Spellbind Mods (
spellbindmods) wrote in
spellgrinders2017-12-23 11:05 pm
Entry tags:
( TDM #7 )

You blink and that's all it takes. At first, the picture doesn't come in clear, like you're waiting for a screen to fully load -- more aptly, it's like you're waiting for a camera to focus so you can find image clarity. Before you happened to rapidly close your eyes and open them, your life was normal...well, normal for you, anyway. Fighting an alien, making a quesadilla, dying. And then that blurry picture suddenly takes over. There's a lot to take in here -- you feel weird, your surroundings are weird. Everything is just weird. For starters, there's that new piece of jewelry inserted in the space above your chest. That certainly wasn't there before you opened your eyes.
B ▢ After a strange incident a couple of days ago, the area around Anmung tower has been essentially dead. This may or may not be lucky for you -- since you're on the top of the observation deck, and all. If you're afraid of heights...oops. It's not that people aren't allowed to be up there, it's just that there aren't too many people. The view is still pretty good, though! C ▢ Let's say that you just want some answers and information about the strange signet you now have. You may find some success in asking around, but be warned: not everyone in Shehui will know what the fuck you're talking about. If you're lucky enough, you may eventually run into a coven member that will be able to explain. D ▢ Since your character didn't show up via any special means, they may not know that magic is a bit taboo in Shehui. If their new magic manifests, it might be a bit of an issue. Locals certainly won't like it, and they'll definitely attract the attention of more than a few monitors. The good news? This is also a pretty good way to snag the attention of a coven member who is here to help! E ▢ Let's get back to some fun stuff. Your character is enveloped in darkness for a brief moment, something clasped in their hand. Lights, camera, action -- the glowing screen that suddenly flashes on turns out to belong to a karaoke booth TV! You and and someone else have been locked in this booth for an hour -- at least there's a mini bar and some snacks! F ▢ For something not so fun, the snowfall has stopped in Shehui, except for those residences and businesses who want to keep paying for it. A lot aren't willing to cough up the credits, so it's safe to say the streets aren't. Everything is frosty and slippery, from melted snow to frozen water littering the sidewalks. Watch your step or you could hurt yourself...or bump into an unexceptional stranger! G ▢ Finally, you may have had the fortunate luck of ending up in the coven's apartment complex. There are names on the door to all apartments, if you want to go exploring. Whether you find the name of someone you recognize, or maybe you just want some shelter from the cold weather, knock knock...is anyone home? H ▢ Wildcard! How will your character react to this strange world? |

no subject
Even a month apart, everything fits back together seamlessly, nerve endings sparking and fizzing with newly found familiarity, like feelings returning back to a limb. A ghostly, constant presence, finally solidified. A tether that grounds him, an axis upon which his world turns.
He glances at the woman and the decorations that Orga indicate toward, but without comprehension or understanding; he isn't familiar with this place yet enough to know, hasn't been paying attention to the customs and the traditions of this world yet. ] No.
What is it? [ asking, assuming that Orga would know whatever he didn't. Or maybe he can hear it from the barest inflections of the question. ]
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And there was still a part of him that missed that faithful presence at his side, which felt hobbled as if he had one arm tied painfully behind his back, but he could always tell that part that he knew Mika would return when the job was done.
Flowers. He looks up to them as they pass the decorations. They weren't really part of a Martian person's symbolic vernacular, for how rare they were. They hadn't known they were meant to be dedicated to those that were lost or gone. He hadn't realized how they represented the brightness of life until he had seen Earth.
It was a strange dichotomy; so beautiful, but so short-lived. That was why Tekkadan was a flower forged in iron, one that would never wilt or fade.]
A day of remembrance. Of mourning.
[He knew it was still a novel concept for a lot of them - a group of children who had grown up knowing that they would one day be piled into shallow graves, thrown away like industrial waste.]
Like the funeral we had, on board the Isaribi.
[With all the others they had lost, he felt like they were due for another one. How many more would they have to have until their fighting ceased? Would the need to mourn their dead ever leave them?]
no subject
They walk past the woman. There's faint grass-sweet scent from the flowers wound around the lamp post, slightly sweet, slightly earthy, smelling of life and death and everything else but Mika isn't familiar enough with it to recognise them all. To him, it's an odd scent; to someone who hasn't ever known what it was to be really restful.
