miki
bottomless ruins
Hiachi Ito
SCENE:
Fighting A Wild Animal Seems Scary Until You Get Hungry
LOCATION:
April 17, 2022
DATE:
Central
PARTICIPANTS:
Hiachi, Tak, Dante
Fighting A Wild Animal Seems Scary Until You Get Hungry
“Sherbet isn’t ice cream. It’s… more… tangy. I don’t know,” Hiachi waved her hand around, swatting away the mental image of her ice cream vs. sherbet diagram away. She turned her attention back to the poster.
Dante wasn’t wrong—she did want to see them. The only thing that stopped her was the possibility of a crowd. Then there would be no point: she would never enjoy herself if she spent the whole time trying to squeeze past other sightseers. Her vision was enhanced, not x-ray.
Still, there was no harm in checking. Maybe she’d even remember something out of her penguin phase.
“Well, maybe—“
Hiachi could only get two words out before Tak’s comment steamrolled over their conversation. It caught her so off guard that her brows instantly furrowed. She was less annoyed that he said anything than the fact that she couldn’t come up with a retort in time.
She didn’t pick up the conversation after that. Instead, she took her zoo ticket from his hand and shoved it in her pocket.
Regardless of the mishap, she was relieved to finally be out of the eternity-long line. She continued to pick the pebble she found forward, until she had to block its path with the side of her shoe when the trio stopped to look at the map.
The mention of hippos made her skin crawl. She could see it now: the looming shadow of a big-mouthed creature, with small beady eyes and monstrous teeth hidden in the recesses of their mouths. How could she not be horrified? Their bites were almost 2000 PSIs. A hippo could crunch down on a bowling ball like it’s nothing. Imagine what it could do to her bones.
Even beyond just being kind of, a little bit scared (in a minor sense), she didn’t want to go because she knew how it would end up. It would devolve into an hour long debate about the strongest animal in the zoo, or worse, which one they could take in a fight. A boring exercise in futility. Or maybe that was just for people like her, who couldn’t use her eyes to laser beam an angry beast in half.
Her stance on the idea of animals fighting HPs was clear: HELL NO. She crossed her arms and grumbled at the concept. It wasn’t an exercise that would help her—it was only one that would make her feel more and more feeble. Everyone knew this, and there was no point in her being there as such.
Annoying is what it was.
With a huff, Hiachi pushed Tak aside so she could stand over it. Her finger trailed down from the penguin exhibit, past the hippos, and landed on a cartoonish sundae.
“Ice cream is before both of those.” Hiachi tapped the symbol twice before looking up to figure out which path correlated with the map. In the distance, around some of the bends, she could see the telltale pastel blue and yellow stripes on the tent awning of a small, box-shaped stand. “So we should do that first.”
Without conferring with either of them, Hiachi marched off in the direction of her frozen treat-to-be. There was only one exhibit to pass until she reached it: a collection of canaries in a tall enclosement with a large tree. She passed the bright yellow songbirds and walked right up to the stand.
It was an advanced operation, with four separate lines to serve the masses. The wait wouldn’t take more than three minutes.
As she positioned herself in one of the offered lines, she pointed at the chalkboard menu next to the counter. It detailed the treat in the text below: ’Want to cut the dairy? Try out our sherbet! A frozen dessert made of fruit juice and sugar. Though it looks like ice cream, there is no milk or cream! Flavors: cherry, orange, mango, lemon, lime, strawberry, pineapple, rainbow.’
“There. Where it says rainbow sherbet. That’s what I want.”
“Sherbet isn’t ice cream. It’s… more… tangy. I don’t know,” Hiachi waved her hand around, swatting away the mental image of her ice cream vs. sherbet diagram away. She turned her attention back to the poster.
Dante wasn’t wrong—she did want to see them. The only thing that stopped her was the possibility of a crowd. Then there would be no point: she would never enjoy herself if she spent the whole time trying to squeeze past other sightseers. Her vision was enhanced, not x-ray.
Still, there was no harm in checking. Maybe she’d even remember something out of her penguin phase.
“Well, maybe—“
Hiachi could only get two words out before Tak’s comment steamrolled over their conversation. It caught her so off guard that her brows instantly furrowed. She was less annoyed that he said anything than the fact that she couldn’t come up with a retort in time.
She didn’t pick up the conversation after that. Instead, she took her zoo ticket from his hand and shoved it in her pocket.
Regardless of the mishap, she was relieved to finally be out of the eternity-long line. She continued to pick the pebble she found forward, until she had to block its path with the side of her shoe when the trio stopped to look at the map.
The mention of hippos made her skin crawl. She could see it now: the looming shadow of a big-mouthed creature, with small beady eyes and monstrous teeth hidden in the recesses of their mouths. How could she not be horrified? Their bites were almost 2000 PSIs. A hippo could crunch down on a bowling ball like it’s nothing. Imagine what it could do to her bones.
Even beyond just being kind of, a little bit scared (in a minor sense), she didn’t want to go because she knew how it would end up. It would devolve into an hour long debate about the strongest animal in the zoo, or worse, which one they could take in a fight. A boring exercise in futility. Or maybe that was just for people like her, who couldn’t use her eyes to laser beam an angry beast in half.
Her stance on the idea of animals fighting HPs was clear: HELL NO. She crossed her arms and grumbled at the concept. It wasn’t an exercise that would help her—it was only one that would make her feel more and more feeble. Everyone knew this, and there was no point in her being there as such.
Annoying is what it was.
With a huff, Hiachi pushed Tak aside so she could stand over it. Her finger trailed down from the penguin exhibit, past the hippos, and landed on a cartoonish sundae.
“Ice cream is before both of those.” Hiachi tapped the symbol twice before looking up to figure out which path correlated with the map. In the distance, around some of the bends, she could see the telltale pastel blue and yellow stripes on the tent awning of a small, box-shaped stand. “So we should do that first.”
Without conferring with either of them, Hiachi marched off in the direction of her frozen treat-to-be. There was only one exhibit to pass until she reached it: a collection of canaries in a tall enclosement with a large tree. She passed the bright yellow songbirds and walked right up to the stand.
It was an advanced operation, with four separate lines to serve the masses. The wait wouldn’t take more than three minutes.
As she positioned herself in one of the offered lines, she pointed at the chalkboard menu next to the counter. It detailed the treat in the text below: ’Want to cut the dairy? Try out our sherbet! A frozen dessert made of fruit juice and sugar. Though it looks like ice cream, there is no milk or cream! Flavors: cherry, orange, mango, lemon, lime, strawberry, pineapple, rainbow.’
“There. Where it says rainbow sherbet. That’s what I want.”