Monday, 23 May 2016

April is the cruelest month [In progress]

Alexander

[Arete, looking through to the other side, by the Node so diff 3? 2 successes please.]

Dice: 2 d10 TN3 (2, 9) ( success x 1 )

Alexander

[Extending, +1 diff, -1 for personal instrument]

Dice: 2 d10 TN3 (4, 6) ( success x 2 )

Alexander

[Oh, and Awareness? (Pleasedontbotch)]

Dice: 5 d10 TN6 (2, 4, 7, 8, 10) ( success x 3 )

Alexander

Early evening brings us to the Chantry. There has been a restless mood through the city today, something not helped by the weather. Sun gives way to storm, replaced by an overcast haze that promises nothing but has the possibility to return the city to snow or disperse into clear skies. The balance of that coin toss is slowly tilting to the side of clear skies, just in time for the sun to begin its slide towards the horizon as day heads into night.

It’s not night yet, though, and there is still plenty of light for someone to see their way around the Chantry house. It’s quiet inside – its current-possibly-soon-departing residents not currently home – but the back door is unlocked. By the steaming pool at the rear, though, there is a sign of life. More life, that is, than the lawn and flower beds returning to life after their winter slumber. By a pair of bike boots sits Alexander, his trousers rolled up and his legs drifting in the warm water. A tray sits nearby, bearing a tea pot and a mostly-drunk cup of some kind of tea. Alexander’s attention, though, is elsewhere. Somewhere not a million miles away but somewhere that most couldn’t dream of reaching. Somewhere out there is a bear – Callisto – and it’s this spirit that his gaze tracks. She sleeps at the moment, somewhere nearby. Somewhere relatively uninteresting that keeps his gaze.

Pen

[Yes, sure, Awareness. -1]

Dice: 4 d10 TN6 (5, 5, 5, 7) ( success x 1 )

Pen

The back door is opened from the inside. The sound it makes is a tarnishing brightness. That descriptor means one thing when it is a sound hinges are making, and another thing when applied to the sky: it can be applied to the sky, cumulous clouds along the edge of the horizon rising palaces of blue-tinted and lilac-tinted glory, limned in liquid gold (barbaric gold: Germanic treasure, Visigoth treasure), pink where the ruby and garnet have lost their bloodied lustre; also cirrostatus clouds, transparent veils, finest silk, and look how these give the Sun a halo going down will crown the Moon too when it sees fit to rise. Tarnished brightness: all of these clouds, all of this luminous gray and hazy blue, as if the sky were ground glass, unreflective but brightening (what a lie. The sun is going down).

The back door is opened. Passive voice: fuck that. Unsuitable!

Pen opens the back door and shuts it behind her and it makes that sound as she closes it and the crickets call to one another (sing! love, raises its glittering knives) and the birds do, too, and Pen approaches the Spring (Fount) directly. Her hair is up, and tarnished brightness too: a burning coal, with shadow a-plenty, until what light gets through the cloud cover washes her in haze, takes the shadows from her eyes and leaves them like smokey quartz held up to the light [catching], and she does not look like Mars is a name she would choose for herself.

She is taking a leaf from a Verbena's book and a something's bottle neck is sticking out of the bag hanging from her shoulder and she is wearing a very flowy and semi-diaphanous dress, something that looks like it was taken out of time. It might've been found at an artist's studio and used on a model who was trying for Elaine of Astolat, see, or Medea, medievalized, or it might've been found in some grandmother's trunk full of music festival memories and grass on bare feet and it might've been worn by a surrealist paintrix in Mexico open at the chest because it's hot work painting, and she's already shoeless.

There is an Alex.

An initiate whose sorcery is boundless, is flowing. The first thaw, the beginning of a flood and the middle of a flood and its end. A complete movement.

There is a Bear without flesh on the Other Side, who she will never see. A starry thing, star-bright, star-light. Sleeping, and undisturbed.

Alex has a look in his eye not unfamiliar to her. Alex is not unfamiliar to her, although he is at the same time new, although they weren't familiar. But now: He's no longer a January man, cryptic and sharp-witted. Pen slips her thumb under the strap of her bag, begins to test its weight but doesn't take it off her shoulder quite yet. She slows her approach once she is within hailing distance, and hails him.

"Hey. It is you." But that's all; he might be Working.

Alexander

The world can be a beautiful place, at times. Sunrise and sunset bring a spectacular display that has inspired art and artists through the ages. Mountains, plains, oceans: all things prone to inspire, in those prone to inspiration. Those who seek to set a moment or a concept in words or music or the stroke of a brush. There are people, too, who might be something to be trapped in stone or paint, something of the mythic that lives through the ages. Such a person steps out from the back of the house.

Alexander is not one of those people. If anything, he is more liable to be forgotten about than immortalised forever. There’s the spark of something mundane in him, something that just slides from notice as unimportant when he’s not there. He dresses for comfort and practicality: a leather jacket wrapped around a chair, nestled under a garden table close to the house. Sturdy trousers, rolled up but still getting a little wet from the movement of the gently steaming water. Red but unmarked tshirt. Nothing there to stick in the mind.

The wash of something immaterial, though, does distinguish him from the crowd. It’s something that marks him out as more than a mere Sleeper. Something flowing, without boundary: no beginning, no end. Something that might mark him as Chakravanti, if he were more that way inclined. But that was never in his fate, because fate is not something in which he believes.

His gaze is elsewhere but there are other senses than sight. The feel of some daring warrior, resplendent in armour and ardent in devotion, comes from some other sense, another set of eyes. The feeling is something familiar but not familiar: something previously encountered, but nothing that comes with a name attached.

He hears the words, but he doesn’t look round. If the presense is here, then he assumes that they should be here. That they have been introduced to the local community, are trusted to come here. He may have doubts about its safety – others less trusted know of its existence – but there had been no sign, no word, that its safety had been compromised.

“It is me. Who were you expecting?”

Pen

Alex is famous now, at least within the small circle that is Awakened Denver. He never gave Pen his name; she knows it now, and can pin it to him like a paper crown on a paper boy, and thinking about famous Alexander Brandt red shirt maybe (no. There are no red shirts, nameless people. Everybody has a name).

Pen circles the Spring and sets her bag down on the stones. Gravity drags the bottle down; Pen fists her skirt (it is fluid; it is water) up over her calves and climbs down into the water, climbs on a stair of natural rocks, descends until the water is up at her knees. Then she perches on the edge, and see:

Alexander is looking at the Other Side; Penelope is looking at Alexander, and curiously, and she is always intense. She is one of those people. The light is changing and her eyes are no longer luminous and clear; they are only clear, more tarnish than brightness.

"I can't call you January man or make Wintering jokes any longer. Won't you introduce yourself?" There is a narrow pause, and then: solemnity, overlying essential good nature. "Let me keep you company since we're both here, or tell me you came for the quiet."

Alexander

That Alexander is known wouldn’t come as any great surprise. Their kind are rare, and have an almost Magickal ability to draw like to like. There are always exceptions to the rule, those who seek to be left alone and live their lives as unnoticed as possible, but Alex isn’t one of them. He had always been ready to stand with the others in a fight. It remained to be seen if that would continue.

Pen’s motion is felt, the soft steps on the stone heard, the ripples in the water that she creates as her legs slide down into the water lapping against his own. Still, he watches the other side. The slumbering bear, the minor spirits – almost moth-like – that haunt the areas where the walls between worlds are thinner. The forest nearby something darker, taller, greener – spirit and concept not restrained by space and food and light. Somewhere inside there are others, spirits of predator and prey that dance through the trees. Above, temperamental and fickle spirits of the weather that pay no attention to what lies below them and simply do as they please regardless of the consequences.

“Maybe more April than January these days. The name’s Alexander.” He finally looks towards her, to where she perches on the edge of the whirlpool of energy that springs from the Node, and sees that part of her: the shining knight. “No, not the quiet.” There’s a brief smile here, with his eyes – almost mirrored – looking elsewhere. Almost through her. “Just to look, and see how a friend is doing.”

“I never caught your name.”

Pen

"Well. We were both being very clever and riddling. What's a name, to a first meeting and a riddle?" Pen says, with a gentle crook of her mouth. Easy lines around the eyes; at the corners of her lips.

The water (water is her element [lake-light, dripping from a sword; one almost expects it: the blade]) is refreshing in a way even a good massage and a full night's sleep can't quite match because this is a thing one feels while one is awake. This: rejuvenation; this: replenishment of reserves. People come to the Spring with shadows around their eyes, the skin thin from sleeplessness or too much trouble or too much work; Pen has come to the Spring after pushing herself hard. People leave it with a radiance to them, leave it more themselves.

She points her toe; her eyes are still fast on Alexander's face, his dreamy and distant spirit-mage's eyes. She considers letting herself slide in sword to its sheath, Boho-dress a casualty of courtesy. Doesn't yet; leans forward and draws on the Spring's surface with her fingertips. Rings on every finger today, even her thumb. Only the middle finger of her right hand is unadorned.

"April is the cruelest month, poetically speaking; are you sure you want to be April, not August?"

There's a bit of rueful consciousness. April. Beat. The cadence to this is natural: "I go by Pen, but the proper introduction is Penelope Sylvia Katabasis Hilde Nyneve Mercury Mars, bani Flambeau, ordo Hermes. Who's the friend you've come to see?"

Alexander

There’s a nod at the comment about them being clever, the smile already faded. “Maybe not clever enough, in the end.” Alexander turns his gaze back away from the house, reaching round with a hand to find the unseen cup to take a drink. Not nearly clever enough, but then it had already been too late when he worked out just how deep the hole he had been standing in had sunk…

Distracted, the reply. “March, then? Or whatever you think works, you wouldn’t be the first to come up with a nickname for me. Can’t say I ever really got that interested in poetry, you know?” The meaning of April truly is lost to him, beyond the obvious change of seasons.

Pen introduces herself fully, and it’s that point that the sensation of something flowing and running around and over and through them fades away into the background. Alexander’s vision changes, returning to the world that they both sat in, and his eyes seem to be more of the brown that they normally are. He looks back to Pen, seeing her fully for the first time in a long time. He takes in her look, her dress, and blinks a couple of times to clear what lingers of the other world. “Alexander Brandt.” A hand is held out in greeting, warm and slightly damp from the steam rising from the water. “Bani Disparate?” He hadn’t seen much in the way of formal greetings – certainly not when an Orphan was involved – so he wasn’t quite sure of the wording. “I’ve met your husband. Interesting guy.”

Alexander nods out into the gardens. “Callisto. Although friend is probably stretching it. I don’t think she’s ever really noticed that I’m here.”

Pen

Maybe not clever enough, in the end. The redhead raises her eyebrows; they disappear into her bangs, and the precise mood of their arches is lost. She does not argue with him; only continues to study him, lofting her chin thoughtfully. The water brings an added shine to the metal of her rings, changes the color of the wooden ring around her left thumb. All of it is gleaming.

He holds out a hand. Pen takes her hands from the water, dripping, and smack! braces them against the spring's rock ledge, tensing her muscles; and then just slips into the water. Up to her waist; her rib cage. She crosses the Spring to take his hand. Of course her grip is firm. Of course her fingers are callused. Maybe there's a burn mark on her palm, semi-fresh. The steam gets into her hair, will make fly aways curl; that tendril unbound just behind her ear, see, it's already curling under her ear.

His formal introduction seems to have done the trick.

He's met her husband. Pen: even the mention of Nicholas, sans name; she is a Romantic creature and an Eloquent one and the mention of Nick always does something to her. Brightens her, maybe: the quick flash of a smile; it's a swashbuckler's smile, but there's a dreaming edge to it; she has a lot of sentiment.

"I heard. I heard you nearly shot him. I'm glad you didn't."

"Who's Callisto?"

Alexander

The comment about being clever passes without comment, and Alexander has no inclination to steer the conversation further in that direction. Things had happened, some random fluke of chance throwing him into a room with a Union agent. That’s all it had been. If it happens again, things would work out a lot different. For one thing, it wouldn’t be the floor he shot at.

There’s a shake of Alexander’s head, something to clear the train of thought before it carried on into places that he didn’t want to go right now. Pen is pushing herself into the pool, the shortest line between them, to take his hand. There’s some surprise in the raise of his eyebrows, but it goes otherwise uncommented. She isn’t the first to jump in – although maybe the dressiest person to do so – and wouldn’t be the last. Hell, at least she’s dressed. The burn to her palm, though, gets a second glance. “What happened there?”

I heard you nearly shot him. “Nearly shot him? I hadn’t even pointed my gun at him.” No denial at all about having a gun, no comment about having the thing drawn and hidden behind him until he became happier that Nick hadn’t been a threat. There had been nothing threatening at the time, only… preparedness.

“Nobody’s told you about her? She guards the Node. I’ve never known her to actually manifest, but I’ve heard that she has shown herself a couple of times over the past few years.” There’s a nod towards the patch where she was still lying, along with a glance with unenhanced sight.

Pen

"Oh." Pen runs her finger around the mark on her palm. "I have a forge for metal-working, and I made a careless mistake. My specialty is Ars Vis, but alack, it happened too quick. Do you do any sort of physical hands-on craft?"

Alex hadn't even pointed his gun. Pen doesn't seem to disbelieve him; lets her chin rise and fall, an acknowledging nod. Her eyebrows are no longer raised, and she moves to one of the convenient seat-rocks, albeit this time one near Alexander. Not directly next to; she wants to be able to look at him while they are speaking.