There's a quick gaze upwards in Orga's direction, catching sight of the expression on his face, speaking more without words. Something like that has become largely unnecessary between them, like the time they spent together reduced each and every gesture to certain meanings, understood only by them. ]
Okay. [ they will hold one, for everyone they lost along the way, everyone else they will lose; Mikazuki remembers all of them, the same as Orga. ]
We'll help them forget.
[ but they never will; there is no way they would, not unless they wanted to sully the memory of these kids who lived and died chasing the same dreams. they will remember in place of those who were gone, and maybe that will help them shoulder some of the pain that the dead have suffered, as well. it was a cycle – maybe when someday when they were gone, someone else will remember for them, as well. ]
I'll help you, so they can come back to someplace better.
[ someplace that orga was trying to create for all of them. ]
no subject
He wonders if this place would do the same.
He nods at Mika's words. He had arrived to Earth after the fighting, and even then things had been too hectic to worry about sending off those that had died in that unnecessary, blind war. Tekkadan was never without lives lost to honor and remember.]
Alright.
[The well-timedness of this particular holiday wasn't lost on him, but he keeps the observation to himself.
He glances to Mika, wondering which avenue of meaning he chose for the words. As far as he was aware his friend wasn't any more of a believer in the somewhat common belief of reincarnation as Orga was - it had never seemed to apply to them. But if some of the other kids thought it was true and it helped them, well... Orga made concessions.
But, no, more likely they should focus on the world they were making for themselves here and now.]
Sounds like a plan. [Said with a small smile. Altering the fabric of the world didn't seem like a tall order with their combined efforts.]
So, [brief change in topic,] I take it no one else has found their way here, other than us?
[That's the feeling he gets, but he might be wrong.]
no subject
He wasn't someone to believe in afterlife or reincarnation — rather, it's like something like that doesn't belong to them necessarily, something that was reserved for human beings other than what they were. It doesn't seem quite real, not like the dirt under his nails and the blood in his veins do.
But they are still — something more than what the world has labelled them as. That's what they'll make them see, here and now. That's important. Not so much for the comrades they've left behind, more for the ones who's left them. ]
Ah, [ his steps slow momentarily, and Mika blinks, the gaze flitting past Orga's head to scan the street numbers quickly. ]
There's that guy. Chocolate's friend. And some girl.
Nobody else.
no subject
But at least he had found Mika; without him, Orga would've been even more lost. For now he'll hold fast to that.
Not privy to the address for the delivery, he's just following Mika along. He pauses as his companion's pace slows, though drifting attention is drawn back when something else seems to occur to him.]
..."Chocolate"...
[???? Mika, what the hell -
He gives a single, rough, slightly long-suffering laugh.] Mika, [The tone isn't admonishing so much as lightly cajoling. He, more than anyone else, has dealt with Mika's idiosyncrasies enough to know there was nothing one could do about them but work with them.] Can you be a little more specific?
no subject
...Gali-Gali.
[ that was ... close enough, right?
Mika's eyebrows draw together a little, an almost frown; he's never been good with things he didn't have a slightest bit of interest in — this too is one of those things. The scars on his face is real, the disdain and the bitterness from Gaelio, it is real, but to Mika, it's got nothing to do with him. It has no meaning, in the path they take. ]
The Gjallarhorn.
no subject
Certainly it's no one from Tekkadan or even the Turbines; Mika tended to remember things that he either found interest in or at least the vaguest sense of respect. When he finally continues to clarify that it was Gjallarhorn, though, it clicks into place. Of course, that would be someone he wouldn't immediately remember the name of.]
Oh.
[Orga's sense of recognition of the peacekeeping force and then the slow backslide into frustration was a visible journey on his face. Depending on which Gjallarhorn it was (because there were many of them, remember, Mika?), this could be a huge pain in the neck.]
You don't mean McGillis, right? [Instincts tell him no.] Another one of them?
[Honestly, McGillis was one of the only Gjallarhorn people he'd ever spoken with at length... His perspective on this was narrow.
He continues, a sound of annoyance catching in his throat.] They haven't caused you any trouble, have they?
no subject
He was with him, before. Not now.
[ Not now, not here. There's something different. Even Mika can see that. ]
It's fine.
[ it's not exactly an answer to what Orga has asked, not a clear yes or no, and it might show. Mika doesn't make any indication of it though, continuing on at a slower, but even pace down the street. ]
no subject
Well, let's just say that he might be a little too mentally forgiving of the younger boy.]
