Captain Malachai (Jack Brampton) (
andlivefreely) wrote in
zenderael_rl2013-05-13 05:02 pm
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Entry tags:
[Mal/Travis] - steampunk revolution
Who: Malachai (PC), Tyrus/Travis
When: Friday, 12th
Where: Phone/Mal's apartment
Before/After: NA
Warnings: Possible swearing, TBA
Mal was growing restless. He'd met Lera's parents that morning, and then puttered around with his constructs, getting started on the lizards he'd promised Gabe, but he was starting to feel more and more alone on Earth. Duncan had shit going on he didn't want to share, Gabe and Lera were in another world, he was running out of people to bother...
So he called up Travis.
When: Friday, 12th
Where: Phone/Mal's apartment
Before/After: NA
Warnings: Possible swearing, TBA
Mal was growing restless. He'd met Lera's parents that morning, and then puttered around with his constructs, getting started on the lizards he'd promised Gabe, but he was starting to feel more and more alone on Earth. Duncan had shit going on he didn't want to share, Gabe and Lera were in another world, he was running out of people to bother...
So he called up Travis.
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Of course, potion stuff wasn't much different from what Zenderael alchemists did, outside of perhaps some of the equipment being a little more technologically inclined.
He turned and headed into the spare bedroom he used as an office. His work desk sat against one wall, with its top-notch computer and printer, along with file folders containing various finished and unfinished artwork. There was also much of his online business stored in the room, another desk and a few drawer units holding all the leather scraps, beads, wires, tools, and such.
The table under the window, which had been his drawing table, was now where he did all of his construct work. Most of what was there were smaller bits and pieces from various small appliances and old-school clocks, along with a pile of sketches, a few started projects, and boxes stacked under it that held bigger pieces.
And, despite how much stuff there was collected into the one room (it was a pretty big room, mind), it was all very well organized, much like the rest of the place. Everything seemed to have its place, the only things seeming out-of-place being the items he'd been using.
"So," he said, nodding to the table under the window. "Ain't much compared to before, but it's way cooler than the stuff I made before."
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He looked the sketches over and nodded his head. "It's awesome," he said. He did not want to go into details. He never came here before. It seemed safer to focus on what was genuinely new to both of them. He motioned at the sketch.
"What's this?" he said. "Some kind of engine?"
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They showed great detail in how the airship would be constructed, with heavy steampunk influence, at least in visible design. The engine and working parts, however, used no steam. Being a construct, it could recharge off of a chosen element, and being as it was designed to fly, he'd chosen wind.
Other sketches in the pile showed a clockwork horse he was working on, but he set that one aside to pull out a design for something smaller. A dragon, also wind element, that would be able to fly and function like a dragon of its size should, except that it was a construct.
He liked animals.
"Gonna work on this one this weekend," he said, holding up the dragon sketch. "Then the horse, probably. Be cool to have a construct to ride around, yeah?"
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"That's awesome," he said, and even if the words were not ones he would use naturally, the awe and respect in his voice was. "This thing will be incredible if you can get it up. Let's see--ah, yeah."
He looked over the horse sketch next. He hadn't build a riding construct, but he had seen them and weighed ideas for a two-legged one before. He should get back to it. "I like it. You definitely got a thing for the animal designs, here, Doctor Doolittle." He grinned in Malachai's direction, before he looked back at the table. He studied the design for a moment.
He started seeing improvements. But could he suggest them, without giving himself away? Damn it. He had been careful with meeting Travis's friends one-on-one for a reason.
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"Yeah, what can I say? I'm an animal lover. Always thought up ideas for makin' robot animals in my comic. Now I can do it for real." It was pretty fucking amazing, in all honesty. Of course, the ideas from his comic wouldn't have worked with alchemy. Probably wouldn't work at all, actually, but they were fiction, so that didn't matter.
"Think the horse'll be the biggest challenge. You know, aside from the airship. That one's probably gonna take months just to get all the part it needs." It would take less time if he had his inheritance, but... That wasn't something he'd told Travis about, his father's death, and he didn't want to bring it up. "Gives me somethin' to work towards, though.
"Oh!" Mal glanced around, stepped to the door of the office, and peered out towards the living room. "Hey, Six! C'mere!" he called, glancing back to Travis to say, "You gotta see this."
A small... creature scurried out from under the couch and into the hall, stopping as it found itself in front of Mal. It was a completed construct - a six-inch clockwork scorpion, tail curled up so the stinger hovered over its back, a stinger that seemed to have some sort of altered welding tool in it.
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It left him with a nagging sense of guilt, though.
The appearance of Six proved a ready distraction from those thoughts. He turns and looked at the little construct. As he looked over it, he knelt down to get a closer look. "Damn," he murmured softly. "This thing is off the hook!" He squinted at it. He took more detailed notes than he really could ever make as Travis. "What's this thing on its tail?"
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"He's Six 'cause I made five others and didn't wanna give 'em all names til I could figure out what sort of naming scheme to go with. Three spiders, three scorpions, each with a different task, though they can all tidy up." Sometimes things fell off the table and rolled under the desk, or got lost in the corner. Having a little critter able to fetch them for him was rather useful.
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Then he looked up at Mal and nodded his head. "Makes sense. I thought maybe you were naming them after frakking Cylons," he said, with a chortle. He looked sideways at Mal, before he nodded. "What kind of constructs are they? Earth?"
It made the most sense, he thought. Letting them recharge in dirt would be simple enough.
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He looked at the scorpion and made a 'shoo' gesture, telling it, "Thanks, that's all I need." Yes, he actually thanked the little laser-bot. It couldn't hurt.
When he looked back to Travis, he grinned. "Wanna hit the bottles, now?" he asked, starting for the kitchen.