Pen seems: intensely (ardently [avidly]) interested when Alex explains about Callisto, sitting up and following his nod, although she can't see anything there and doesn't have the wherewithal to change that. "What does she look like?" Beat. "Do you think she was licked into shape? In some old stories that was the belief: that a she-bear had to lick her cub into a bear's shape, or it wouldn't be a bear. Have you been in Denver very long?"

It isn't a rhetorical question; her attention plunks from the patch of empty grass where a star-bright spirit Bear might be curled.

Alexander

“Ars Vis?” For all of Alex’s time hanging around Kalen, the Hermetic terms for the forces had never really come up. Maybe this showed up some of the differences between Kalen and Pen’s backgrounds? Kalen had always been very open to Orphans and Disparates and other ways of Working, presumably because of his indirect way of coming to the Order. Maybe Pen took a less varied route in?

“Hands-on, yes. Crafts, not so much. I can change the oil in my bike, but no – I’m no craftsman.” It takes a moment to drain the last of the tea in the cup and set it back on the tray. A hand rests on the pot for a moment, feeling the cold ceramic. A shame, but possibly one that can be rectified... One hand remains on the pot, the other moves to hang just over the warm water.

Alex takes another look at Pen, cocking his head, when she asks what Callisto looks like. “A question for you before I answer. Have you seen any of the Umbra before? I’m assuming you don’t have much skill with Spirit, otherwise you’d probably have looked across and seen her before now. It’s just that something Nick said makes me curious.”

“A little over two years. I moved here from Seattle.”

His attention drifts, then, but not to any one thing in particular. Rather, it drifts onto nothing in particular. Alex closes his eyes and his breathing slows and deepens, as he feels the flow of heat up from the water into the cooler air. This is something new, untried, but it’s not something so different to moving a flame from a lighter to a camp fire. This, though, is something smoother rather than the stuttering steps that moving the flame had been. The sense of flow strengthens, some unseen river washing through Alex and Pen as he concentrates on that flow of heat. It’s surely something within his reach to redirect it through his will and into the pot...

Pen

As Ophelia among the lilies attended by rosemary for remembrance, here's rue for you, the Spring tugs Pen's skirt and the fabric billows around her, clouds gracefully a vibrant scrape of color just beneath the water's glassy now-transparent now-opaque churning, and all she needs are flowers hanging from her hair, braided by sap and scalp, twining that burnished hair that dying ember hair, but she has no flowers, and the resemblance there ends. Pen has an interesting face. Perhaps it could be a model for tragedy, but tragedy seems very far from her now: clear-eyed with a certain poise (if she were a star, she would not be falling. She would know the name of her own constellation [but of course one cannot be a constellation; only many can]).

Ars Vis? he asks. Her answer is plainly spoken: common-day. "A term for Ars Essentiae. The Essential Art. The Art of Natural and Elemental Forces."

He has a question for her before he answers, and Pen is still leaning forward, the water up to her ribs skimming the curve of her chest just above her elbows and her hands are clasped her rings gleaming silver and luminous where they just break the water and see how easily and how loosely her hands are folded? And her elbows are on her thighs, and she looks comfortable even with wildness of the Spring, the steam curling up, the flush beginning to steal across her skin which is too fair to take much heat without reaction.

"I have never seen the Umbra by my own Will, though I have seen places within it before, and I have no skill at all with that Art." It's not quite a shrug; Pen would like to be proficient in all things. "I've studied cosmology of the other worlds and some of the denizens which occupy it, but: well. "Is that where your interests lie; the spirit world?" Beat. "What did Nick say?" Because something Nick saying making Alex curious makes her curious, of course.

Alex has a hand over the Spring and the other on the ceramic tea pot and his attention drifts, he breathes in, deepens the breathing, finds a rhythm, stokes a rhythm, and Penelope does not interrupt what is clearly a Working, but only observes it.

Alexander

Compared to the wonders she may already have worked, the Working that Alexander pushes his will behind is a simple thing. There is heat in the water, rising gently as steam. It’s a small thing to pull some of that heat and push it into the tea pot, gently warming the tepid liquid into something more easily drunk. It doesn’t take long before a faint wisp of steam can be seen drifting out from the spout of the pot. Alex pulls his hands back from where they had been, rubbing them together to disperse the moisture from the pool and the heat from the pot.

“Is that your focus, then? Forces? I seem to recall that it tends to be of interest to most in the Order.” He lifts the pot, refilling the small cup sat on the tray. There’s a glance in Pen’s direction as he asks, “I can get another cup if you would like some?” If she does, it’s a short pause to fetch another cup from the kitchen, leaving her with a cup of green tea.

“He said that a lot of what we see, especially in the spirit world, is shaped by our expectations. I wasn’t convinced by that – my first sight of the other side was before I knew that there was one. So I’m curious what you would see if I were to try to show you her now. Would it be what you expect, I expect, or something based on the expectations of everyone who has already looked?

“Would you like to try?”

Penelope

"Hmm. I'd say that it has been a focus. Most of my focus has been on the material world. This side. The physical aspect of it." When he asks if Forces are her focus.

"Thank you, yes." When he offers her tea. Pen would like some tea: it is an old courtesy, and even if Alex mayn't mean it as an old courtesy, there is something reassuring about it. The pause to fetch another cup is brief. In that brief span of time Penelope becomes more water-witchy and when Alex returns her hair is streaming, molten glass and bright shadow, an undine's twisting fall and water dripping from her earlobes and her nose, light-brimming water see how water conducts (resplendence), and the sleeve of her top folds against her arms with the drama of an oil painting, transparent and opaque at once, and she wipes her face with the palm of her hand and sniffles, opening her mouth on an exhale. She takes the cup he does not drink from when he has returned, and holds it in the palm of her hand, fingers cupped around. There is a whisper of steam rising from her shoulders, so hot is the Spring, from her hair, and a stronger ribbon of steam from the fresh-poured tea, and this one fragrant.

And see, the quickening of her attention when he answers her question. Says what he says. Pen parts her lips to make some reply, and then the coup de grace: Would she like to try?

Pen: she cants her head to the side, a quick bright thing; a drop of water which yet lingered at her earlobe trembles, gathers itself into a shape. There is a dark curl against her throat like a hook. Her resonance is one of Daring, and Daring is in her bones, in her blood, in her magick, in the way she regards the world, and after the span of a heart beat just one half ba- the bum is coming she says, "Yes I would." Here: flash of a swashbuckler's grin, it dredges a dimple from one cheek. "Though I have thoughts on perception and the spirit worlds. But yes, let's try! How can I help you?"

Alexander

“Are there many of the Order who take an interest in spirits?” This is something of curiosity, seeking another point of view. Talking with Kalen had shown that attitudes towards the subject ranged from arrogant dismissal through to a rare passion. “It doesn’t seem like a subject that people with a primary interest in the material world would spend much time on.”

The tea, when it is taken, is not bitter as green tea tends to turn when left to stew. The remains of its brewing still sat in the kitchen, waiting on a small plate near the stove to be cleaned and cleared. The cup it comes in is a match for Alex’s; small, cracked-jade patterned, but uncracked in itself. It takes a short while longer than might be expected for simply fetching a cup from the kitchen. The cup, though, comes accompanied by a couple of towels retrieved from elsewhere in the house. The warmth of the Node will keep most of any night chill away, but that chill would return quickly when the moved away from the steaming water. And given Pen’s immersion in the water, she’s likely to need some way to dry off. Or perhaps it will turn out that she doesn’t. Call Alex old fashioned, or maybe just still learning the ways that Magick can be used.

There’s a snort of amusement which accompanies a curling of the corner of Alex’s mouth. “You make it sound like I’ve put any kind of effort into planning this. I think…” A pause, here, as he does contemplate what they’re going to try. “Tell me about what you’ve seen before? Where was it? In the city? Near the Gauntlet? I’m curious how it compares to what I’ve seen so far.” He pours a little more tea into his cup, but sets the cup aside for the moment. He does offer Pen a little more, if she would like.

Penelope

"I've known a number of Spirit mages in the Order, and I don't... Hmm. I don't mean to say that, well. As far as I go, my focus on the material world doesn't indicate a lack of interest in the immaterial world, only a curriculum which begins here, where I am already standing, and will move on to compass everything else later on. And it isn't a narrow focus. I don't think there's much to be gained from a narrow focus, not when you might find yourself needing to be sufficient in and of yourself at any moment in time."

He'll learn, perhaps, that Pen is direct -- tries for frankness when she can be frank. Her thumb finds the edge of the cup, following the river-bed cracked pattern in the porcelain, the faint and almost missable texture.

"What I've seen before, hmm...?"

"It was me through a shallowing with someone who knew what she was doing, and how to bring someone like myself across. I should say I had no idea what was happening at first; it was in the city, and we went through and there was a white road, and the walls of the library we were in were still there and standing, but in places they shone, in other places they crumbled and it was more - it was this haphazard house; it had rooms, I think, that the library on this side did not have, and there were guardians all over. I remember colors being particularly bright, but I remember everything being washed out too - as if it was under a spell."

"How does it compare to what you've seen before? Tell me one of your stories."

Alexander

“That sounds reasonable. My… experience, I suppose, hasn’t been quite as directed. I found there were certain things that I woke up with an awareness of. I’ve started getting a deeper understanding of them – like moving heat around – but I guess that my focus is still a little narrow. Not so much by choice, more… through not having quite figured things out with the other spheres. I’ve got an idea about Correspondence, but I just need to work on it some more.”

This time, rather than a snort, there’s a laugh. “Oh, I absolutely agree with never knowing what’s coming along next.” Had they been drinking something more toast-worthy – and had he had something in hand – he would have toasted to that. “The first time I crossed into the Umbra, I had no idea what was happening. A Sending dragged a few of us across to help its creator. It was…” There’s a wince as he remembers the sensation of crossing through the storm – relatively mild for him, so much worse for Sera. Alex’s gaze is still towards Pen, but he’s seeing somewhere else as he recounts the experience. “I’m pretty sure where we ended up didn’t match up with anywhere in this world. Definitely not where we started, at least. It was mountainous, with a cave system. The sky was red, where it could be seen through the clouds. Not like a sunset red, though. Blood red, maybe. There were things flying in the clouds, but nothing like birds. We were on the side of a deep valley. There were… things below. Difficult to see, just glimpses through the wilderness.”

He returns to the present again. “I can’t say I had any expectations of what should have been there, so maybe it was what the others expected to see? Or the creator of the Sending? Hell, maybe even the Sending itself? Maybe when it gained its sentience it also gained the ability to shape its world?”

This last sentence is punctuated by a shrug. Maybe Pen has her own theories on what shaped the place where they had found a long-dead Mage. There’s something to try, here and now. Grabbing his cup, Alex stands and moves closer to Pen before sitting down again, legs drifting in the water. “I think I just need to touch you to get this to work?” One hands still holds onto the cup, the other extends out – open-palmed – towards Pen.

Penelope

Pen sips from the tea cup as Alex tells his story, and the gloam-gray of her eyes is darkened by reflection but glints - see - with this shining suggestion of warmth because she is a responsive creature and his snort became a laugh and humans respond to other humans so. Maybe it's his air of a toastmaster without any toast; she inclines her head over the cup, and then her own expression becomes more solemn as his gaze goes dreaming again and he winces.

"How fascinating," she says, of the Sending, of the glimpses he had. "But I think you might be interpreting the idea of 'expectations' narrowly. When we dream, would you say our dreams are shaped by our expectations? I mean, we might have expectations, but not know them ourselves. Does that make sense?"

He stands; he moves closer. Pen drifts, too; sinking down in the water so it laps at her shoulders, at her pale collar bone: but no, she is flushed; the water is hot. Dramatic coloring; she drifts nearer, finds solid footing and perches on a rocky seat (still beneath the water; it rejuvenates; wellspring enchantment) by Alex's calf. He holds out his hand; Pen takes it, so curious, and consciously alert.

Alexander

Dreams. A subject that he’d put some thought into himself. The place where he could find himself if he chose to direct his mind in a particular direction, was that a dream or something more conscious? It had always seemed that when he’d dreamt – assuming he remembered them – that it was either something related to events at the time, or something completely random that he couldn’t make sense of. “You mean expecting something unconsciously? Or subconsciously. Whichever. I accept that dreams can be shaped by the thoughts that we’re not aware of. But… Before I woke up, I would never have believed in any of this stuff. Hell, I didn’t believe in ghosts, spirits, magic. Religion was always just some way for the charlatans to get hold of your cash while thanking them for taking it. So I’m not sure how you can expect something when you outright disbelieve it in the first place.”

Hand offered and taken, Alexander lets the flow of conversation fade as his attention turns back to the cup in his other hand. Or, rather, his attention returns to the liquid inside it. It’s still – much stiller than the water of the pool, especially with Pen moving and disturbing the surface – and the lack of ripples leaves a smooth surface. He sees himself in the surface, and it’s something that allows his will to focus and change the world. Once again, the unseen river they stand in becomes noticeable as it flows on without beginning or end. Alex’s breathing slows again as his eyes start to seem somehow mirrored themselves.

