http://freezeitwithice.livejournal.com/ (
freezeitwithice.livejournal.com) wrote in
milliways_bar2009-08-21 09:26 pm
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EP
Days in Castle Oblivion have a tendency toward the featureless. Vexen's view rarely changes; if he emerges from the stark and sterile world of his laboratory, it is to wander the stark and sterile halls of the upper levels, or at other times the darker but similarly repetitive - if convoluted - hallways of the basements. The neophytes rarely visit the realm that the Chilly Academic calls his domain, and he does his best to avoid theirs when at all possible.
Mixing the neophytes with the founding members of Organization XIII has been, in Vexen's experience, not dissimilar to dropping a chunk of pure caesium into a bowl of water with the lights off.
But aside from the occasional explosion, run-ins with the neophytes, and visits from his Superior, Vexen's non-existence is relatively quite and undisturbed. He's left to his own devices and spends his days in blessed quiet and solitude.
It's no wonder that when he steps into the bar, he looks... surprised, to say the least. It's crowded, it's far darker than he's used to, it's loud, and it's warm. All things that are immediate strikes against the place in the Academic's book. But in the past decade, he's seen stranger things and been to far more unusual worlds.
Which means that he's pulled his mantle of unflappability back around him within short order as he presses further into this strange new 'world', or whatever it is.
A scientist must never turn away from an opportunity for the acquisition of new knowledge.
[OOC: Mun has to leave at 12:30AM MST, but feel free to tag and I'll get back to you as soon as I can. X3)
Mixing the neophytes with the founding members of Organization XIII has been, in Vexen's experience, not dissimilar to dropping a chunk of pure caesium into a bowl of water with the lights off.
But aside from the occasional explosion, run-ins with the neophytes, and visits from his Superior, Vexen's non-existence is relatively quite and undisturbed. He's left to his own devices and spends his days in blessed quiet and solitude.
It's no wonder that when he steps into the bar, he looks... surprised, to say the least. It's crowded, it's far darker than he's used to, it's loud, and it's warm. All things that are immediate strikes against the place in the Academic's book. But in the past decade, he's seen stranger things and been to far more unusual worlds.
Which means that he's pulled his mantle of unflappability back around him within short order as he presses further into this strange new 'world', or whatever it is.
A scientist must never turn away from an opportunity for the acquisition of new knowledge.
[OOC: Mun has to leave at 12:30AM MST, but feel free to tag and I'll get back to you as soon as I can. X3)
no subject
It was not the gods who had cursed Atlantis, but her King's folly. He'd tried to use the city's life-force as a weapon, and had brought ruin to his people. And then, instead of admitting to his mistake and working to correct it, he had hidden it under the guise of traditions and things working as they were.
'Has he even considered permitting study of what was lost? I can understand that those who could once read have forgotten how, but surely it would come back to them with effort.'
no subject
It's obvious Kida doesn't know the extent to which her father is at fault for the city's fate, and her own mother's. And eventually, what will be her own.
"Even...we will be lost, if nothing changes. You know that as well as I do. We must change to survive."
no subject
See exhibit A, one Chilly Academic, the physical remnants of a kind and generous man who'd wanted nothing more than to learn how to bring his people the life they had once known. That was part of what had driven him, aside from an insatiable quest for knowledge. There were reasons he'd been so interested in memories, instead of just the chemistry and biotechnical engineering and computer programming.
'I have... other obligations,' he says carefully, 'but I will do what I can to help you.'
He can't care, but he can remember.
no subject
She hadn't quite been able to do that with Even; at the time Kida had no idea what he was trying to do. "You look so different now..."
no subject
Kida seems to come close, though. He has no reasons to be civil or expend energy on artificial emotional responses save for Even's memories, but those seem to be enough for now. He's certainly never considered plundering his homeworld and her people for his test subjects.
'I know you would not have,' he replies. 'You had no reason to, and as determined as I remember you, you were not a cruel or unnecessarily vindictive person.' Harsh when she had to be, but never wantonly unkind.
'And circumstance, if not the relatively short time I've been gone, tends to precipitate change,' he says with a wry, humourless little smile. Just a quirk of his lips, nothing of it reaching his eyes. 'But I like to fancy that life has not been too unkind, after that fashion.' Scars and hair styled for convenience, but nothing too drastic.
no subject
"I've missed you, these past few years."
no subject
And still he'd followed Xehanort willingly into the darkness, knowing that losing them might be the price of the knowledge that he sought so desperately. He'd had a genuine curiosity by also, he realises now, something to prove, even unconsciously. He looks up at Kida from his kneeling position, and shrugs.
'I was warmer,' he agrees. 'My work has necessitated that I embrace certain things I might not otherwise. And of course, to gain something one must sacrifice something else.' Not the whole truth, but not a lie. It's enough for now.
no subject
Unthinkingly she rubs a hand over the side of her neck, where he'd bitten, but the small mark has already healed over, and there is no scar. "If you would like I have a room you may rest in. It is like home."
no subject
Her offer is tempting, more than he thought it would be. He hasn't seen anything Atlantean in centuries, save ruins on the surface and what Even took with him.
'I do not require much rest these days,' he says carefully, 'but I do find myself thinking of home. It would be good to see that which would remind me of it. Perhaps we may speak there, and you can tell me more of what I may do to help you.'
no subject