Yves (
yves) wrote in
londoncallingrpg2016-09-13 02:25 am
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OTA - Winter or Yves
The fair haired sprite had been staring at him for nearly an hour now as Yves had made his way around the little shops. For all the creature had somehow enchanted itself to be of mortal height, there was no denying it was a pixie. Those pointy ears and sweet and spicy scent could be confused for nothing else.
Yves had ignored it at first, wandering through the early morning market and pretending not to notice the way it followed. Even allowing it to get close a few times before turning and staring directly into its pale blue eyes. Strange looking thing, all pale flesh and bone. Clearly underfed in its youth. Likely brittle boned, and unaware of it's poor immune system. Yves would have felt bad for it- If he was in the habit of feeling for lesser beings.
It had skittered off for a bit after that, but he'd spotted it once more when he'd stopped near the end of the market in a quieter area. They were practically alone, some grannies on a bench nearby so busy chatting that they hadn't even noticed they had company. The only people who might see them were those passing down the parallel street on the other side of the road- Though there view would be slightly obscured by the stalls and carts.
"The Unseelie Butcher," The pixie gasped, blue eyes going wide as they confirmed what he'd suspected all morning.
"Dreadful nickname, slanderous as well," Yves replied, sneering a little and removing the creature's charm with a wave of his hand.
Winter was so good at measuring and controlling his potion doses now that he rarely carried any with him, and the moment Yves waved his hand, the fair haired pixie knew he'd made a mistake. ...Perhaps several, if he was honest. Shrunk down to his normal size, Winter darted around in a panic, desperate not to be seen- Only to be snatched out of the air by Yves.
"Go home, pixie, and do not speak any of my names ever again," Yves warned, waiting until Winter nodded before letting him go and watching him zoom off as fast as his shimmering wings would take him.
(OTA- Tag Yves or Winter, only one or the other please! Catch Winter hiding and trying to make his way home, or Yves skulking off back home to his lab.)
Yves had ignored it at first, wandering through the early morning market and pretending not to notice the way it followed. Even allowing it to get close a few times before turning and staring directly into its pale blue eyes. Strange looking thing, all pale flesh and bone. Clearly underfed in its youth. Likely brittle boned, and unaware of it's poor immune system. Yves would have felt bad for it- If he was in the habit of feeling for lesser beings.
It had skittered off for a bit after that, but he'd spotted it once more when he'd stopped near the end of the market in a quieter area. They were practically alone, some grannies on a bench nearby so busy chatting that they hadn't even noticed they had company. The only people who might see them were those passing down the parallel street on the other side of the road- Though there view would be slightly obscured by the stalls and carts.
"The Unseelie Butcher," The pixie gasped, blue eyes going wide as they confirmed what he'd suspected all morning.
"Dreadful nickname, slanderous as well," Yves replied, sneering a little and removing the creature's charm with a wave of his hand.
Winter was so good at measuring and controlling his potion doses now that he rarely carried any with him, and the moment Yves waved his hand, the fair haired pixie knew he'd made a mistake. ...Perhaps several, if he was honest. Shrunk down to his normal size, Winter darted around in a panic, desperate not to be seen- Only to be snatched out of the air by Yves.
"Go home, pixie, and do not speak any of my names ever again," Yves warned, waiting until Winter nodded before letting him go and watching him zoom off as fast as his shimmering wings would take him.
(OTA- Tag Yves or Winter, only one or the other please! Catch Winter hiding and trying to make his way home, or Yves skulking off back home to his lab.)
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"Is that what you are, Miss Ives? A daywalker?" he asked, his gaze lingering on her a long moment, then returning to the cards. "I've always suspected you've got a bit of the night about you, to be honest."
Though his words weren't unkind or judgmental. Yves said it the same way he might inform someone their milk had turned, or that it was going to rain later.
He lingered a beat longer, then moved to join her.
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"We don't always get a say in what we become," he said softly.
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The kettle whistled then, and she excused herself with a small smile, stepping back into the kitchen. She came back a minute or so later, bearing a tray with tea cups, milk and sugar, and the tea seeping in a pot.
"Please, help yourself if you want any fruit," she told him with a nod at the plate, as she set the tray down beside it. The tea set was, unsurprisingly, Victorian. "The tea should be done shortly."
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"You have a taste for the classics," he noted, "On some people this nest of yours would come off as trite, but- It suits you. It makes sense somehow. Like nothing else would surround you quite so perfectly. ...Have you always had an interest in the Victorian era?"
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She did not know why she was telling him these things; she seldom talked of Mina at all.
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"You were the ringleader," he smiled, finding that strangely charming, to be honest.
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"Just sugar, no milk or cream," Yves replied. ...Cream was too risky. It made him too loose, too relaxed.
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Yves took a single cube of sugar, Looking thoughtful as he stirred it in.
"I suppose I was what people would call a loner. I tended to keep to myself. I read a lot, I explored the woods often, usually collecting specimens and samples. I was considered very odd by my peers, to be honest."
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"Happy? Perhaps, It was so long ago that it's hard to recall how I felt. I think most of the time I was just angry," Yves admitted.
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Whatever he actually was, she hoped that the word 'boy' fit what he had once been. She had none better.
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"They were stubborn, I was stubborn- And I was sick of the way things were done. It caused a lot of tension," Yves shrugged, not elaborating more than that.
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"How did they earn your anger?" he asked curiously.
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Yves couldn't relate, his parents shared their beds all the time, different cultures, different lives. Still, he nodded in understanding.
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It might be her home, but he was her guest. If needed, she would go and have that cigarette at the window. The weather was still warm enough that it wouldn't be a problem.
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