[Ugh, bit rusty with this. Arete, Spirit Sight. 1 succ for the effect, 1 to affect Pen, 1 for threshold, chuck an extra one in to make it last more than a round. Diff is the Gauntlet, so 3. Right?]

Dice: 2 d10 TN3 (3, 9) ( success x 2 )

Alexander

[Extending +1. Near the node, -1]

Dice: 2 d10 TN3 (1, 5) ( success x 1 )

Alexander

[Extending, same diff]

Dice: 2 d10 TN3 (4, 5) ( success x 2 )

Penelope

The flow of conversation ebbs because Alexander is about to do his Will. His attention turns back to the cup in his other hand; the mirror-flat surface of it; chalice, cup, grail; threshold. Pen watches Alexander do it. His Will flows, unbounded, over her; it is a veil, or it pulls aside a veil, and for a moment - even a moment more - Pen glimpses the spirit world as he Alexander sees it. Expectations: a bear, sleeping over there; that is where she looks; that nebulous there Alexander indicated at the beginning of their conversation. Her hand tightens on his. Reaction. Response.

Alexander

It takes moments for the effect to build, for the wash of the felt-but-unseen river to wash over them both and pull them in its wake. The shift from one world to the other, though, happens in the blink of an eye. Before the closing of the eye, they’re by the Node pool near the Chantry house, surrounded by garden and pasture and forest. In the distance, perhaps some view of Denver itself; the city turning to a shape mostly defined by the yellow-and-white streetlights dotted through it.

After, though. Things aren’t so different, the two of them hadn’t fallen into some far-and-deep realm of the Umbra where there is little reflection of the material world. The basics are the same: the pool, the house, the forest. They’re all different in some way, though. Moth-like motes of spirit flit and fly and rest close to the water – some in the water – attracted to the thinning of the veil as if it were a source of light. Somewhere in the water – seen but untouched, as Alex’s affect only brings their sight across the veil – something ephemeral and eel-like in shape swims, the concept of dynamism of water given shape.

The house is there, darker than it was before. There are fewer moths gathering around it, as if wary of getting trapped in it somehow. To the perceptive, the iridescent light of cobwebs can just be seen in some of the darker corners; under the eaves, tucked away where the elements won’t reach them. The distant city rather than becoming darker, seems almost crystal-like. Huge, unchanging shards taking the shapes of the larger buildings, strung through with more of the web-like strands that glisten in the light.

The forest seems darker than before, dangerous. Not malevolent, as such. More primal. Hunter seeks prey, which seeks its own prey in turn. The spirits of animals, of the forest, of the hunt care less for good and evil than they do for survival. Life and death. An occasional glimpse of some undefined spirit can be caught in the fringes, before disappearing back into the dense, curling undergrowth.

The sky becomes more intense than before. Before the blink, the sky was beginning its turn from bright blue to the shades orange and red that lead into the dark of night. Now, those colours are there but so much more that they were. To someone with a more poetic soul than Alex, the day could be burning away in flames to be left with the shade of night. In the blazing colours, there’s movement. Zephyrs and djinn dance with the curling shapes that bring cloud to mind. In the fire, specks of light begin to appear.

And still slumbering in the direction that Alex had waved in earlier, stardust-coat shimmering as if alight, slumbers the shape of a bear. A very large, powerful bear. But, like the forest, there’s no sense of dangerous or malign intent. More… indifference. She stirs briefly, rheum-crystalled eyelids lifting for a moment to gaze at its two observers, before she returns to her dozing.

“I wonder if what you see if shaped by what I expected to see here, or if you see what you want to see. Either way, I do sometimes think this is where I find the most wonder.” Alex’s voice is quiet, almost reverent, for what he sees.

Pen

As the effect takes hold, Pen stands: quick, long-limbed, rising to stillness; as if she were unsheathed. The water line reaches just below the swell of her hips; the poetic billow of her skirt shifts, slow and languorous; a superfluous movement which trails, echoing, behind her. She squeezes Alexander's hand because they were holding hands and because she is ardent which is to say she feels this moment keenly, squeezes it like to say look look and anchor. Penelope's hair is dripping, Ariel, Ophelia, is slick and dark at her shoulder blades, in a loose tangle over her collar; it has all the shadow in it which brightness will give. And she is: attentive; that is how the ardence expresses itself. Attentive, wide-eyed, first when she is staring at the bear, and then when she is looking around, and tipping her head back lily-maid to stare at the sky, and then she sinks back into the pool moving away from the seat (though she keeps Alexander's hand) to get a better look. And then she says,

"Now that I see I don't know whether the experiment is a fair one. Because, after all, this is your sight lent to me; that must bear the imprint of your thoughts." Pen: she grins, suddenly, crookedly, a young sort of grin; she won't explain herself, because she is grinning at the terrible pun of 'bear the imprint of your thoughts' when the spirit sight was lent so she could see a bear. The grin goes diffuse; it lends her sweetness; she's still staring at the sky.

"But it is all the best of dark and bright now. The creature is crystal and glass and starlight. The world is unchanged, but more nuanced; it has a different texture." Pen: she smacks her lips. "Something you could taste, like an unspoken word -- do you know? When it's right there. That's what I'm seeing. Colors. Things moving. Activity which is more obvious -- maybe because it is new to me and I am looking. Why do you think it where you find the most wonder?"

Pen: she looks at Alex now, cocking her head. "Is it important to you to have wonder?" Her voice: a bit confessional.

Alexander

[Dice! Arete, testing/sensing the gauntlet. So spirit 1, I believe? 1 succ for the effect, 1 to share. Diff 4, -1 for the node.]

Dice: 2 d10 TN3 (1, 7) ( success x 2 ) [WP]

Alexander

Alexander’s grip of Pen’s hand is something gentle, easily pulled away from if she chose to. An attempt to show him something similar had once gone rather wrong when he’d instinctive reacted to another’s presence in his mind. It was something he couldn’t stand at the time, and after recent events was something that he intended to find a way to stop. So it’s important to him that Pen can end this at any time she chooses. He smiles, though, as he watches her reaction to the change in their surroundings.

“You know, that’s probably true. I’ve never exactly been one for the scientific method, and this wasn’t exactly thought out. But I am curious how this compares to your previous sight. Or, if you get someone else to share their sight here, what difference there are. Unless what I’ve shown you here affects what you expect to see, so it’s what you see next time?” There’s a slight pull of his hand as his shoulders rise, shrugging. “What can I say; Disparate making things up as he goes along.”

Alex’s legs come out of the water, crossing under him as he shifts position and thinks about his response to wonder. He’s still silent, contemplative, as he lifts the cup up again with his free hand. The grip is odd, leaving his index finger free. Looking down at the still surface, he dabs it once with the tip of the finger. All around them, it seems as if the surface of reality ripples slightly. A ripple of cracks, finer filigree around the node itself, becoming coarser and less mobile as the ripples move away.

“I guess I struggled a bit with the whole Magick thing to start with. All it seemed to drag along with it was a whole load of shit. It helped being reminded that there was still some beauty in the world, you know? That it didn’t all lead to death and destruction.”

Pen

Pen fixes her gaze back on Alexander as he says I've never exactly been one for; her lashes are wet and black; they stick together momentarily when she blinks, and look, slants a glance back toward the guardian of the fountain. Her interest in the bear is brief; she feels more interest toward Alexander, see, and she is the kind of listener who is an expressive listener. This wasn't exactly thought out, he says, and she is unrepentent; without regret. He says he's curious and she is solicitous; she'd like to sate his curiosity, somehow, or at least respond to it; she is ready to respond to it; she is readied.

Perhaps Alexander has found how some things help his magick: sympathetic magick it is called; a lock of hair for a person; a key for a house; and so on. Disparate making things up as he goes along: the flash of a smile is witch's spell; lake-light, on beaten metal; the loveliness of it; and see - she feels sympathy for that statement. "We're all making things up as we go along, I think. Only some of us have chosen to study a body of work, so we have shoulders of giants to stand on, etcetera. I learn as much from fucking around by instinct as I do by book, and I learn a lot by book." Now: Pen; she notes Alexander growing pensive, as he thinks about wonder. Notes it: then, "What is that? That ripple -- did you see it?" As he touches the water, as reality shifts: cracks: filigree and hoarfrost.

Beat. "I'm glad you found your way to being reminded of beauty. I think a lot of us, when we're new, find ourselves suddenly assailed -- besieged by things darker, maybe not than we'd imagined, but darker and more fixed in nature than we'd hoped before; and it can be lonely. What helped you?"

Alexander

It would be fair to say, and Alexander would be one of the first to admit, that he is not much for book learning. It has been done, and it will be done again. But, for him, it’s not the best way. The easiest way. Instead, it tends to be more trial and error. Something instinctual, even. Training instinct and response based on what goes right and, often more importantly, what goes wrong. Perhaps not the safest route, when a mistake can do unfortunate things to the fabric of reality, but it is simply what works for him. And that, which he’d also easily admit, is what put him off the Order when Kalen had asked him to consider joining. Fighting against the prejudice that he’d woken up unassisted and untrained, simply working out what worked for him when it wasn’t the Right Way according to centuries of doing what other people thought was the right way? Well, he hoped it wasn’t too painful when those who took that view needed to extract their wands.

His Magick, though, did often focus through instinct and sensation more than analysis and deliberation. Something touched or felt in some way; the elements, reflections, the meditative act of feeling nothing at all. Perhaps there’s a little of the Cultists in him somewhere.

It was interesting, though, to hear Pen say that everyone was making things up as they went along. “I thought that the Order had specific ways of doing things? A circle of something or other, with this wood and that jewel.” The comment isn’t intended to be insulting; it’s something of the little that he has picked up about the way that the Order tends to work. “Because that had always worked for everyone in the past, so it will work for everybody in the future?”

Alex smiles when reality seems to ripple – their perception of it, at least - perhaps feeling her hand tighten in his as the surprise. “Sorry, I should probably have warned you before I did that. That’s the Gauntlet. Well, maybe how I see it anyway. You saw how it was more cracked and fluid closer to the node? That’s why it’s easier for things to pass through here.”

What helped you? “I think seeing what we can do helping to put things right? Making things a little better, easing a little pain. Giving a little peace.” In the end, isn’t that all he’d ever really hoped for? “I think I’ve been luckier than a lot of people who Awaken away from the Traditions. I’ve always had people I can lean on.” Even the times when I pushed them away, they were still there.

Pen

He apologizes and Pen shakes her head: don't worry about it. Even when she startles, even when she sharpens up, unsheathed, see, even then she is poised; careful rather than careless, careful even when some aspect of her is careless; and she draws some sigil in the water, some idle mark, some word, and it is just a word, and water does not hold it, and the water takes it away, and she flattens the palm of her hand just above the steam; looks for her hands reflection, ghostly, but the water is too much roiling.

"That's not exactly so." Her response to his supposition about the Order. She does not seem to have taken offense, but Pen is an open-hearted woman. "'Because that has always worked for everyone in the past' is a poor foundation for any Work; I think it would only leave you open to disappointment, especially given the current reality Consensus. My master taught me to improvise; I have sometimes thought that is why he accepted me as a student. Because I could improvise more readily than some of his other students. But when I began to practice as a Hermetic, I accepted certain universal truths, and I pull from symbols that - yes - men and women before me have poured over and experimented with. That does not keep me from experimenting; it only gives me a frame work. Does that make sense? It's like learning how to write. And then breaking rules, later on, or making up your own make believe language."

"I'm glad you have people. It's good to have them." Ardent: right? And maybe clear, see, how capable she is of love; it's in her voice; it's in the simplicity of the statement, the awareness of what the words mean as she says them; it's somehow an immediate thing. She tugs gently on Alex's hand.

"Won't you come in the water? I'll dry your clothing after. If you're concerned about it."

And: "Even what you just did: showing me how you see the Gauntlet. It is different from my past brushes with somebody else dragging me along on their adventure. With the other I didn't notice the passage, except for where it hurt; there was no sign of this world. Once I was given a glimpse of Shades - the restless dead - gathering close over a bowl of blood; but that's all of the sight I was afforded that time."

Alexander

The symbol isn’t recognised as anything of significance, but Alex watches as Pen holds her hand above the water and looks for the reflection. It makes him wonder, would I see our world in a reflection? Something to try later, perhaps.

The conversation with Pen is what keeps his attention, a chance to learn a little more about the Order. He still has no illusions that he will join – become Kalen’s shining knight – but it’s still something of interest, something that perhaps corrects a few misperceptions. “I guess I see what you’re saying. Would you say that’s something more specific to your house? From what I understand, Flambeau are like the soldiers of the Order, so you’ve probably got the greater need for improvisation that someone who never sees outside of their library?”

Won’t you come in the water… Mirror-tinged eyes turn to look at Pen as she gently pulls on his hand. “Are you sure you weren’t a siren in a previous life, drawing men to their watery doom?” There’s a curling of a corner of his mouth as he adds, “Assuming you can carry a tune in a bucket. I think that’s a job requirement or something.” Alex does shift, though, to move the tray and its cup a little further away and to pull anything likely to be upset by immersion from his pockets before hopping down into the water.

“I guess it’ll likely be different when other people show you, too. But I’m curious, now, how you’ll see things when it’s your will behind it. You make it sound as if your first encounter wasn’t exactly willing, though.” There’s an unspoken question behind it, tell me?. “That pain, it sounds like passing through the Storm. I’ve heard its finally died away, but haven’t had the opportunity to see if that’s true yet. I’d guess you went somewhere deeper, if it didn’t look like it had any ties to this world. I think the further you go, the less the worlds mirror each other.”