Hmm. [Honestly, that doesn't help much, but Orga's knowledge (and, by extension, his opinions of) that particular branch of Gjallarhorn was limited. There had only been his dealings with McGillis - or Montag, as he had known him during his masquerading days. As they had been simultaneously harried and supported by him and those attached to him, Orga's thoughts were complicated, which made trying to make a snap decision about someone merely affiliated with him (and now not) even more so.
So he doesn't.]
Well, [he rolls his shoulders in a shrug,] we'll deal with it when we need to, then. Can't say the politics of it matter much here anyway.
[Without mobile suits and other weapons to muster, suddenly the stakes felt a lot lower.
He peers at Mika out of the corner of his eye, discerning. He doesn't call him out on the vagueness of the answer, though.]
I'll talk to 'em soon. [He indicates the house they've idled in front of with a nod of the head.] This it?
no subject
And he'd been helped by him — by that man, when he clearly didn't have to. Whatever truce had been struck between them all had only minor effects and influence on Mika; it was something that had more to do with that man and McGillis.
The scar, the bitterness running under surface. The funeral.
The hand extended toward him in snow. ]
Even if Orga didn't talk to them, [ Mikazuki continues to carefully check the street numbers off as they walk, finally coming to a stop in front of a particular door. This must be it. ] —they won't bother us here.
[ a child comes to the door to answer the bell, and Mika shifts to ease the flowers out of his hold, handing it over. ]
no subject
It put him in an odd situation, then, when he felt so adrift in situations that were technically safer for those that he should probably be trying to keep alive. The catch-22 of the leader of a mercenary company, then.
To Orga, though, none of it should apply to Mika; if they had any complaint about what the boy did, they should take it to him instead. Barbatos did not deploy unless Orga gave the direct command.
So those will be discussions he will need to have. Fine. He prefers have them directly regardless; all of this running around and talking through channels and liaisons back home was starting to grate on him regardless.
He smiles at Mika's response, choosing not to answer. He thinks speaking to them is an eventuality, but regardless of how it shakes out, they wouldn't be able to touch them. Let's just say... they don't particularly scare him in-person. He idles on the street corner while Mika makes the delivery. He's waiting for him when he returns.]
So what's on the docket for the rest of the day? [Asked with smile slightly askew.] Or are you off the hook?
no subject
Not for the first time since he caught sight of the other boy, Mika wonders if this is his doing, somehow. Geir had said that the witch had ways of bringing a few people from the same world, people who had some kind of an important bond or connection between them.
He had just been — not waiting, but trying to find his way back to Orga, to help him get to where he wanted to bring them to. Did his efforts only succeed partially, working in reverse to tear Orga from his rightful place instead? ]
I'm done now.
[ Mika doesn't quite smile, but the tilt of his head mirrors the line of the crooked smile on Orga's face. ]
That was the last of the delivery.
[ It might be seen as selfish, if people had all but known that something inside Mika has settled by Orga's presence like ripples across the surface of the water growing still to reflect the light of the moon. It is selfish, but Mika doesn't stop to think about what kind of an emotion that spreads in his chest; some kind of peace, some kind of solid reassurance that Orga always exudes, some kind of confidence in his belonging, to this place, beside him.
Now that Orga was here, whether it be through his own wishes (fault) or not, Mika was going to do what he always has done — everything and anything that Orga wants. ]
What next, Orga?
no subject
The question of the why of it might be something to press itself into quiet moments of contemplation, but it wasn't something Orga would waste too much time wrangling with. It wasn't his way. Orga always kept his eyes forward, on the path ahead, always poised and ready to flag what might need to be pursued or otherwise removed. That he had Mika at his side only meant that that they were able to continue to angle towards what was best for them here, and if he had any thoughts to spare for the witch that drug them all here, it would a shred of gratitude for them being together now. Even if Mika had had to field a month on his own.
Orga's smile spreads a few notches wider, and he laughs, giving Mika a small clap on the back as he comments,] delivery boy... [in a way that wasn't quite mocking, though an outside observer might make that mistake in reading it that way. No, it is a warm sense of disbelief, a deep humor in finding perhaps the deadliest mobile suit pilot doing something so mind-numbingly menial.
But, then again, he's a mercenary company boss out of work. Hm.
At this point in time, it is a more difficult question to answer. He's out of his game, out of his field, out all of his men, out the barest outline of a plan he had started to hatch with McGillis.
So for now he rolls his shoulders in a shrug, assuming another easy smile.] We look around and see what sort'a trouble we can get into. [Of course, his tone seems to imply.
And he sets off, knowing intrinsically that Mika would be with him every step of the way.]