apotropaic: (Default)
Philomena Flores ([personal profile] apotropaic) wrote in [community profile] multiversallogs2012-05-13 01:24 pm

[open] you bought a star in the sky tonight/ because your life is dark and it needs some light

Who: Open log. EVERYONE GET IN HERE.
What: Cockatrice Crafts --Baedal's brand new craft fair/market!
Where: Howl Barrow.
When: Sukkardi 12th of Ceidary.
Notes: This is an open post for everybody since we have so many new people joining. There'll be a sub sections in the post itself for general areas but other than that, feel free to mash you characters together like Barbies!
Warnings: None yet.

Baedal is a city that never sleeps, but everyone likes a long-lie in on a Sukkardi morning. At eleven o’clock, the Howl Barrow is climbing to a weekend buzz but it’s not quite there yet. But right off Carnelian Street, Cockatrice Markets is already has its doors open –and bubbles are floating down the street in welcome!

The Market is housed in what once would have been a small, high ceilinged factory building, but the inside and outside has now been painted all manner of colours and murals by local artistic residents. There are tables inside the airy structure, as well as in the outside alleyway, and a large mosaic chandelier dangles outside the entranceway.

It’s free entrance, fun, and like most places in Howl Barrow, friendly and inviting.
agrat: (i want to watch you lose.)

[personal profile] agrat 2012-05-26 01:13 pm (UTC)(link)
It isn't that Lea is immune to awkward, but it doesn't often show in her presentation. She turns to greet Wolfgang with a broad smile of her own, head tipped to the side as she looks up (way up, even in her shoes) at him. "Hi, yourself."

When she notices his attention has listed to her newfound companion, she lifts the jar a touch and eyes her scorpion friend.

"Oh, um--magic supplies," she explains. "At home the only place we could get anything like this would be back in Kurdistan, and I couldn't even get there before we closed the airports, for obvious reasons. ...he's kind of fuck ugly, isn't he? Poor thing, it almost goes all the way back around to cute."
gramarye: (pic#3554653)

[personal profile] gramarye 2012-05-28 03:00 pm (UTC)(link)
"Ah," he says, still eyeing it as if it is a giant probably venomous amphibious scorpion. Which it is. Wolfgang likes animals, and not just the cute ones either, but that is pushing it. "Ah — that's right, you'd mentioned you were Kurdish, I think. You've never been?" Her accent is awfully French — or, well, French-Canadian, honestly he can't tell the difference, but he can't tell the difference between American accents either.
agrat: (i'm afraid we won't be leaving.)

[personal profile] agrat 2012-06-04 03:51 am (UTC)(link)
"I think we were when I was very little...I don't really remember it, though, my parents were refugees." First of politics, and then of their own families, but that strikes her as more than she ought to divulge so readily--not due to her own discomfort or reticience on the topic, but because it is tricky subject matter. She adds, "From Eastern Turkey and Iraq," as that may complete the picture she's painting of their circumstances. "Iraq supposedly got better, after the late 80s. Turkey didn't."

Now, in her own reality, of course, she has no idea. The apocalypse has rendered most of their governments obsolete. She's wondered on multiple occasions what it must be like to be in a Kurdistan with a chance, and it's really depressing to think that maybe the fucking end of the world was their best shot at taking back their own country.

Lea glances down the market, and then back at Wolfgang. She tips her head to the side. "Want to walk around with me?"
gramarye: (☽ not your playground it's my heart)

[personal profile] gramarye 2012-06-04 04:25 pm (UTC)(link)
"I've never been very far east —" He pauses, inclines his head as in, yeah, for rather obvious reasons he was heading north, not further east. "— but even in western Turkey, mm... yeah. I remember it being pretty bad." He is slightly unusual in that he paid attention at all; most people will ignore it if they can. He had another conversation with someone here about Turkish nationalism, but that was different, explaining it to an outsider — not that he and Lea are the same, but it is a pleasant change of pace to speak to someone whose viewpoint isn't so focused on the West. After a while, he gets tired of trying to dance around certain delicate topics that would take hours to do any justice in trying to explain.

He nods, and if his smile is tired, it's only because he is always tired. "Sure." He's up for aimless wandering around; moving keeps him from fidgeting in ways that become increasingly painful to watch.
agrat: (i want to know how it'll end.)

[personal profile] agrat 2012-06-13 11:27 pm (UTC)(link)
"My mother used to tell me stories." Not exactly bedtime stories, judging by her tone of voice. Lea sets off in the direction of some food stalls, though she's pretty idle about it, and the pace is anything but brisk. She carries her little friend like he weighs nothing, but given her abilities, maybe she's making him that way.

"You know a little bit of Arabic, too, then, right? --or is that not common?" Israel isn't something many Kurds actively support much, though there are some Kurdish Jews there, she knows. Still, it seems to her that with two societies in such close quarters, there must be a little language mixing on both sides.
gramarye: (☽ take apart my head chew it up)

[personal profile] gramarye 2012-06-16 12:47 pm (UTC)(link)
"It's not really very common for Jews to speak Arabic, no," he says, switching immediately, and the difference is clear; he's much quicker and more precise in his word choice. He's actually quite good at it, much better than English, although it's hard to tell with that given how the city helps him out there. He still gestures broadly, a habit he's gotten into since picking up ASL. "We can take it as a second language in high school but it's optional, not like English. But I had... but my friends were from Palestine and it was easier for me to learn Arabic than for them to learn Hebrew. So."

By 'easier' he does mean 'possible in a timely manner,' in that he did cheat with magic. He was five and he wanted to communicate with his friend, it was at least harmless.
agrat: (take me to wonderland.)

HEY GUESS WHAT I'M ALIVE :C

[personal profile] agrat 2012-09-22 09:40 pm (UTC)(link)
She brightens, briefly, at the opportunity to switch languages--as she assumes with him that Hebrew is his first choice, like Kurdish is hers, Arabic is a lot easier. It flows faster, because what Lea needed was to talk faster, really. When she gestures, loosely, it's with her scorpion container in hand, and people around attempt to give her hand a wide berth.

"We just learned whatever we could from home. My neo-Aramaic isn't very good, but there aren't a lot of people to practice that with." Though she could probably find at least one person, somewhere in Baedal. "It's similar, isn't it? Kurdistan and Palestine. Although the government here isn't really perfect, either."

She phrases it more carefully than she's said other things, just because even in a different language--you never know who's listening.