Saturday, 14 May 2016

There's no tentacles, I promise [In progress]

Kiara

It isn't a fancy restaurant, by any accounting for tastes, that Kiara Woolfe invites Alexander to.

But it's charismatic in its own way. There was personality to the tiny Vietnamese restaurant pressed between a chain of other stores in a shopping strip. There was an adult book store nearby with a flashing neon sign featuring a scantily clad woman. Flickering between two coquettish poses in bright pink. Nestled up against this, a supermarket that seemed wearily resigned to its neighboring businesses; specials plastered to its windows.

Discount seasonal vegetables, one declared.

--

Hey. Going for the best phở in Denver. Meet me?

An address had followed with the assumption (and her initial tacked on) that the Orphan would either assume he was to meet Kalen at a tiny little cramped Vietnamese restaurant on Federal Boulevard - or his companion for the evening would turn out to be one half of the rescue team that had extracted him from a certain Union stronghold.

The latter, as it would turn out.

The brunette was sitting at a small table pressed up against the wall inside; the interior was painted a vibrant shade of red with gold trimming and a tiny bell that cheerfully declared every new visitor. A young man stood at a small podium to greet diners and seat them.

The place smelled of rich, welcoming aromas and despite the relative size constraints; it was evidently a popular place on a Friday night; quiet chatter rising up above the sounds of a kitchen at work and the soft strains of music piped through speakers.

It was Friday the 13th, one had to wonder if the Verbena had inclinations one way or the other about the date.

The brunette was reading the laminated contents of a menu when her companion arrives -- her dark hair loose and wild around her shoulders; a hand bearing several silver rings resting on the table. Even like this, sitting amidst the other patrons; the pagan seemed to elude a particular energy that drew the eye. Something in the way she held herself.

Something in the dark, painted eyes perhaps. The cherry red lips. That dynamic pull.

Alexander

[Awareness - hopefully Jove has worked the runs of botches out of its system by now..?]

Dice: 5 d10 TN6 (2, 4, 5, 5, 10) ( success x 1 )

Alexander

One thing that can be said about Alexander is that he is no kind of snob. The location may not be particularly high-brow, but that didn’t mean anything when it came to how good a place actually was. The expensive, pretentious places that dotted the more exclusive areas of the city traded on their exclusivity just as much as their wares. Finding good food had nothing to do with the rent. Hell, this wasn’t even anywhere near the worst strip that he’d been on. At least there didn’t seem to be holes left in walls from drive-by shootings, or suspiciously iron-brown stains on the sidewalk.

The message had been a curious thing, signed only with a K. The wording didn’t quite come across as Kalen would, but it didn’t take long to work out the other possibilities of who it might be. For one awkward moment a certain person did come to mind, but that wouldn’t make sense. Not after the lengths various people had gone to… It was still a possibility, though, and one that leads him to wear a jacket on warm evening. Not as something to protect against the cold, but as a means of hiding something.

There had been a simple reply. Sure. When? There hadn’t been any digging into which K was making the offer. He still wasn’t entirely sure if anyone would be listening in, any more than they would be routinely.

He arrives around the time that had been arranged, having the advantage that a bike is relatively easy to weave through Friday night traffic and even easier to find parking for. Under the jacket – a light cotton hoodie – is a red t-shirt, grey trousers, and heavy bike boots that make a solid noise as they hit the ground. There are some flecks of colour on his hands, and possibly further up his arms, and a couple of small patches on the back of his neck. Something stubbornly attached that has survived showering.

Alex’s senses aren’t particularly honed right now, but they’re enough to work out which K sent the invitation around the time he reaches the podium. The faint wash of life’s pulse, of something waking from slumber and spurring into growth: it’s something that fits well with the season, as spring gets going and slowly heads towards summer. His own, of something once frozen now flowing into infinity maybe marks the move from winter into summer. Something slackens in the way he holds himself. This isn’t to be a battleground.

Alex smiles politely at the greeter, saying something about meeting a friend who was already there. Nodding in Kiara’s direction, he smiles again and wends his way around the tables to where she’s sitting.

“Hey. I’m not sure what a pho is, but if it isn’t going to fight back with suckers and tentacles then I’m happy to try. How are you?” He pulls a seat away from the table and slides into it. The jacket stays on.

Kiara

The woman at the table he settles at was wearing a long-sleeved blouse in a deep shade of green. The sleeves had been rolled up to her elbows and the top-most buttons left undone enough that a thin silver chain was visible around her neck, the end tipped with a clear quartz pendant. Her wrists were heavy with bracelets; they offered a musical underscore to the slightest movements Kiara made.

Alexander is greeted with a flash of white teeth; a bright smile. The Verbena was pleased to see him; Kiara Woolfe never had been (or likely would be) a creature inclined to mask her pleasure (or the distinct lack of it, as the case sometimes was).

"You've never tried pho?" Fine, dark brows lifted in playful dismay as she sat back; straightening. A petite Vietnamese waitress approached and set a menu down in front of the Orphan before scurrying over to assist another table nearby. Kiara's remaining outfit seemed to consist of ankle high boots and tights; a black skirt that almost touched the floor with a stylish cut along one leg.

"Clearly, you're in dire need of my help, Alexander Brandt. There's no tentacles, I promise." Kiara's eyes were bright. Teasing. "Try rice noodles in broth. With your choice of beef or chicken. They make amazing spring rolls here, too."

Her eyes dipped to her menu.

"Nothing has tried to attack or otherwise maim me in the last month so I consider that an achievement." A touch of her eyes back to his face, the edge of her mouth lifting. A joke, apparently. A witch's sense of humor, perhaps. Her eyes search his face. "I'm okay. How's life treating you outside that motel room?"

Alexander

“I’ve tried Japanese and Chinese, but never quite made it to Vietnamese food.” One thing that Kiara will notice is that, regardless of the country of origin, Alexander does at least appear to have been eating properly. The last time they had met, there had been somewhat less than the time before that. He had never been bulky, but the solidity had started to return. If his clothes still hung off him a little, as least they were more filled out now. A month of proper food and a return to some amount of physical activity, rather than purely mental, was starting to show.

Clearly you’re in dire need of my help. There’s a smile at that, but something tinged with… something. Not regret. Melancholy. “I seem to be making a habit of that lately. Hopefully I’ll get to return the favour.” A breath, something short and sharp and exhaling as he shakes his head. The sadness fades as he tries to push it away. A little, at least. “Ever eaten German?”

This said as his own eyes look down and start scanning the menu. The type of food is new, so there’s a lot of reading of descriptions, making mental notes of which ones to look back to. Kiara makes her joke, and there’s a snort of amusement in response. “I’m sure things are just waiting until you get comfortable with the world not imminently ending before returning with a vengeance. They’re nice and considerate like that.” He glances up, looking for Kiara’s response, before returning to the food options.

There’s another breath as there is consideration of his answer. “I’m doing ok. I think I needed the trip to Seattle, or just the time away. No. It was going back. It helped me work out a few things.” The menu sags a little as he looks up again, meeting Kiara’s gaze if she’s not currently looking down at her own menu. “I guess I finally decided that it was time to move on. You know?”

Kiara

There's an awareness tucked in there somewhere, a registering of the reaction her teasing sparks. That tinge of sadness that brings an edge of empathy to Kiara's gaze where it rests on his face for a beat. She doesn't address it other than to offer that singular pause - a lingering look that read much for the way she felt about what had happened leading up to his temporary isolation in that motel room on the outskirts of town.

That conveyed she was appreciative for the gesture; that idea of returning the help she and Andrés had offered. There's a smile, then: "You forget, I'm from New York. There's not many things I haven't tried, at least once. Since I hit Denver? Not yet."

Alexander's eyes return to the menu and Kiara's follow suit, though they return, more than once, briefly, as if she were contemplating the changes she'd felt and glimpsed in him since they'd taken him back from the laboratory. It was less concern he'd catch articulated in those looks and far more a sort of mild scrutiny; the consideration of a friend.

Especially when he mentions his return from Seattle; the decision that it was time to move on.

Does she know?

There's a flicker of something close to anguish then; a shadow that passes across Kiara's lovely features. Wistful and full of a quiet loss. "I do. More than you know. Sometimes there really isn't any other way but to keep going." A beat, the pagan's eyes dip back to her menu. "I'm glad you decided to come back. This city's lost too many good people lately."

Alexander

You forget, I’m from New York. “You know, I don’t actually know that much about you apart from you like to play basketball and…” There’s a squint, trying to remember some long-ago conversation. “Travelling? I guess you found your reason to stay in the city?”

Kiara’s pause, the appreciation for the gesture, receive a tiny jerk of a shoulder. Some unspoken version of no problem. Alex had already made his own contributions to the various crises that had plagued the city since his arrival two years ago, whether that was through churning through the sources of information that he had access to or drawing his pistol against a threat. There were times, in the not so distant past, when he had thoughts of leaving that all behind. They were nothing more than passing thoughts, though.

“I’ve only tried a couple of places so far, but neither of them really stood out. But that could just be because nothing ever matches home cooking. I’ve got a decent recipe for Kartoffelpuffer, though.”

Alex finally narrows down his selection: chicken noodle soup, with spring rolls (because Kiara said that they were good) and the house special bean curd skin. He sets the menu down to wait for the server.

“It was tempting to stay in Seattle, but it just didn’t feel right in the end. It was great catching up with my old friends there, but our lives have just changed a bit too much.” Some more than others. “There were too many experiences that I’d missed out on, I ended up feeling like a bit of an outsider. So, yeah.” A shrug. “I came home.” There is thought behind the word home. Even as recently as a few months ago, he still thought of Seattle as home. It was where he had grown up, it was the place he knew best, and the place where he had the strongest ties to. Now? Now, Denver is where he thinks of as home: for better or worse.

“What happened? Who’s gone?” There’s some concern, there, that he might have arrived back in the middle of some new disaster that he wasn’t aware of. Hell, there were still vampires in the city and a group of Hermetics all ready to kick them into a war with the Union for all he knew. Had things gone downhill in the proverbial handbasket?

Kiara

I guess you found your reason to stay?

"Yes, I suppose I did." She sounds surprised, as if only just realizing the depths to which this was a truth.

The server appears with the sort of promptness that might be the envy of other restaurants. She takes their orders (a double serve of the spring rolls for entrée and what the Verbena defines as bun cha from the menu) and gives a little nod after reading them back to ensure she's recorded them correctly - vanishing into the kitchen and calling out the order in Vietnamese.

She doesn't expound on what those reasons are, after their server departs, the brunette, but she does offer, neatly pouring two glasses of chilled water and pushing one across to him: "What details interest you? I'm an only child," her mouth hooks, her eyes bright as if she's suggesting that kernel of truth should somehow have been self evident. "I woke up in New York, my mentor was a former nurse. She found a lot of potential Verbenae the way she did me.

Women who were searching for something."

A beat.

Who's gone, he wants to know. Kiara's eyes drop; her long lashes dipping. There was, in the moment, a particular (and unusual) degree of vulnerability written into the brunette's features. "I suspect Annie and her Cabal won't stay long. If they ever meant to. And Ian. Ian's gone." Kiara's eyes return to Alexander's face, her mouth stretches into a bittersweet little thing.

"I'd argue he would have wanted to say goodbye in person to everyone but - I don't think it was his style. Big fanfare. He's fine." There's a delicate stress here, as if she wanted to ensure it was clear: "I think he just needed answers he wasn't going to find in Denver."

Alexander

[I don't think Alex knew about the Kiara/Ian thing, so Per+Emp to work out the reaction?]

Dice: 6 d10 TN6 (1, 3, 3, 4, 4, 6) ( success x 1 )

Kiara

The reaction is, from what Alexander can see and sense further than that: one of sadness. There's a clear ache in the way the Verbena says the other Orphan's name that suggests whatever their relationship had been, Ian and Kiara, it had been more than simple polite association with one another.

The way the brunette speaks of his departure, it feels very much as if it comes attached with an implied break up of some kind. An emotional departure, as well as physical, apparently.

Alexander

Alex rests his elbows on the table, interlinking his fingers to use as a rest for his chin as Kiara gives her surprised reaction. A crooked smile appears, as her reaction seems to mirror one that he had not so long ago. “It’s strange how that happens, huh? You don’t think there’s anything tying you down until you finally think about leaving and realise what you’d be leaving behind.” He doesn’t dig, though. It doesn’t feel like they know each other well enough for that yet, so he lets it settle.

There’s a pause in the conversation as the server appears, Alex pointing out any items on the menu that he isn’t really sure how to pronounce. He mutters a quite thanks as Kiara pushes the glass of water towards him, but it goes untouched for the moment.

There’s a moment when he lifts his head and scans the tables around him. Purely because the conversation could start heading towards topics best not overheard, he’s curious to see if anyone is paying particular attention to them. It’s only a matter of seconds before his chin returns to its nest, though, but his voice drops – enough to fade into the background noise of the restaurant at any great distance.

“Did you spend much time without a Tradition before you became Verbena? I’m curious what makes people choose which one they join. Should I ask what you were looking for?”