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He grinned and started off after Mal. "Yeah, let's."
It was easier to be Travis with drunk people. Part of it involved taking an endurance potion before he got here, to make it harder for him to get drunk. It was a trick he learned with Upas.
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He went to the cupboard beside the fridge, where he stored his booze, and pulled out a bottle of spiced rum. "You tried any Zenderael booze, yet?" he asked, while pulling out two glasses from the upper cupboard. "Tried some of their ales. Weren't that great. 'Course it's only Everea stuff." He glanced to Travis and made his way to the living room. "Got a lead who might be able to get me some better stuff, if dmail ever starts up again." Or if the merge finishes, if that happened first, he supposed.
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Travis's taste in liquor was awful, though. Tyrus still liked Earth booze better -- it was exotic and interesting, damn it. Of course, Zenderean alcohol reminded him of home.
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"Hey, you know me. Gotta save money somewhere, right?" he asked, laughing again. He shook his head, before he took his glass and clinked it against the other one. Tyrus looked down at the glass, then lifted it and took a long drink of it. "Not bad. Dragon's Breath, huh? Did you rename yourself Puff after it happened?"
He grinned. He could have asked if Malachai was okay, but it looked he was fine.
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"That was when I set up the potion lab, though," he continued, thumbing towards the lab setup on the table not far from the couch. "Grabbed a bunch of supplies, came back home and ordered what I couldn't get quick. Was able to mix up a bunch of fire resist potions, and some heals in case I needed 'em."
He gave Travis a wide grin. "You got any idea how surreal it is to have all this shit be real? Before, you just knew it was talk about some game. Not it's like... shit, man. You'll never know if what someone says is referrin' to a game or not, now."
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Tyrus took a seat on the chair, taking another drink of the rum. He never liked to take shots of rum; he preferred to drink his liquor slowly. It also made it easier to control his intake of liquor and keep him sober for longer. He swirled the drink around, before he looked back up and peered over at Mal. He nodded to him. "That sounds like the good thing to do. It's..."
He looked around. He learned to fake this sentiment. It made it almost real in his head; to become truly amazed at Zenderael. He had to channel the amazement he felt at Earth to do that, but the end result was similar. He smiled, over the rim of his glass, and nodded his head. "Yeah," he said. "It's a big change to get used to. Makes you look at the world differently, too, you know? Seeing how people lived on the other world."
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"But it's more than that, too. Monsters- I mean, people went huntin' and came up against bears or wild boar, but that's nothing." He went quiet a moment, looking into his glass, and then shook his head before continuing. "When I got attacked by the cracklecat- I don't remember if I told you about that- I was scared. Never seen anything like it. But people from there're used to these things."
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It made sense to Tyrus. He remembered when he was out with Harriet and saw the sea monster up the river; it hadn't frightened him the same way it frightened most of the people from Earth. His expression grew distant for a moment, as he thought about it, and then he threw back his glass and drank the remaining rum down. He looked at Malachai and nodded his head. "Yeah," he agreed. "We're scared of things that they're used to. I'd bet even a soldier or whatever, they'd be scared of a monster."
He lowered the glass, cupping it in both hands. "There's just nothing like monsters over here, you know?" he asked. "It makes Earth... I guess peaceful, in some ways. Not so much in others, though, probably."
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He nodded to the bottle on the table. "Help yerself," he invited. "There's a couple more bottles in the kitchen, plus some other stuff. Just don't touch the vodka." He only had the vodka on hand for Duncan- he never touched the stuff himself, it was nasty- but wanted to hold onto it for whenever it was Duncan decided to fill him in on what was up.
He finished off his own glass while waiting to let Travis get a refill first.
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"No shit." He laughed again at that. "We don't want traffic either. Too bad they gotta deal with it, too."
Tyrus decided to stick with the rum. It was good stuff; he wanted a bit more of it, before he switched to a different liquor. He filled up his glass and took a sip of it, before he looked back to Malachai. He grinned over the glass's rim again. "I'll leave your vodka alone," he said. "I'm not the biggest fan, anyways. You like the stuff too much to share?"
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He wasn't sure for how long, but it wasn't like vodka went bad.
"What've you been up to, anyway? Aside from crashin' into shit."
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It was easy enough for Tyrus to brush it aside, like he was just fucking around. He knew who "Chief" was, too, thankfully. He nodded at Mal, grinning at him, and then shrugged his shoulders. Part of making a convincing lie, he found, was basing it in truths. Half-truths let him use his emotions normally, kept him from constructing a entirely fabricated life. It was better that way.
"I was in Instructor Kahil's class," he said. Travis signed up for that before Tyrus got here. "That was the big one. And trying to keep from growing broke before the fall semester starts, y'know?"
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But he'd heard enough of his friends talk about money problems, so Mal nodded understandingly. "Shoulda become an alchemist when ya had the chance," he said, grinning. "Already got a few patents pending."
He sipped at his rum and leaned back. "What was Kahil teaching, again?" he inquired. "I was taking swordsmanship and monster tracking before the instructors got sick."
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"Yeah," he said. "I should have." Except it would have given him away to Harriet. "I even got along with Nyx pretty well. Too bad, you know?" He shrugged again. "How were you at swordsmanship?"
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"Pretty good, actually. More of a defensive fighter, but the dancing experience meant I picked up on the footwork pretty easily, and swords don't need a whole lotta strength behind 'em." Which was good, because he wasn't all that strong. "Could probably hold my own against some'a the less deadly beasties."
He snickered, then. "I actually told the instructor off- Anais Vallinar, a paladin- for sayin' that the kids who weren't learning so well were refusing to. She tried to punish me by makin' me her partner for defensive demos."
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