BillieRoss
coffee lover
Bill
Location: Her Kitchen
With: Hatsu ( silverwhere )
Bill unlaced her boots and kicked them to one side.
“What a mess,” she muttered. “What a bloody…”
She breezed her way into the kitchen, refilling the kettle and setting it to boil. She thought she should probably make an attempt at being more gentle, given the events of the day. Hatsu might have known the guy, maybe. More than the odd hello as they passed in the street, as Bill had done since arriving here. She should ask, she thought, she should try and be comforting. She should ask how Hatsu was. She should ask how it made him all feel.
She didn’t want to know. She already knew. It made him feel bad.
The question died in her throat.
God. What was she even still doing in Marasong? Why had she come here? Why had any of them come here?
Why had any of them come here?
Why had any of them come here?
The kettle boiled. She filled up a tea pot, dropping in a couple of tea bags, and thought.
Jacob, Edward, Greenwitch, that all made sense to her. There was something supernatural about them. Three was almost enough for her to call it a pattern. Alyce confirmed it to her - for creatures out of fairy tales and storybooks and early 2010s CW shows, there was something magnetic about this town.
But Tilly? Bug? Miranda? Could they all be different too? They had all seemed weird, but within the normal parameters of weird. Small-town-weird. Normal-people-on-a-bus-weird.
Hatsu? Weirdest thing about him was that he was here at all. It made her uneasy, that he was here. That his house had burned down. That there'd been a safe with a map to something in it. That he was living in the same inn as things that wanted to eat him. Maybe.
She wasn't sure why she cared. She didn't know him. She didn't know the first thing about him. Why should she care what happened to some stupid mundie who'd been dumb enough to wander in to something like this and not turn and run at the first sign of weirdness? Why should she care whether Hatsu came out of it in one piece? She shouldn't She couldn't.
She glanced over her shoulder at him. She hadn’t said anything since entering. Maybe she should.
“How d'you take your tea?” She asked, her voice hoarse and strange.
And then, because she couldn’t help herself, because she couldn’t leave well enough alone, “If you weren’t in Marasong…would you have somewhere else to be? If you had to leave suddenly, could you?”
Location: Her Kitchen
With: Hatsu ( silverwhere )
Bill unlaced her boots and kicked them to one side.
“What a mess,” she muttered. “What a bloody…”
She breezed her way into the kitchen, refilling the kettle and setting it to boil. She thought she should probably make an attempt at being more gentle, given the events of the day. Hatsu might have known the guy, maybe. More than the odd hello as they passed in the street, as Bill had done since arriving here. She should ask, she thought, she should try and be comforting. She should ask how Hatsu was. She should ask how it made him all feel.
She didn’t want to know. She already knew. It made him feel bad.
The question died in her throat.
God. What was she even still doing in Marasong? Why had she come here? Why had any of them come here?
Why had any of them come here?
Why had any of them come here?
The kettle boiled. She filled up a tea pot, dropping in a couple of tea bags, and thought.
Jacob, Edward, Greenwitch, that all made sense to her. There was something supernatural about them. Three was almost enough for her to call it a pattern. Alyce confirmed it to her - for creatures out of fairy tales and storybooks and early 2010s CW shows, there was something magnetic about this town.
But Tilly? Bug? Miranda? Could they all be different too? They had all seemed weird, but within the normal parameters of weird. Small-town-weird. Normal-people-on-a-bus-weird.
Hatsu? Weirdest thing about him was that he was here at all. It made her uneasy, that he was here. That his house had burned down. That there'd been a safe with a map to something in it. That he was living in the same inn as things that wanted to eat him. Maybe.
She wasn't sure why she cared. She didn't know him. She didn't know the first thing about him. Why should she care what happened to some stupid mundie who'd been dumb enough to wander in to something like this and not turn and run at the first sign of weirdness? Why should she care whether Hatsu came out of it in one piece? She shouldn't She couldn't.
She glanced over her shoulder at him. She hadn’t said anything since entering. Maybe she should.
“How d'you take your tea?” She asked, her voice hoarse and strange.
And then, because she couldn’t help herself, because she couldn’t leave well enough alone, “If you weren’t in Marasong…would you have somewhere else to be? If you had to leave suddenly, could you?”