Annie and her Cabal’s appearance had been a slightly odd thing, when it happened. The house had always been very much a communal area, but it always felt awkward, somehow, going there once they had moved in. Very much like intruding in someone’s home. So he hadn’t visited the chantry much after, except when he’d been invited. For dinner, for the seasonal parties. There’s a sigh, though, as he had at least gotten to know them and there’s always some sadness at parting.

His head rises, though, when Ian is mentioned. That was a surprise, as he hadn’t realised that the man was even having thoughts about moving on. He had never seemed particularly tied, but there didn’t seem to be any great push for him to move on elsewhere either. There was a time where he wouldn’t have thought twice about it – maybe even been quietly happy about the asshole leaving – but things had changes, as they have a habit of doing. He’d built up a respect for the man, maybe even considered him some degree of friend. “Damn…”

He isn’t picking up on clues as well as he usually does, the small clues of expression and body language that hint at the emotional state of a person. But he does pick up enough to realise that the two of them had been something more than acquaintances. More than friends?

His hands separate, one resting on hers for a moment before moving off again. “You knew him well?” he asks quietly. An interesting question, given a conversation that he once had with Ian. A conversation about how well anyone really knows anyone else.

Kiara

His hand settles on hers briefly, then makes to move away in the manner an acquaintance's might, when offering uncertain comfort. She sets her hand on top of his though - stays the intention to move it with a gentle squeeze and a flicker of gratitude. Physicality came easily to Kiara; it was her solace in many, many ways. It was also where her calling lay.

She was a healer and her hand felt very warm where it touched his skin.

"We were - together. I mean, as together as anyone can be with the lives we lead." She relinquishes his hand, then. Her fingers reaching instead for her water glass. "It wasn't anything either of us saw coming but - I don't regret any of it, either. I'm just not very good at processing what it feels like on the other side of being with someone like that."

Kiara's mouth curves a little, a thin shoulder lifts.

"Lack of practice with the whole thing, I guess." A beat, then quieter: "I miss him. I haven't told the others yet, that he's gone. In truth, I have no idea if he even wanted them to know, but: I think they should. It's easy enough to assume the worst."

The server re-appears with their entrées, then.

Setting down two plates of steaming spring rolls. The brunette appears, for a moment at least, somewhat relieved by the distraction. She orders a glass of red wine; then directs her attention back to the orphan. Directs their conversation back, too, out of dangerous waters and into fresh ones: "I really didn't spend much time at all on my own. My mentor sought me out and I was being groomed for the Coven before I even really knew what was happening."

What was she looking for, then. Kiara tears a roll in two between long, elegant fingers. "I think all I was ever really looking for, at least for a long time, was an escape. From my family. From a life I had no desire for. When I met the Verbenae - it just felt ... right. Natural. Nature isn't perfect by design. She's wild and angry and yet - she can restore life, restore balance.

It means something, for me. Being part of that cycle."

Alexander

There was a little uncertainty behind the contact. Kiara hadn’t retreated or pushed away when he’d unexpectedly hugged her in the motel room, but circumstances there were a little different. Hell, he had (use to have?) a habit of pushing away contact when things were hitting the air conditioner. So when Kiara rests her hand on his, he turns his over and gives it a gentle squeeze. If it’s something that makes her feel easier, the contact is there for her.

…as together as anyone can be with the lives we lead. There’s a snort of something like amusement at that. Another conversation, another restaurant. “You know, I said something very similar to Sera once. That my life isn’t really one I’d want to bring anyone else into. It’s hard anyway, with the job. The work life has killed more than one relationship over the years. But add on the complication of everything else and…” There’s a shrug. “But I guess it’s still a good thing that you coming together happened? That you have some good memories to hold on to? And who knows, maybe you’ll get to make more. Nothing’s fixed.” He nods silently as Kiara talks about people assuming the worst. “I can try to let people know, if you like?”

When the food arrives, Alex mirrors Kiara in picking one of the rolls up. Where she tears, he bites the end off, careful of the steam. There’s a quiet crunching as he chews up the mouthful, returning the hot roll to the plate. “It’s interesting you say that, about how things feel. That… I guess that’s how all this works for me, more than staring at books and learning obscure theories and whatever. But it’s meant that none of the Traditions I’ve really had any contact with have felt right. I thought that I might fit with the Euthanatos, but I think we have some pretty basic disagreements about fate.” Another shrug as Alex picks up the bitten roll, picking out a stand of shredded vegetable and nibbling it away. “I thought that there was something wrong with me to start with, where nothing seemed to fit right. Then the prospect of being told that I’d been doing it all wrong the whole time… Yeah, no. But then I worked out that it doesn’t mean anybody’s wrong. We’re just not right for each other. Not in this life, anyway.” There’s another shrug, but there’s no real energy behind it. Things are, simply, as they are. They may change, or they might not.

Kiara

There's a cant of the Verbena's head at that. This slight gleam that surfaces in her eyes. They're expressive, Kiara's eyes, a very dark brown that she took particular care to highlight with liners and bold, smokey eyeshadows. There was (and always had been) too about the woman a particular inclination toward bold, flirtatious behavior.

Her charisma was potent enough that most found her sharp little looks and edged smiles engaging - but, not every time. There were more than a few individuals that had (or did) reside in the city that held less than positive reviews of one Kiara Woolfe.

She'd told Ian once she stopped caring about opinions a long time ago.

It wasn't entirely true but to some extent, it was an honesty. She pushed boundaries, the Lifeweaver; such was her faction's reputation and function - after all, somebody had to begin for progress to happen. So, her eyes do adopt a particular brand of bright amusement when Alexander admits more than one relationship had perished by the wayside due to his career (and the life he led): "It's a terrible world to attempt dating in, but you should keep trying.

After all, we need something to want to come back in one piece for, right?" There's a pause, while Alexander discusses the Traditions. Trying them on, finding nothing that quite fit who he was and how he found himself Working. "Some of the Verbena in my old Coven held that belief. That notion that there were set ways that things had to be. That to truly be one of us you had to adhere to a doctrine."

A tiny suggestion of a smile: "Suffice it to say there's a reason we had to adapt to survive as a Tradition. I wasn't born of a pagan bloodline, there are some who'd argue that makes me less of a Verbena than others who can trace ancestry back generations. Personally, I think it means I'm better suited to surviving.

Things do change. It's what should happen. Seasons. Us. You." Kiara's smile brightens a touch. "You changed." A pause, then. She wipes crumbs from her fingers. "About Ian, though. I'd like to tell Elijah-William, myself. He and Ian were close. It feels right that I be the one to do that.

Kalen," Kiara frowns. Thoughtful. "Maybe you can tell him. I'm not sure what I'd say."

Friday, 13 May 2016

I promise that's not my intent

Alexander

Spring was in full swing, although that didn’t always mean quite the same thing close to the mountains. There were more days of sunshine, as the city’s marketing department liked to say, and fewer days of snow and sleet and hail. The potential of summer creeps over the mountains, allowing plants to sprout and animals to feel the push towards their mating rites and rituals.

A clear, if cold, blue sky hangs over a section of some random section of some random national park to the west of Denver. Somewhere far enough away from any of the parking lots to avoid random tourists and hikers and dog walkers happening across what Alexander has in mind. The area is near a river, the sound of water streaming and splashing over rocks quiet but clear. The ground is mostly stone and hard-packed earth, away from anything attempting to grow. Given time, plants would eventually sprout here, but for now the ground is bare. Bare, except for a small circle of stones. The circle surrounds a, currently unlit, camp fire. It’s a small thing, not built to last. It’s by this stack of sticks and paper than we find Alexander, sitting cross-legged next to it flicking the cover on and off a lighter. His eyes are closed as he sits there, maybe concentrating on something or maybe concentrating on nothing. There’s a backpack set on the ground nearby, with a mostly-full bottle of water sticking out of the top.

[Int+Med]

Dice: 5 d10 TN6 (1, 4, 7, 8, 10) ( success x 3 )

Nicholas Hyde

It is clear, it is cold, and Nick Hyde is left wondering not for the first time since mid-April just when spring officially begins in Denver. See Nick's a son of the desert, of fine dust and red rock, and the home of his heart is far and away and near the ocean: still warmer there than here.

In spite of that we will find him out today in a heavier jacket than he would normally be wearing close to the middle of May, but out nonetheless, walking the river's edge. They say that rivers are another doorway, a road that leads Under or Through or however one is given to conceptualizing the Veil, and they are as intrinsic to Nicholas and his Work as language itself, as words, as ash and bone. He may not have anything specific planned today for this river; walking it is a meditative thing for him as often as not.

He cuts a stark figure, out here where there's no greenery to offset the dark cast of his clothing and the black of his curly hair and the utter silence of his footfalls. He sees someone here on the barren earth in front of a circle and he cannot help but be curious, even as his trajectory widens to keep from alarming the other man before their paths intersect.

Alexander

[Awareness seems like a relevant thing right now]

Dice: 5 d10 TN6 (2, 6, 6, 6, 9) ( success x 4 )

Alexander

Alexander is not a desert animal, having grown up on the west coast. He’s no stranger to the rain or the snow or the cold, so he’s covered with a pair of hiking/cargo shorts, a light, red-coloured jacket and a sturdy pair of boots. Other, heavier, clothing is stashed away in the bottom of the backpack, some easily accessible waterproofs tucked into a side pocket. Alexander is also no stranger to being outdoors.

There’s a subtle shift in his body as he picks up on something - someone - on the edge of perception. It’s something that’s moving closer, and something that demands a certain amount of attention. It’s an unexpected distraction, and there’s a little grunt of frustration as Alexander turns and pushes himself up and onto his feet. Their kind has this unerring ability to find each other, like some sort of magnetic pull. Like calls to like, so it’s a little less of a surprise than it might have been. Still, he crouches by the backpack – back towards the stranger – and seems to be digging around inside for something.

It’s only a few moments work before he stands and turns towards the slowly approaching and circling presence, hands held behind his back.

Nicholas Hyde

[Awareness. Relevant. Yes.]

Dice: 7 d10 TN6 (1, 1, 3, 5, 8, 8, 8) ( success x 3 )

Nicholas Hyde

[And some empathy - are you hostile?]

Dice: 8 d10 TN6 (1, 1, 2, 2, 3, 6, 7, 8) ( success x 3 ) [Doubling Tens]

Alexander

[Alexander isn't openly, outwardly, hostile. There's no attempt to close with or stare down this approaching stranger, but there's no sudden push to flight either. He's simply waiting and watching to see if Nick is some kind of threat.]

Nicholas Hyde

Magi find each other; Nicholas has known this for years. Perhaps it's merely confirmation bias: when they can sense each other, when they have a means of finding each other in a crowd, perhaps it's only a matter of statistical chance that will lead them to one another. Maybe there are hundreds of magi in the city that they don't know about, who are in those areas that they don't frequent. It's a possibility isn't it?

Regardless, whether it's fate or statistical likelihood, here they are. The stranger Alex has sensed is wearing a puffy dark green jacket and dark grey canvas pants and a pair of black boots; his hands have been tucked away into the pockets of his jacket. They seem strange on him, those clothes: they fit his body but not the rest of him, somehow, because he is hallowed he is twice-born he is highland barrows and cairns and burnt auger mounds in the deep woods. He is high lonely places marked long ago by a sole traveler and he is the hush of crumbling churchyards at dawn, the greening of first Spring. He has this spare fey look to him, could be the subject of some Victorian painter's dark whimsy if it weren't for his clothing, see.

Alex is digging around inside his pack and so Nick stops where he is, sweeping his gaze over the man in front of him. Alex's hands are behind his back; Nick slowly draws his from his pockets. He doesn't make a show of holding them up, but the intent is clear enough. "Hi there."

Alexander

[Per+Emp right back at'cha - you a threat?]

Dice: 6 d10 TN6 (5, 6, 7, 8, 8, 10) ( success x 5 )

Nicholas Hyde

[Here's what Alex can tell about this stranger. He's not a threat but - and this is an important distinction, one he can tell because he is sharp today - he could be, he is willing to be (if he must). He is gauging Alex just as much as Alex is gauging him, and he cannot see what Alex has behind his back which is giving him pause. He did not expect to encounter anyone out here today.

He is most certainly aware of Alex, and of whatever magickal undercurrents he can sense from him. It's there in the subtle flare of his nostrils and the way his focus seemed to sharpen suddenly as he drew nearer.

Alex can also sense magick that was worked very recently, that seems to contribute to the otherworldly air about the man in front of him. He feels as though he has one foot in this world and one foot in the next.]

Alexander

The world is full of possibilities, although not everybody knows where to look for them. For Sleepers, the possibility that the world can be changed with a thought and a pure act of will is something that only appears in works of fiction. So maybe the world is full of Awakened, who push each other out of orbit like some sort of metaphysical electron. Perhaps there are only a few of their kind that pull to each other, for whatever reason. Or perhaps chance was just as malleable as time and forces and matter, and they simply skewed probability by existing.

Nick had walked along a river to get here, and he would have noticed something of the elements surrounding Alexander’s little clearing. Just as the nearby river flowed, there was the feeling of something else flowing by/around/through him. Something that, if you were to be floating in it, would have no boundary to it. No bank, no beginning, no end. Something of an unknown and unnamed eternal river, created when some immense glacier had thawed.

