhaps things are merging." And that was certainly an unsettling thought. "If we came here, and the monsters are doing so, as well, perhaps the cities crossing over is the next phase." The next phase of what, though?
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"Which would you wish for?"
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"Why?" she asked, eyes still on Anais. "Nature is full of phenomenons. Perhaps it is not a matter of what started it, but who is guiding it, and for what reason."
Because as far as Noelle was concerned, there was someone guiding it. That someone looked like her benefactors, placing them at the food festival that night, expecting something to show up. Had they expected the Spenta, too?
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"Not them, no. Likely they are as uninformed as ourselves in this area." She paused, closed her eyes, then opened them again, looking at the edge of the table. "The ones guiding it belong to or have ties with X-DAV, I think. They knew, that night when Kharveryos arrived, that Kharveryos would arrive. Not it, specifically, perhaps, but something. Which is why Roman, Zale and I were sent there."
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But there was something else in her words. "You have doubts." About X-DAV.
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"They must know something other than what they tell us." Even Zale's description of why X-DAV was taking them in had been painfully vague, probably only what X-DAV had told him to say, and it had seemed far too simple when he had told her why they were letting them stay here. Kill monsters in exchange for all of this? No. It seemed far too easy. There had to be something beneath all of that. Noelle, she thought, knew it, too.
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A phase, Anais had said. The more she thought on it, the more Noelle found herself agreeing with her choice of term. "They feign ignorance to the public. I do not trust them. Not wholly."
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"These are not gestures to be taken lightly."
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The hunter, he understood. What use did they have for others? But the paladin... no, of course she would not know. They helped their own and cast out anyone who disagreed. They had grown up with the luxury of choosing who to trust. Of being trusted by most.
But any anger directed at them died with another realization: that, too, may have been a fabrication of his creator.
He clenched his jaw, reddened and turned to leave.
"No. I apologize," he said before remembering he had not voiced the thoughts he was sorry for. "I... have to go."
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And then Gunnar stood, and she frowned, watching him apologize for something he hadn't even said. Perhaps, she thought, this sort of conversation was best kept away from people who weren't nearly as suspicious of their "benefactors" as she was. She would have to see about getting Nadir's phone number from Zale afterwards, of course. Nadir had seemed reasonable. He hadn't gone along with them, after all, when Zale had approached them both.
"Hydrik," she said after a moment, "if the conversation makes you uncomfortable, we can always change topics. I do not believe either of us would be offended if you said as such." She and Noelle would just have to talk about it later away from him.
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To endear them, perhaps? To bribe. To instill a sense of loyalty or responsibility -- I helped you, now you help me.
She watched Gunnar with a small amount of hesitant curiosity. This was a side of him foreign to her. Of course, unexpected, their relationship was purely business, but to see the boy uncomfortable, hesitant in his own right, when Noelle was accustomed to quick and concise, no doubt at all in his words, it was -- curious.
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"There is no need," he said. "Not on my account."
There was no excuse he could think of, so he offered none and made for the door to return to his room.
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At least she had enough sense to wait until Gunnar was out of the room before turning to Noelle, and asking, "Was it something I said?"
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"I have an errand that takes me to the Bastan in this city," she said, finding a change of topic to something she could adequately address more preferable. "Would you like to accompany me?"
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She stood from her chair, gathering the mugs as she did so. "I will meet you downstairs in five minutes," she said, taking them to the sink to be washed. Her bow and quiver were already in the same room, propped up against the wall right below the window.