herr_bookman (
herr_bookman) wrote in
milliways_bar2013-05-06 03:30 pm
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"But musing what an easy thing it were to mix our opiates in a larger cup," Autor says, patting the counter in preparation to hop over it. "And drink, and not perceive"—and here he hops—"sleep deepening lead his truer kinsman up, like undistinguished Night, darkening the skirts of Eve.*"
After a few minutes of setting up his prior preparations, the boy reaches for the specials board. "Good night, Bar."
Bitter Chocolate Aria
Hot chocolate & one croissant
Submission Sonata
Virgin strawberry & wasabi daiquiri
Ode to Blood
Giga ant eggs, sour apple juice, seltzer water, flavored ice
Fiery Trigon
Grenadine, lemon juice, apple juice, passion fruit juice, & cinnamon
Silent Overture
Free coffee if you can prove that you’re knighted
Note: Virgin bar.
[This post is open forever.]
*Ode to Sleep, Richard Chenevix Trench
After a few minutes of setting up his prior preparations, the boy reaches for the specials board. "Good night, Bar."
Hot chocolate & one croissant
Submission Sonata
Virgin strawberry & wasabi daiquiri
Ode to Blood
Giga ant eggs, sour apple juice, seltzer water, flavored ice
Fiery Trigon
Grenadine, lemon juice, apple juice, passion fruit juice, & cinnamon
Silent Overture
Free coffee if you can prove that you’re knighted
Note: Virgin bar.
[This post is open forever.]
*Ode to Sleep, Richard Chenevix Trench
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"Snow Queen doesn't suit you," he says. "The bar's greenhouse is gorgeous this time of year if you want to banish the winter."
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The proof, as they say, is in the pudding; so after a mild look at the croissant, Sunshine takes a bite, considering the croissant as she chews.
When she swallows, she smiles. "You've been practicing, haven't you?"
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The kid adjusts his glasses, trying very hard to give off the impression that he does not care, not even one little bit, because who needs a second opinion anyway, and gosh, It's Just Sunshine.
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For a layman's attempt. (Ooh, burn.)
"Mind if I get something a bit stronger to put in the hot chocolate? It's freezing, back where I came from."
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The door to the bar's fridge opens apparently by itself, and a bottle of Irish Cream floats out, up, and into Sunshine's hand. She twists off the top and adds a generous splash to her hot chocolate.
As long as it's taken her to admit it, magic has its advantages.
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"You have so many abilities," he says, a little awed--and a little annoyed. "Does that one draw power from the sun, too?"
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Which is true.
He props his elbows up on the bar and cups his chin in his hands, wrinkling his nose at the smell of the alcohol. "So what else can you do?"
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Apparently the answer is: nearly beaned by a bottle of Irish cream.
"Lots of things, really, but transmuting is what I'm best at, apart from snuffing out vampires," she murmurs, taking a sip. "Transmuting is stuff-changing. Changing something into something else."
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He pulls out a few German marks from his pocket, and arranges the coins in front of her. "What can you do with these?"
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("I'm tired of that red stone. Give me a green one.")
"These are your world's currency?" Rae says, picking up one of the coins and eyeing it. "Sweet. Your mint doesn't skimp on the metals."
It's nice and heavy. Dense. Sunshine closes her hand around the coin, and when she opens her hand a moment later, the coin is a bright blue, plastic button.
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Sense, Sunshine. This makes none.
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Then he furrows his brow. "I assume human transmutation is morally reprehensible and so thoroughly frowned upon that the only people to have tried have been imprisoned or executed?"
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Like this particular baker, who is now spluttering madly. "What kind of lurid, multicolored hell is your brain, Autor," she chokes out. Apparently the thought of transmuting a person hadn't even occurred to her.
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Then he sits back and waits for her to yell at him. He'd ask another question, but he has a feeling it would be disregarded.
Apparently his and Sunshine's typical conversational-argument has arrived early. Surprisingly, it's not the one he thought would happen.
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"That kind of thing... It's not really something that's come up, thankfully," she says, between coughing. "On very rare occasions you might get a bad blood-cross, but there are usually signs to look for way before things get that bad."
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He is fairly certain that more discussion on this topic would lead to more, "what the hell is your brain," which is why he really should steer them away from it as quickly as he can. Figuring out how to weaponize an ability Sunshine isn't already gloomy about--and he has ten to twelve theories already--would probably be have a longer-lasting effect than causing her to stain her clothes with hot chocolate.
"What's a blood-cross?" he asks.
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"Magic-handling is hereditary, and the strength of one's power depends on the strength of one's combined ancestry, more or less," says the daughter of Onyx Blaise. "You've heard me talk about Others, in my world, I think? Sentient non-humans. Well, there are also Part-Blood Others, people who have both human and Other parentage. With me so far?"
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"Oh, genetics!" Autor says, lighting up. He nods eagerly; he's been working on a similar topic for months. "I assume people who have Other-blood running through their veins have significantly concentrated magic ability? What price do they pay for it?"
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"Others and Part-Blood Others don't really..." she says, grimacing. As she said, it's complicated. "There are lots of different kinds of Other, and those that have magic abilities aren't... they don't handle magic like human magic-handlers do. Most often it's because they are magical, in some way or another. Like how Swallow Demons fly only partially because of their birdlike, hollow bone structure. Mostly they fly because the atoms that make them up don't seem to submit to gravity like they should. They don't handle magic, they are magical."
"A bad blood-cross is when someone with magic-handling genes has a child with someone who has Other blood in their background. Magical Other blood and human magic-handling blood do not mix well. Nine times out of ten, the child turns out to be very inventive, very powerful, very hard to catch serial killer."
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Teacups in hand, he turns back to her and shakes his head. "Well, that's rather deterministic, and I bet Others shoulder the blame," he says. "No wonder humans discriminate against them. What is it about the Other blood that warps a human's magic-handler's child? I've been studying this, but it still seems odd to me that a person would genes would have that much an effect."
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"It's part of why magic-handling families are very careful about which families they marry into - Dad's family was dead set against him marrying my mother, for example, because she was an unknown. The general discrimination towards Others and Partblood Others, though, comes from the Wars."
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"Wait, I thought the discrimination was an instigating factor in the wars," he says, furrowing his brow. "A cause rather than a result, though I imagine that the attacks made it worse."
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