Alex studies Nick as he approaches, searching for some hint as to what to expect. Friend? Foe? Or was this just to be some random intersection of their orbits on their paths elsewhere? Nick gets his empty hands clear of his pockets, and the meaning there seems clear. But, really, did they need to hold a weapon to be dangerous? It wasn’t something Alexander had explored yet – there were reasons he had travelled out to the middle of nowhere today – but he was well aware of the possibilities.

“Hi”. The tone isn’t warm and welcoming, but it isn’t cold and hostile either. It was simply a recognition of the greeting and its return. The start of the dance between them. “I wasn’t expecting to find anyone this far away from the normal trails. What brings you out this way?” Still: assessing, wary, cautious. But not: hostile or even unfriendly. More: something of the wild that has no intention of being caged.

Nicholas Hyde

Despite working in a hospital, Nick to his knowledge has never encountered a Conventionalist. It's not a thought that occurs to him often, that a random mage he meets in the city somewhere could be and that it could put him in danger. They both Awakened after the war's end, and this is a natural product of peace time.

This is what informs his response to Alex: he isn't cagey about why he's out here, not the way many older magi who can remember the War would be. "I come out here to work sometimes," he says. "But this is my first time down this way. I didn't expect to run into anyone either."

His voice is warm because it cannot help it. He has the clear, resonant tones of someone who speaks for a living, someone whose natural instinct is to protect and soothe before anything else.

Alexander

Experience skews reaction, almost the definition of wisdom. Alexander truly had no experience of the war that raged between the Union and the Traditions, sweeping up those that stood apart whether they liked it or not. There had been some clear messages along the way, though. That the Union was something to be wary of, lest people disappear into unmarked towncars for being too open, too vulgar, with their Work.

All of that turned out to be worthless paranoia, when it came right down to it. Alexander had cut himself off from everybody when he had thought that he had caught Union attention. He had – at least temporarily – pushed away others when times had been hard, while he tried to work things out. He had been slow to trust. And in the end? In the end, it might have simply been the fickle work of chance that pushed him into their hands.

So here, now, he isn’t quite sure how things went next. He was prepared for the worst – he would not be caught again. But, still, there had to be hope for something better. There was the hope that others could bring change for the better with them. After some moments of indecision, Alexander’s body relaxes. His arms don’t move, they’re still crossed behind him, but there’s a little less tension in him now.

“What kind of work? You don’t exactly look like a ranger, so I’m guessing you mean the kind with a capital W.”

Nicholas Hyde

It's been said of Nick Hyde that he's a more perfect mirror than some people would wish for. He's skillful in how he navigates the emotions of others, reflecting empathy when they show vulnerability, warmth when they show uncertainty, resolve when they show fear. It isn't always useful to be a mirror though: note before, how the beginning of their encounter could easily have become a standoff. His posture slackens now when Alex's does, the line of his shoulders becoming a little softer, less defined.

"Yeah, that kind," he agrees, and he smiles in a manner that is less in the mouth and more in the left of his eyebrows and cheeks, a general shift in demeanor. "There are different spirits out here than in the city, and there's less risk to others. I'm still trying to get comfortable with the area, I guess."

There is a significant glance toward the circle that Alex has arranged on the cracked and stony earth surrounding the river's shallow floodplain. Young rivers: they haven't quite had time to settle into themselves yet. "Were you out here doing something like that yourself?" He's either more dense than first impressions would allow or it's an invitation, of sorts: tell me about it.

Alexander

As first encounters go, it might not be a shining example of how smoothly they can go. On the other hand, no blood had been spilled, no voices had been raised. No gates to hell had been opened. Not yet, at least. The day was young, and Alexander hadn’t really started his own attempt at Working.

There’s a shift in Alexander’s face when Nick mentions spirits, the raising of his eyebrows a tell of his slight surprise. “There haven’t been many in these part who deal with spirits. Not who are still here, anyway.” Alyssa had left, Lucy had vanished. Elijah was, he assumed, still around somewhere. But he may well have vanished into the night too. “Does that mean you’re new to the city, then? I’ve been,” a pause. “Out of touch. I’d heard there were some new faces in town.”

Alexander breaks eye contact to look down at the unlit fire when Nick draws attention to it. “Something like that. I thought it was time to,” another pause. “Stretch my wings a little.” Although the detail isn’t there, there is willingness to engage in the conversation. There’s another shift in Alexander’s position, as if something were being tucked into the back of his belt, and his arms – and empty hands – cross across his chest.

Nicholas Hyde

There is a murmur of acknowledgement when Alex says that there aren't many: Nick seems to have made note of the same. "I only know Kiara," he says, and there is eye contact here, this manner of someone who is both offering information and testing at the same time. Kiara's a disciple, and by her own admission has been in Denver for a long time: a useful person to name drop, in other words. "There aren't many people anywhere that work with spirits, though, in my experience."

There is a beat. "I am new. I moved here in December."

He follows Alex's gaze back to the ring of stone and waiting fire. Up until now, up until Alex folds his arms across his chest, he hasn't made any attempt to close the distance between them; now he does, though not quite to friendly speaking distance. "Where did you go? I'm Nick Hyde, by the way. Bani Chakravanti."

Alexander

Kiara’s name gets another shift in Alexander, some further stepping down of tension that is accompanied by a cocking of his head and a slight nod. “I hadn’t actually realised that she was that way inclined, but I can’t say that I’m surprised that she is. I’ll have to ask her about it, some time.” There’s a touch of curiosity in that, when he speaks. Since Alyssa had left, he had been mostly guideless when it came to the spirit world. It might be a hidden blessing that he hadn’t gone exploring Magick much, given the risks that are tied to dealing with spirits.

Where did you go? “Now there’s a question.” Alexander steps sideways, getting close enough to the circle to crouch and retrieve the lighter that he had dropped on Nick’s approach. Note, though, that the caution hasn’t disappeared completely. No, Alex is careful to keep Nick in, at least, his peripheral vision. He starts flipping the cover on and off again, turning to fully face Nick again. “I’ve been out of town for a few weeks, catching up with family. Before that.” A pause, some break to try to patch together some sort of explanation. The pause is followed by a harsh exhalation, a glance away at something unseen before looking back at Nick’s face. “Before that, I was a guest of the Union for a couple of months.” Take that as you will, Nick. Is Alex now someone to be cautious of? Pitied? He hadn’t picked up on much of the detail surrounding his release, such as Nick’s involvement in finding where he was or that he had changed. There was some slight anticipation in the wait for the reaction.

“Alexander Brandt.” No Tradition is given, as there is none to give.

Nicholas Hyde

There is recognition that springs into his eyes before Alex offers his name, and mark that Nick is not often transparent: he selects facets of himself to shine forth and reflect back to others far too efficiently for that, so maybe he chooses to do this now. The noise that springs forth from his throat is pleased, even. "It's good to finally meet you," he says. "There were a lot of us who helped to get you out."

It's information that is offered forth without expectation of a specific response: namely, he is not stating it because he expects gratitude. His tone still carries that pleasant cadence it held before; if there's caution (at least, more than before) or pity, it isn't evident just yet. "I'm glad that you took some time to leave Denver."

When Alex looks back at Nick he'll find the Chakravat's eyes gone a little distant, inward perhaps, gently unfocused and with this air of concentration. The weight of considering his words. Eventually this seems to resolve; at least, he at last begins speaking again. "Kiara and I summoned a crow spirit to see if we could find out where they were holding you. Crow told us that you went Seeking there. I can't...I haven't ever heard of someone being able to do that." It stops short of admiration, doesn't quite reach; a note of appreciation, though, perhaps, can be sussed out.

Alexander

Of the reactions possible, pleasure was perhaps the least expected. There’s surprise on Alex’s face, when Nick proclaims his pleasure at their meeting, and he isn’t quite sure how to take the reaction. “Um, thanks. No, wait. Thank you. For helping. I sometimes wonder how many people will really help out someone that they’ve never met before.”

I’m glad that you took some time to leave Denver. This time, Alexander does turn and takes a few paces away, leaving Nick with a clear view of the pistol tucked into the back of his belt. It’s surely no surprise how Alex might have been prepared to react if things had gone a little differently. “Yeah, well, it was time to get out of that motel room and figure a few things out.” There’s a slight jerk of his shoulders, along with a snort of amusement. “Well, a few more things anyway.”

He turns back to the circle, getting a little closer before crouching next to it. That he isn’t still eyeing Nick from the corner of his eye is perhaps a clue that there was some degree of trust now present there. “I didn’t know there was such a thing. Most of what I’ve seen so far has been ghosts and the like.” Most, but not all. But those other things might be a subject of conversation for another time.

Alex flicks open the lighter once more, but this time strikes the flame instead of flicking it closed again. “I can’t say it was intentional, you know?” He waves a hand over the flame, feeling the heat rising up from the lighter. “I’d started looking before the shit hit the wall, but I couldn’t quite work out where to look for my Avatar. Sneaky little bastard that it is.” There’s another snort. “I just hope it doesn’t take another trip like that to find it again.”

The sensation of that river washing over the clearing builds as Alex pushes against the world, finally starting what he’d come here to do.

[Arete, sensing the heat from the lighter. Diff 4, I think?]

Dice: 2 d10 TN4 (6, 6) ( success x 2 )

Nick Hyde

Of course Nicholas can see the pistol: he had somewhat suspected that it was there, or that a weapon was there, whether pistol or knife or whatever instrument this stranger might use to work magick. He is not a soldier (that epithet goes to his wife), but he has been around them long enough, has lived just dangerously enough, to find hidden hands suspect. And does it make him wonder what he would have done had Alex leveled that weapon at him and started shooting?

Perhaps. Just a little. He would have died, that's what he would've done.

There is a gracious nod when Alex thanks him, a sidelong flick of the eyes that suggests that Nick is perhaps not entirely comfortable with thanks or with compliments but if so he is still too socially aware to brush it away, and he absorbs the rest of what Alex says in silence. "That was all I saw for a long time too," Nick says, of ghosts. "It's more common to see only them in the city. More people. The rest goes unnoticed, a bit. At least for a little while."

Nick watches as Alex passes his hand over the lighter, and now he finally does edge nearer. He crouches down outside the circle, close enough to speak comfortably. "I think the process of Seeking is a restructuring of the self," he says. "A kind of death and rebirth. It doesn't always have to be painful. At least, not in the same way."

Alexander

Their kind could work miracles. They could create, build marvels to last generations. They could destroy, turning entire realms to nothing more than a memory. But, at the end of the day, they are very much mortal. It had taken a sword to take down a rampaging Adept not so long ago. It had taken a tranquiliser dart to make Alexander disappear. His pistol wasn’t a guarantee of safety, but it could at least make anyone trying to make him disappear again regret it. Or, possibly, not regret anything again.

But there had been no imminent threat from Alex. He isn’t so paranoid to push any Awakened that he doesn’t recognise away at gunpoint. Not when a certain Agent hadn’t even appeared to be Awake. There’s caution, definitely, but it’s something controlled.

For the moment, Alex’s attention seems to be on the small flame of the lighter and the swirling currents of warm air above it. It’s what attracts his gaze, rather than Nick, but the conversation continues.

“I know there’s more out there. There was a corrupt spirit turning people into plant zombie type things hanging around outside the city a couple of years ago. It’s gone now, although some of the wreckage is still around somewhere.” Skye, Claire… “I just hadn’t really gone looking, you know? Not on the other side, anyway.” There had been on particular spirit creature that Alexander had kept an eye out for, waiting to see if its angel wings would reappear in the park again.

“I’m still not sure I really get most of what happened in mine. But it got us talking, anyway. Me and my Avatar, I mean. It… She, I think? Showed me some things I didn’t know before.” There’s a ghost of a smile that passes over his lips, as he concentrates on the flame. He isn’t quite sure what to do next, here.

Nick Hyde

For a moment Nick is quiet, watching Alex as he passes his palm over the flame, over the waves of heat that emanate from it even though they can't be seen by the common eye. "I think like a lot of things, what we see past the Veil is what we expect to see."

And to the rest, well. He does not show surprise, would not even if Alex happened to be looking up at him. The lives of Awakened people are dangerous, whether they live in Denver or somewhere else. He has settled back on his heels in a way that appears to be comfortable for him, and his eyes are a pale brown hardly darker than his skin and they are curious things: it's a little like being watched by some retreating forest creature.

About sensing the flame, he appears to have little to offer in the way of advice. It's one of the few ways of Seeing the world of which he is not aware, just yet.

"What did she show you? Tell me about it."

Alexander

Alex shifts, settling cross-legged by the unlit fire rather than crouching. This might take a while – the work and the conversation – so he may as well get comfortable. He does glance up from the flame, though, when Nick says that they shape what they see. “I don’t know I’d completely agree with that. Not everybody who goes there has any expectations. But I wouldn’t completely disagree either.”

What did she show you?

That gets a longer look, something more considering. “Why the interest in someone you’ve only just met?”

The look is a short one, though, as Alex returns his attention to the lighter. He looks from the flame to his other palm, finally diving in to try something.

[Arete, Forces 2 to pick the flame up from the lighter. Vulgar, I guess, do diff 6, -1 for going slow]

Dice: 2 d10 TN5 (2, 5) ( success x 1 )

Nick Hyde

What Alex says about the spirit world provokes a thoughtful noise from the other man. When he looks up Alex will find him looking off somewhere else, somewhere past Alex, casting his gaze like a line down the river. Look at him long enough, and his attention will shift to something else, some other nonspecific place.

