http://ofminastirith.livejournal.com/ (
ofminastirith.livejournal.com) wrote in
multiversallogs2011-06-05 11:08 am
Entry tags:
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Who: Boromir and Ilde.
What: Boromir is on his way to a tavern for post-monster slaying ale, andgets drive-by trolledmeets Ilde along the way.
Where: Somewhere by the Gross Tar!
When: Sukkardi (Saturday) evening.
Notes: None.
Warnings: None.
Boromir was restless. In less than a week he had been slain in battle, resurrected in the strangest city imaginable, attacked by even stranger creatures and resolutely he had battled on. But when he had finally gotten back to the Valhalla Inn on Sukkardi morning, washed and tried to get some rest, he found he could only manage a few hours. He wasn't used to a long night's sleep; he had been travelling for months on end, alert and ready at the slightest hint of danger. It was impossible to suddenly stop.
The answer was to find whatever tavern was still open and hope that a good, long drink of ale could bring him some respite.
Still unsure about his bearings, especially at night, he made his way towards the Gross Tar and followed the river.

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(And a little flushed, almost immediately; alcohol hits a fairy hard and fast. If she were a more sensible creature, she wouldn't drink the way she does, but where's the fun in that?)
"See how you feel about it in the morning, if you're using it to get to sleep." He looks like he'd be funny, hungover. Men are babies.
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He continues drinking (it is, admittedly, good beer) and can't help but watch the other bar patrons with idle curiosity. When he turns back to Ilde, he asks, "Is this tavern like the ones in your world?"
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She's also baby-faced at twenty-one, so one can only imagine how she managed passing a fake ID for the short time she had one.
"When we still had bars," she adds, saluting him with her glass. "Tavern is archaic. You're archaic." Your face is archaic, Boromir- no, she's friendly, still, just tipsy and blunt.
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"Bars," he says, musing on the word. It does make sense; they do call the area where the drink is served 'the bar' and the people behind it are called 'the barkeep' or 'barmaid.' But they also served as a place to reside in for the night, in the countryside between cities and settlements. He wonders if that's changed.
"At least I can handle my drink," he jests in good fun.
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...for the meanwhile, she kicks him under the table, which serves no purpose at all but to amuse her; her flipflops aren't exactly going to do him any damage, and she's not kicking very hard, laughing her gurgling little laugh into her glass. "I'm handling it," she says, with dignity. "I'm just handling it my way."
Which is 'not at all'. Accursed physiological differences.
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"If you say so," he says, chuckling.
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"I do," she insists, accordingly, self-satisfied and pink in the cheeks, crossing her ankles under the table and seeming awfully catlike in her I meant to do all of that attitude. "It's only because I'm-" she makes a little gesture, twirling her finger in the air and trying to indicate 'fairy' rather than 'insane'. (Both are arguably true.)
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He seems a little bit wistful for a moment, but pushes it aside. Now isn't the time to dwell on such things.
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Perhaps his experience with xenians will spare him any surprise that it's those other than human who seem to interest her the most, though in Ilde's case it's often a matter of how quickly she's trying to catch up with worlds a part of her own that she didn't know existed for so long. 'Naiad' she can swear to, and not mermaid - she knows she needs fresh water - but there are so many stories and so many possibilities and in some ways she's searching for familiarity.
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'Honour' is a very specific choice in words, and it's wholeheartedly meant. He held his friends in great regard -still does- but right now he cannot allow himself to think about them or how he left them. Not now. He tries a smile before asking, "Have you heard of their kind before?"
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"I've heard of elves and dwarves," she says, holding up a finger, "but not 'Halflings'. What is a Halfling."
...well, under the circumstances 'resisting the impulse to ask what that was about' will have to suffice.
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"Incredible," he says, smiling fondly. "They're also known as Hobbits to some, but in my part of the world they're known as Halflings. I travelled with four of them, and two of them had not yet come of age. They look very much like Men, but range between two and four feet in height. Although they have slightly pointed ears and, of course, there's their feet -covered in hair, so they don't don't wear shoes. They let their soles become thick and leather like."
"As for their nature... Friendly. Very friendly. And funny, too. They describe themselves as peaceful, not much concerned with the goings on outside their own borders. They prefer a simple life." By this point he's much more relaxed again. The conversation is distant enough from his worries to let him reminisce about more pleasant memories. "They're hardy as well, and not to be underestimated. There's something inherently good about them. If you think I'm virtuous, then hobbits are ten times over. But it is not a weakness."
Last but not least, "And if you'd let them, they'd eat eleven meals a day. It reminds me of the two youngest; their names were Merry and Pippin. They ate two lembas each, a type of elven waybread, when one bite was enough to fill a grown man's stomach."
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"I think I prefer my feet optional," she says, wriggling her toes in her flipflops.
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The expression that follows that is almost comically put out.
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Yes. He's tall.
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(She says 'too', as if she's a little glad there are other people here who might be finding this place a mood whiplash.)
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He looks as though he's struggling a great deal to contain something within himself. Things he's been holding in since he came to Baedel. Then, "Might we talk about something else?"
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(Understanding people doesn't, always, mean knowing how to apply the understanding. Understanding someone else doesn't mean she wants to say I know and be understood in turn.)
Out of no where, she says, "When I was small, my father used to have these house parties, and once when they were drinking I got to ride on a baby grand piano that his friends were carrying out to the deck, I don't know why, though you know there were a lot of them because pianos are extremely heavy, especially when they've got a child sitting on them, and anyway I about got seasick because it kept tipping-" there are illustrative gestures, at this point, "-and then I rolled off and Daddy caught me and I knocked him on his arse and he had to get seven stitches in the back of his head, but he kept giggling about it." Which is what he gets for asking her to change the subject without giving her a direction to go in.
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