ext_95150 (
kayip.livejournal.com) wrote in
milliways_bar2006-10-09 03:21 am
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Behrooz is sitting at the piano again.
He doesn't particularly want to leave again, but being at the piano is probably a sign that he's at least unconsciously resigned to doing so soon, and so was taking advantage of this while he could. Somehow, visualizing the notes in his mind when bored just isn't really the same.
At the moment, he's just playing through scales, and there's some sheet music from the Bar open in front of him.
He doesn't particularly want to leave again, but being at the piano is probably a sign that he's at least unconsciously resigned to doing so soon, and so was taking advantage of this while he could. Somehow, visualizing the notes in his mind when bored just isn't really the same.
At the moment, he's just playing through scales, and there's some sheet music from the Bar open in front of him.
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"Pleased to meet you."
And, changing the subject, tactfully: "There seem to be a good many people here. Is it always so crowded?"
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"Doesn't really ... look more crowded than it usually is," he says, once his eyes return to her. "Maybe... more people that I haven't seen here before."
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Rather ruefully: "I suppose I've spent so much time in the castle recently that I'm not accustomed to crowds. When you're my age, you don't get about as much as you used to."
Nevermind the fact that when she was Behrooz's age, she spent most of her days shut up in a hat shop; this is entirely besides the point.
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"Where - are you from?"
He'll follow up with the 'when' if she doesn't seem to know about this, either.
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Hastily: "You'll forgive an old lady; we tend to forget things. I mean, I used to live in Market Chipping. I work for the Wizard Howl now, in his castle on the hills."
Beat.
"In Ingary."
The boy certainly doesn't look like he comes from Ingary; more likely one of the eastern kingdoms across the desert.
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"I think ... you're probably from a different world than mine..."
If 'Ingary' wasn't unrecognizable enough, 'Wizard' likely meant it was somewhere with magic.
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"I suppose that might be true," she agrees, rather startled.
Sheepish: "The concept does take some getitng used to."
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"Count yourself lucky, young man. Witches and wizards only cause trouble - especially when you get mixed up in their affairs."
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"Are there a great many witches and wizards here, then?" Sophie asks, and tries not to look nervous.
After all, what has she got to be afraid of, at her age?
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"I'm not - really sure. There are some. They don't... all call themselves that. But they can... do things that - people can't in my world."
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"- what sort of things can't people in your world do?" Sophie asks, cautiously.
It would be rather foolish to get herself into a tizzy over - over knitting, or something equally ridiculous.
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evilpresent in most worlds.He pauses, and says, "Just - making things appear, like the Bar does, or -"
Talking to animals? Mind control??
"- just healing people."
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"Though of course some wizards can be quite helpful, in their way. They say Wizard Suliman served the king well - even if he was terribly stubborn."
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Well, Behrooz can't comment on that, so instead just says, "A lot of them here - are... nice, anyway."
Or sometimes at least not menacingly evil.
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"Not to mention whoever makes the door work, or however it is."
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Not that it helps much, in Sophie's case - but at least it's someone to blame.
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Curious: "What do you do when you're not in the bar, young man?"
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It's a lie, isn't it? But even he'd like to pretend it's not.