Eventually, though, he does look back. "I've yet to find someone who didn't have any expectations about anything. I don't think any one of us comes to any sort of magick entirely as blank pages. The blankest are palimpsest." He finishes saying this, and then he shrugs, this slow drawn out motion.

His eyes stay fixed just long enough to hold steady under the weight of Alex's next question, and when it's voiced a corner of his mouth tugs upward. "Are you not interested in people you've only just met?" His voice is neutral, as much as such a question can be; Nick is well aware that other people are not very interesting to some people at all.

He's not one of those, clearly. "You don't have to answer me. Regardless, I'm glad it got you talking."

Alexander

There’s no break in Alexander’s gaze on the flame as he tries to coax it into his palm. He isn’t sure if it’ll hurt, or if it’ll even work. But he still holds his will against the resistance of reality. “I was pulled across the umbra the day after I woke up. Maybe it was somebody else’s expectation shaping the place we ended up, but I didn’t have any expectations then. Hell, I didn’t even know where we’d ended up. And I’d been very much Asleep before.” There’s a grunt with a half-shrug, a simple acknowledgment of how life had been before.

There’s a brief glance, a flick of the eyes, as Alex holds his concentration on the flame. “I’ve not met that many of our kind, but things like What I Did On My Seeking doesn’t seem like the first round of small talk.” There’s a snort, something amused, as he considers a vaguely similar conversation with another Mage. Only their positions had been reversed, and Alex was being something less of a dick about it.

“Either way, I saw something of my past lives. I asked what I could be. She showed me what I had been.”

[Areteing some more, +1 diff – should get the flame this time unless it all goes horribly wrong]

Dice: 2 d10 TN6 (1, 8) ( success x 1 )

Nick Hyde

Nicholas is silent when Alex says this: that he was pulled across the Umbra when he Awoke. But Alex says this, and Nick places a palm flat on the ground to use it as a brace as he lowers himself so that he can sit there crosslegged on the ground. "I walked through a shallowing not long after my first Seeking. I doubt we saw the same things in the Umbra, though. From what I've read and heard tell it's different, for a lot of people."

He wasn't invited to sit, but he remains there nonetheless, and his senses are keen enough today (they are often keen) to get a sense of Alex's resonance and how it flows just now, unbound. "You brought it up, so I asked the question," he says simply, and draws a knee up to his chest, whereupon he loops an arm around it.

He does perhaps have the grace to look a little abashed, just now. Nick is aware that he asks a lot of questions, sometimes too many; it doesn't stop him, but there are often times that he is aware. He makes an interested noise when Alex mentions his past lives, a brief bright note. "So now you came all the way out here to learn how to shape fire?"

Alexander

Nick sits, Alex doesn’t object. If he had truly wanted to be alone, he would have asked Nick to leave. The man had apparently been on his way somewhere, it would be no great ordeal for him to continue. The flame finally moves away from the top of the lighter and towards Alexander’s free hand.

“Probably not.” Again, there’s a flicker of a smile along with the agreement, although his gaze is fixed on the flame. “We found a cave with a centuries-dead Arch Mage.” The troubles that Apprentices get up to… “It wasn’t an expected thing, though. We were taken there.”

Another shrug, something absent-minded. Nick had brought up the Seeking, Alex had continued that line of conversation. It was a mutual thing, then, its continuation. “I had just assumed that this life was all that there was, before that. But maybe I was just shown the other lives that my Avatar had been attached to. It… didn’t feel like that, though. It felt like I was there.”

If it had been colder, there might have been a little sweat forming on Alex’s brow at the concentration he’s keeping on the flame. “It seemed safest. I didn’t really want to burn down my apartment block if it went wrong.” His hand stays still as he wills the little fire into the unlit wood. “Nothing quite like making things up as you go along. Just be glad I didn’t start out trying to direct lightning.”

[Arete again, as before. We light the fire?]

Dice: 2 d10 TN6 (3, 9) ( success x 1 )

Nick Hyde

Alex's gaze is for the flame; Nick's is on the water nearby, whispering as it rushes past the two of them. "Taken there? By the arch mage?"

The other man brings up past lives, and here Nick's hesitation is perhaps a little telling, though it would be difficult to say of what. He remains something of an enigma to many of Denver's magi, even if they might not realize it until they think about it further, if they think about it further: and perhaps that's exactly the point. But finally he does say, "It was you. Maybe a different version of you, the same way the you-before-Seeking and who you are now are different, but you. It's unusual, being able to remember with that much clarity."

A beat. "I started remembering past lives like that when I was a kid. There's...there's a lot you can learn from it, if you try to."

The quip about directing lightening provokes another little smile from him. "Why not water, next? We are at a river."

Alexander

Slowly, finally, the small ball of flame shakily falls towards the waiting wood. It’s a slow thing, the catching, but it does catch. The fire will slowly build and consume the fuel there. Alex exhales deeply as the effort ends, a broad smile forming as his attempts finally succeed. He might try to build the fire faster, some time, but not right now. Baby steps, for the no-longer baby Mage.

“Huh? Oh. No. Well. That’s a complicated question. The Mage sent out a Sending to find help, but the poor thing got stuck in the storm. When it finally made it through, the guy was long dead. The Sending is still out there, though.” Now his head cocks to the side, a thought catching him. “You haven’t come across something called The Message, have you?” He isn’t really expecting Nick to have met the being, but the world can sometimes be a small place. And The Message had been keeping busy on the other side of the Umbra.

Nick is pretty much an unknown to Alex at this point, having only met him some minutes before. The pause may be noticed, but is there really anything to read into it when there’s only this fleeting contact to base anything on? The guy might just be collecting his thoughts. “I wouldn’t call it clear, and I think it was a difficult thing for it to do. But there were flashes. A circle of others I was leader of, talking about a Fallen. Another, where there was something important about the words. Other than that…” He flips the clover back on the lighter with an abrupt click. “It’s like trying to remember a dream in a dream.”

“Did you know about Magick when you remembered the old lives?” Time for the healer of minds to answer some questions.

Why not water, next? “I don’t know how to do water. Wrong kind of river.” That gets a lop-sided smile, at some private joke. “To be honest, this is the furthest I’ve gone with any of it. In the waking world, anyway. It was easier to change things when I was Seeking.”

Nick Hyde

His interest appears earnest, here, as Alex offers more detail on the arch mage they discovered. "I haven't," he says, and of course: the world can be a large place too, particularly when one is factoring in other worlds, layer after layer of separate realities. "I've found plenty of spirits out here and in the city both, but nothing out of the ordinary. My wife, Pen - do you know her? - she mentioned that another Hermetic here saw some sort of messenger or presence recently, but I haven't seen it myself."

Which, come to think of it, he hasn't heard about since then either. He draws one of his legs up against his chest, wrapping his arm around it down near his ankle to affix it there. Maybe he is just collecting his thoughts; conversation with him has that sort of natural ebb and flow that way, where he pauses however briefly and becomes quiet. He has absorbed what Alex tells him about his past lives in much that way. "I didn't know anything about magick then," he says. "When I started having those memories I wasn't even sure of what they were, just that they were too vivid to be something I'd imagined."

There is a glance, then, from the river to the fire and back. "I hear from most people that magick is easier to do when you're Seeking, or when you're Awakening. I guess it's when you're communicating the most with your guide, so it makes sense, I suppose."

Alexander

“Ah well, it was worth a try.” Alex shakes his head gently, when Nick asks if he’s met Pen. “I don’t think so. I don’t know the name, anyway. But then I’ve not been back in town that long. Chance hasn’t decided to throw me in anyone else’s direction just yet. That other Hermetic, it wasn’t Kalen was it? He was there, too. That was… a couple of years ago now? Or, most recently, I think last year. That’s a whole other story.”

Alex stands, tucking the lighter back into a pocket, before stepping over to the backpack. He pulls the bottle of water out, rocking it back and forth a couple of times before uncapping it and taking a drink. He steps back, offering the bottle to Nick when he does. “That must have been tough. Did you have any idea about any of this before you woke up?” Alex twists his free hand in the air, gesturing at nothing in particular.

“Is yours something of a guide then? Mine mostly hides.”

Nick Hyde

"It was Kalen," Nick says, and when Alex extends the water bottle toward him he inclines his head in thanks and takes it, taking a swallow from it before offering it back. "It sounds as though a lot of you here have known each other for a while. I'm surprised it doesn't seem to be more politically enmeshed than it is." He does not sound displeased (hardly that); it's a simple statement.

He hasn't made to rise back up, though he does untangle his arm from around his shin, letting his leg extend half-bent in front of him. There is only a subtle arch to his brows as Alex says: it must've been tough. "I didn't know about any of it, no. I'm not even completely sure when I woke up. I was seeing things for a while before then. Spirits and my Avatar."

For many of them, it is big: terrifying, traumatizing, awe-inspiring, all of those things in one sometimes. For others it's a slow shedding of their sleeping lives.

The corner of his mouth pulls once more, almost involuntarily, when Alex asks him about his Avatar: caught out, almost. "I mostly call it that because it's what my sister called it when she told me what it was. She is kind of a guide...I just don't know what she's telling me half the time." A beat. "It would be difficult knowing how to move forward, if I didn't see mine. It was helpful, back when I was a Disparate."

Alexander

Alex nods when Nick confirms that Kalen had been the one talking about a spiritual messenger. “He was there too. Actually, that was the first time I ever met him. I must have done something right to impress him, even if I didn’t have the faintest idea of what was happening. Grace and Sera were there too, if you’ve met them?” His eyebrows rise with the question, as he meets Nick’s gaze again. “Although if you’ve been here while, I’d be more surprised if you hadn’t.”

He takes another drink from the bottle before answering the next part, before putting the lid back on and tilting the bottle and watching the water move. “The Awakened population here had always seemed to be pretty fluid. People come. Some stay, many leave.” There’s something wistful in the way that he says that last part. “Some just fade away without a word. But, I guess, because the people here change so often there hasn’t been any real press to make things more political. Plus I don’t think that many people would be thrilled by someone trying to take charge. I can’t say I’d be particularly happy with someone telling me what to do.”

I was seeing things for a while before then.

“Ever feel like you were losing your mind?” There’s a snort, but not something born of amusement. More... putting forward something of his own experience, without defining what. Not yet, at least.

Alex leans forward and pulls an untouched stick out of the fire and holds it close to the nascent fire. The end starts to char and catch. “How long were you Orphan for? And what made you change?” He pulls the stick back, angling it so that the flame can grow and climb along it. There’s genuine curiosity behind the questions, and Alex looks back to watch Nick’s face when he replies. “Why the Chakravanti?”

Nicholas Hyde

There is a slow nod at the mention of Grace and Sera to confirm that he has met them: and they are important people in Denver, after all. It would indeed be surprising if he had not. "I think it's fluid everywhere. It was like that in New England too. People came and moved around, or would leave and come back. Sometimes they died." Most things are transient; this is a Chakravanti teaching and it is one that Nicholas has internalized to a great extent. He accepts it without thinking, the same way a Hermetic accepts that Will shapes the world.

He looks back to Alex then, at his questions. Nick is the one who is usually asking questions; most people are quite satisfied to talk about themselves and generally he is quite satisfied to allow them to do so.

There is nothing to suggest that he is offended, or affronted, or believes the other man too forward. But there is a clear pause before he answers. "I did feel like I was losing my mind at first," he says. "I called my sister and told her I was hallucinating. I was in grad school at the time and I thought...well, I was worried that there would be no coming back from it."

He watches as curls of smoke materialize over the stick Alex is holding over the fire, as they wind their way skyward and dissipate. This is shortly before the wood catches flame. "I was a Disparate for about two years," he says, and perhaps this is deliberate, choosing to say Disparate rather than Orphan. He might have learned the same vocabulary as Alex, but the connotations are often different. "Then I...well, I don't know how much you know about Quiet, but I had an episode. We call it Jhor. Some magi newer than me call it Morbidity. It was bad, and I found a shallowing by accident and went past the Veil and it got worse. My acarya found me before it got too bad, and after I spent some time with her I...started to feel as though I had a responsibility, I suppose. So I was initiated not long after that."

Alexander

Sera and Grace are important people. Powerful people. It’s likely that the two go together in certain Awakened circles, but it has been noted that Denver isn’t a traditionally Traditional city. Perhaps it’s a place where it’s easier to be one without the other. “Denver’s the only place I’ve got to go on, but it doesn’t surprise me to hear you say that faces change as often in other cities. Do you think that we tend to find fewer things to tie ourselves down in a particular place than Sleepers? Or that some of us don’t find the more mundane ties as important?” The questions aren’t intended to be something prying, trying to tease out a little more detail about Nick. But Nick does seem to have had more experience with other Awakened, so it seems reasonable to ask if his experience mirrors that view of the world.

Their respective lines of work may differ in many ways, but there are some similarities. Notably, the search for information. They ask questions directing conversation to unearth things that may be overlooked. Some things that are intentionally buried. It’s an easy pattern to fall into, leading the conversation with question after question. This isn’t an interrogation or a counselling session, though, so there’s more sharing of Alex’s own experience than there might have been. Alex watches the flame slowly creep along the stick as he speaks. “I was convinced I’d gone nuts when I woke up. I was hearing voices, I saw time freeze. Not exactly the kind of thing that you expect to see, especially when you didn’t believe in anything beyond the sleeping world. I came quite close to trying something stupid. Sera stopped me.”

