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[OTA] Better Than The Lifestream
WHERE: South Village Fountain, Inn, Around Town
WHEN: 12/10 for Arrival and Inn, 12/11 - 12/13 for Around Town
OPEN TO: All
WARNINGS: None
Fountain Arrival - Can't Swim Well - OTA
They say that when one died they returned to the Lifestream. This was a story Reeve had even more reason to believe these days. That upon death one would float within the waters until their consciousness parted into it, melting like butter into water, flowing and mingling until it became new life. Reeve, himself, though he would like to be a cat if possible. Was it wrong to imagine that he could be a cat, Reeve thought as he felt himself weightless and rising in the water. Hope that as he scattered back into the Lifestream that he'd get to be a cat? Because he couldn't begin to imagine what else suddenly coming conscious in the water could be. Yes, it was colder than he'd imagined, and he felt like he was moving and heavy but... Well, none of Reeve's work or travel had any reason for him to be near water. He didn't swim because he was bad at it, he wasn't flying to Wutai until next week, and the last he remembered he was regarding the ruins of his Headquarters with some disappointment. So water didn't make any sense.
Which of course made this the perfect moment for the strain to really set in on his lungs, because whether his mind was willing to admit what was going on or not, Reeve's body at least handled being submerged in the right way. He was holding his breath and his lungs hurt and that more than anything got him kicking belatedly toward the surface as his eyes opened.
Too bad he was a terrible swimmer. The more he tried, the more it felt like he was just sinking back. Maybe he wasn't in the Lifestream yet, but as he flailed toward the surface with little real hope of making it on his own, it wasn't beyond reason to think he might be there soon anyway.
At The Inn - A Bit Like Home - OTA
It's beautiful, in its own way. In a way that some from Gaia might not appreciate. The structure is old fashioned by Midgar and even Edge's standards, but there was something about the exposed wood, the stone of the fireplace and the hearth, that made Reeve feel almost at home. Not in his suite at the WRO headquarters, or the apartment he had maintained for himself in Midgar, or even his mother's house in Sector Five. No, it was like his childhood, and even with all the strangeness of this place, Reeve felt oddly safe here. He could close his eyes and smell the rich stews his mother made when he was little and drew pictures of fairy cat kings and listened to his father tell the old tales about the spirits of the world and the will of the Lifestream. It was far simpler than the life he had afforded himself, but perhaps this inn made it more comfortable to be in this strange place.
"Now if only there was a hot cup of coffee," he mused as he stared into the fire he was sitting near. "Maybe a nice rasher with a side of beans and some stewed greens."
Or just company. That could work too.
Around Town - When All Else Fails: Plan - OTA
There was no point in letting himself stagnate. A bit of time spent in the Inn appreciating it for the shelter it provided and the warmth, and a lovely meal or two, had been more than enough. This, Reeve was given to understand, was the new way of things. Perhaps he had died in the final acts of Omega and Chaos, but he didn't think so. Perhaps he'd gone to Mideel and fallen into the Lifestream and come out somewhere completely different, though that seemed unlikely too. Or perhaps it was just another one of those strange things that seemed to scatter through life. Would lingering on the impossibility of it really serve any value end?
No. Never had and never would. So Reeve had pushed himself off of his rear and headed out into the village to walk the paths. He considered them as he went, carefully measuring each pace off in his mind, trying to create an image of the arrangement of the place. This many paces between the Inn and the fountain park. This far down the road to a house. A house of so many paces wide, calculated to actual scale in his head because really the math wasn't hard. At each house Reeve paused and allowed himself a bit of an arch of the front. Rude to truly traipse around his new neighbor's properties, but he wanted an idea of each house. And he marveled over how each had not only a distinctive look, but how well it all fit together.
"Interesting, an old fashioned style evocative of something along the lines of Kalm or Nibelheim, and yet with its own style. I wonder what sort of team they got in to build such structures. How did they transport in sufficient materials for construction, or was this all clear-cut for production?"
So many considerations, and he didn't know where to start!
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His name had become a common enough one, tied to the WRO efforts. Of course Cloud's was more famous and he thought if he floated that now, it would mean nothing to the woman.
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She cut off his answer before he could give it, though. They were having a different conversation right now in which there had been a misunderstanding.
“I’m not saying everybody is dead back home. But a few are, for sure. Me, for example.”
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To him it makes sense. It's just... well, it's an application of logic.
Which might be a bit hard to follow for others.
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“Sure, whatever. Pretty sure we’re from different planets anyway. I don’t know what this place is. What I do know is that I died six months ago.”
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"And you remember your death?"
Reeve, of course, did not. He was certain he was alive.
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"I am sorry," Reeve said, his voice quiet. "I did not know. Here I am talking about the way my own world works, and not being sensitive to your situation. Please, I ask your forgiveness."
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“It’s fine. I don’t really care, you know? How death works, how life works, how my being here now works. It does, and it sucks less than home, and the only real choice I have is to work from there.”
She shifted in her seat so she was pointed just a little more away from him.
“I know it matters to other people. I just... forget.” There were a whole lot of things she forgot to care about. Sometimes that included who she should and shouldn’t direct her anger at.
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Still didn't think he was dead, this was something else entirely.
The fact that she wouldn't look at him meant he probably was making her uncomfortable.
"If you wish, I could be quiet."
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"That's not what I want. I think a few of my social skills might've gotten lost in the fountain, that's all."
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He had gotten quite caught up in his work, and now he had to take some time to reconsider himself. Instead he considered the fire.
"Would you like to start the conversation over? Pretend we both manage to act as civil people?"
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“Sure. Hello, normal person. I too am a normal person with normal problems.” It naturally came out a little silly, but it was a genuine effort.
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"Hello normal person, I appreciate your normalness and normal problems. Like being abducted by strange powers."
There you have it, better start.
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"Well, my mother always said that a good abduction every now and then bolsters the spirit and puts a spring in the step."
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"A spring in the step might be interesting. I hope you don't bounce too much."
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“I understand that it depends on your natural elasticity. I’m a gymnast, so too many abductions may well have me cartwheeling up the walls.”
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"Don't forget the shoe prints! You can only get your shoes so clean on a welcome mat."
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In a way she reminded him of Yuffie. Energy when she wanted it, but when her mind went to dark places, they went there deeply. What she needed, no doubt, was purpose. And until then, distraction.
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“You know,” she pointed reasonably out, “we do have some of those things.”
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Unfortunately he didn't have the background necessary to manage that sort of thing, so don't look at him.
"I still think it would be wise if you were to keep your feet on the floor, Miss."
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“Hey, nobody said anything about staying earthbound. I can’t make any such promises.”
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Besides the young should live while they are that. There is not enough fun in life. If she can get her feet on the ceiling more power to her.
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'An Internet' he says.
incredible
Re: incredible
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Might be a good close point.
Aye