Alex stays quiet as Nick talks about how he found his Tradition after two years without one. This was something that he really was curious about, given his own lack of success in finding one. There were terms used that he wasn’t familiar with. Disparate was one of them, but the way it was used gave an explanation to its meaning. And, perhaps, a better term to use. Is he truly Orphan, when he had no ties to Tradition or Union to lose? Flames almost to his finger, Alex drops the stick back into the growing fire and rubs the tips of his fingers and thumb together, dissipating the heat. “I did think I might have gotten on with the Euth.. Chakravanti.” Some of the new names are still new, unfamiliar.” His head turns, dark eyes searching out and meeting Nick’s if they’re looking in his direction. “Fate seemed to be something of a sticking point.”

Nicholas Hyde

Alex's questions - thoughtful questions, all told - draw an equally thoughtful hum from the Chakravat sitting across from him. "I think even a lot of Sleepers seem to be moving around right now. The past few years haven't been a very stable time," he says. "But I think, from what I've seen, that Awakened people don't connect easily to each other. Which makes sense. We see different things, we...there's trauma for a lot of people, after they Awaken, and they're isolated so often afterward. I've yet to meet one who didn't feel at least a little like the weird kid growing up, unless they grew up in Awakened society. That aside, I think being the kind of person who believes reality is mutable and you can transform it lends itself to a certain mindset and personality type."

Ask a counselor such questions and you'll get a counselor's answer.

Nicholas has looked away now that the flame is creeping up toward Alex's fingers, but not far: just down into the larger one, ringed by stone. (Circles, everywhere.) "I had never believed in anything either, really. Definitely not magick. Was Sera the first mage you encountered, then?"

Prolific thing, she is: she was nearly the first one Nick encountered himself. At a Trader Joe.

There is no twitch of his muscles or anything to betray what he thinks of the older term for his Tradition, except that what Alex starts to say draws Nick's eyes back up to his own. There are reasons the Chakravanti have chosen another name, one that doesn't center around Death; until Nick began to question his own role in the universe more closely he might not have minded. But here he says nothing except, "Even within the Tradition, there are a lot of different ways to understand fate and its role. What about fate was a sticking point for you?" A beat, a smile. "I know that sounded like a recruiter, I promise that's not my intent."

Alexander

“Maybe I’ve just gotten luck with the Awakened I’ve met so far, but…” There’s a pause, as Alex thinks about some of the people who have come and gone in the city. “…it didn’t seem impossible to find some kind of connection. Certainly some people are easier to connect with than others.” He can’t help but think about Arionna at this point. Even Sid to some degree, but there was a lot of history there that he just wasn’t aware of. “But maybe that’s part of the city being so loosely organised? Everybody’s left to get on with their own thing, unless they’re looking for help. Or, you know…” The last point drifts into silence, unspoken: Or they get buried by Technocrats and need someone to rescue their sorry ass.

There’s an amused snort when Nick asks if Sera was the first mage he’d met. “The universe has a strange sense of humour. She was one of the last people I met before I woke up, and then the first person I met after. I had no idea that she was anything special beyond that whole Sera package, you know? I might have met others, but I guess they didn’t feel the need to broadcast their existence to an officer of The Man, you know?” Given how closely they tended to walk the line between legal and illegal – hell, even getting so far across the line that it’s only a distant memory – it’s not something he often announces on meeting new people. Sleepers or Awakened, given how people suddenly start worrying about the bald tyre on their car or the not-strictly-legal paraphernalia that they have stashed in a closet somewhere. Alex assumes that Nick either already knows his profession, or his little enforced stay with them allays any fears that might have arisen.

“Oh, you know. That it exists, for one thing. Being told by the only member that you’ve had that kind of conversation with that they’re the hand of fate is a bit at odds with thinking that it takes away any kind of meaning for what we choose to do. Reality is far too fluid for things to be set like that.”

There’s a laugh, but this time it’s not held back. “Don’t worry, I’ve already had the Order recruiting party visit. I politely said no.” There’s another laugh, some private joke about what to tell the Order if they tried to tell him that he was any less because he was an Orp… Disparate. Oh, Alyssa, where did you go..?

Nick Hyde

"I think it might be," Nick says, of the city being loosely organized. "It's not like some of the other cities I've been in. New England was more...well, there were definitely more politics, for one thing." And a lot more of their kind. Though perhaps that is the way of things, out here in the frontier cities: many of the people who were before are dead now, and it is in the process of transition to a new way of life.

That has been in process for over a hundred years, now, but such things don't seem so long to the earth. It remembers.

"I think as far as first people to meet, though, you could definitely do worse than Sera," Nick says, and there is a quirk of his mouth here. It is genuine though for all of that, evidenced by the way his eyes flick upward and glance at the other man. "I think most of us don't let on what we are. I've had a hard time figuring out if I even want to tell my coworkers or not."

And here, he listens, his gaze becoming an intent thing as Alex tells him about the issues he has had with Fate. "I think calling yourself the hand of fate is a little grandiose," he agrees, though it is after a beat. "I don't think most people in my Tradition see Fate as a linear thing, though. Which helps to avoid that sense of fatalism."

Alexander

[Eh, dice again. Int+Med.]

Dice: 5 d10 TN6 (1, 3, 3, 6, 8) ( success x 2 )

Alexander

[And more dice. Arete, Forces stuff. Vulgar, I guess? Diff 6, -1 for going slow because nobody is in any rush here, right? 2 succs should do?]

Dice: 2 d10 TN5 (10, 10) ( success x 3 ) [WP]

Alexander

[Or 3 is good. Magicked the crap out of this one, then... o.O]

Alexander

“So what made you leave New England? Or was it something that brought you to Denver?” The reason for moving to a new city is often one or the other: moving towards or getting away from. “Getting away from the politics? I hear that stuff stains.”

You could definitely do worse than Sera. “Oh, absolutely. She’s always there when you need her to be. And I find it amazing that, even with all the crap that this life drags along with it, she always takes time to see the wonder in it. Like, there’s always something there worth saving. It’s easy to lose sight of that sometimes. You know?” There’s another glance, here, searching for that something in common. Alex’s history, at least recently, is much more known to Nick than anything much of Nick’s history to Alex. But there’s bound to be some commonality between them. Surely they’re not that unalike.

Alexander stands again, still listening to Nick as he talks about fate. “How do you see fate?” He asks before turning to the fire and closing his eyes. Alexander’s mind still again as his breathing slows, finding his centre. Perhaps not that place of stillness anymore, though. Maybe more… the feeling of floating on water, drifting with the current. Relaxing, letting go… He feels the heat rising from the fire, the warmth of the sun. But it’s the movement of the air that his attention drifts towards. His first forays into Forces was to watch the wind, another moment of wonder when his instincts had opened up to let him see. Now? Now his arms rise, circling around the fire, as he does more than look. He pushes the air, circling it around and above the fire. The dancing flames shift, following the currents of air spiralling above it. The small cyclone gusts, more force behind it than expected, making the fire sputter back in its wood-filled circle.

Nick Hyde

"Pen wanted to move to Denver, and we both wanted to get out of New England for a little while," Nick says. There is a little point that appeared between his brows at the mention of politics, a stitch that yanked his eyebrows together like a pair of dark wings. "Our old cabal split up last year. The year before that was a bad year. We just...needed a change of pace."

His brow smooths again as he listens to Alex talk about Sera, and when Alex seeks Nick's eyes out he'll find them gazing off into the treeline, though there is a pull at the corner of his mouth. "It is easy to lose sight of. I think she...I don't know. I appreciate the way she remains so careful of people, even with the power she has."

He does not rise when Alex does, but his attention, or at least his sight, has returned to the Disparate to gauge whether or not he plans to move off and away from the fire he sprang into being. Nick did not show surprise when it did: his wife does this often enough. As Alex raises his arms Nick scoots back a pace or two, giving the little cyclone and the dancing flames their space.

He does this, before he answers. "Kind of like a great river, I guess," he says. "It branches out and away and comes back to itself, and in certain places it changes pace and narrows or widens. Or like a wheel, how it comes back on itself the way the seasons do. Pen's compared it more to a gyroscope, with a lot of wheels working in tandem."

Alexander

There’s a nod as Nick gives the basics for how they ended up in Denver. A little of from a little of to. The details, though? Those are Nick’s to give in his own time, if he chooses to. “I can get that. The circumstances would have been very different, but I needed a change of scenery too. This was the first place that I liked the look of. I mean, how can you not love the mountains here?” If finding Alex in the middle of them hadn’t been enough of a clue about how much he enjoyed the outdoors, that statement should have cleared up any doubt.

…she remains so careful of people… “That. Exactly. It seems something of an occupational hazard that we forget that as we head up the food chain. I can’t help but wonder what the point of it all is if we forget about people.”

The silence between them is filled with the sound of moving air and crackling, disturbed flame as Alex works his effect. A smile – no, a wide grin – crosses Alex’s face as his eyes open and he looks down at the small, short change that he’s made to the world. It’s a small thing, in the grand scheme of what their kind could accomplish, but it’s more than most could ever dream of doing and it’s further that he’s pushed things before. There were new things to learn, now, and this had always been his preferred way to learn. To do. And this is a new wonder: I did that.

The cyclone, though, is a short-lived thing. He could have – knows that he could have made it last longer. There were still limits to test, such as how strong he could make it, but this is enough for now. Enough to start feeling out the extended range of his abilities without blowing himself across the hillside in a cloud of paradox.

As the wind fades, and the smaller fire flickers and starts to re-establish itself, Nick gets an amused chuckle when he says it’s like a great river. “Small world, at times. I guess I can see what you mean, though. It’s something that tries to pull you in a particular direction, but you can at least try to swim against it. The wheel, though… Doesn’t that just mean we keep making the same mistakes again and again?” There’s a tiny shake of Alex’s head at the gyroscope idea. “A tiny cog in a huge machine? Again, where’s the free will in that? Everyone is trapped by everything that surrounds them.”

Facing the fire, still, Alex starts to kick dirt onto it to extinguish what remains before it grows large again. There’s a bottle of water not too far away, but he’d prefer to save that if he can.

Nick Hyde

"It is really beautiful here," Nick agrees, as Alex mentions the mountains. And he is settled here out in the wilds, and had appeared comfortable when Alex sighted him wandering along the river and so perhaps this is some indication that he too enjoys the out of doors. "Where did you come here from?"

There is silence between them for a time and so Nicholas observes the grin on Alex's face, the elation as he shapes this swirl of wind and dust from nothing. It finds an echo on his own face: it is easy enough for him to remember the first time he was able to do more than look, the first time he spoke to a spirit and was able to reach out and touch one beyond the Veil.

"I don't really think of the Wheel on as small a scale as that," Nick says, once Alex objects. "It's more like...we see repeated themes throughout our lives, and everything that happens to us has happened before, somewhere, to someone or something else. Most of us have lived at least dozens of times before, but most of us also don't remember that, so we do repeat old mistakes sometimes. I think of it more...like this cycle of death and rebirth, of growth and decay. We can fit any number of things into that, and it allows room for choice and for new things to happen."

Alexander

It really is beautiful here… “You’re probably someone who can look after himself reasonably well, but things aren’t always this… peaceful out here. A corruption spirit had set up store close to one of the reservoirs to the south of the city a couple of years ago, and there were some unexplained deaths last year that looked like they had some kind of supernatural thing going on with them. Things have been quiet lately, but that only seems to mean that something will be hitting the fan again soon enough.” Alex concentrates on the fire for a little longer, stamping out the sparks that linger. He could try to work another effect to suck the heat away, but there are simpler ways that don’t risk a backhand from Consensus.

“Seattle,” is the answer when the fire is completely out, and Alex’s attention returns to Nick. “Born and bred. Unless you mean more specifically to now, in which case the parking lot way back that way.” He points a thumb along the direction a nearby path sets off in.

“That almost sounds like a trap, more than anything. Other than you, I can’t remember anyone talking about their past lives. Certainly nobody still Asleep. So if there’s no way of knowing what happened the last time around the wheel, there’s no way of avoiding what’s to come. Death, hard to argue with that one, but anything else?” Alex’s head cocks to the side, something vaguely remembered. “Isn’t that some religion or other’s idea about resurrection? You keep going around until you finally get it right?”

Nick Hyde

Nicholas has, at this point, heard Denver likened to any number of things by its denizens: a hellmouth, a place where shit hits the fan on a regular basis, a place where people die and disappear and aren't heard from again. "Every city has its crises from time to time," he says. "Back where Pen and I lived in Connecticut, a whole town got threatened once. I think it gets easier after a while to take it in stride."

Or maybe Nick says that because he wants to believe it gets easier. Belief shapes reality, after all.

He nods as Alex shares where he's from. "I'm originally from Phoenix," he says, because Alex seems to enjoy reciprocity. And after a moment, he rises.

"That's one of the main tenets of Buddhism," he says, "and Hinduism too. The Chakravanti Tradition has roots in both. Or maybe both have roots in it." Nick shrugs one of his shoulders, here. "Either way, I ought to get back to my car. Want to walk back with me?"

It takes a little while for the smoke to stop coiling up through the dust that Alex scattered over the coals, but eventually it does, and the ashes grow cold at the riverside as they make their way out of the woods.