Ishiah (
priorcommitment) wrote2012-02-01 11:42 pm
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breathe in, breathe in the day
Among the many things that Ishiah missed about the Ninth Circle, he always felt as though he hardly spent enough time around wildlife. In his bar, the birds had been teeming, plants placed strategically around the establishment to afford everyone privacy and to offer the birds their own safe haven. Some people had resisted the décor after his initial opening, but in time, as the years wore by, it all fell to silence, because if there was one thing that none of Manhattan could question, it was the fact that Ishiah maintained the safest bar to be found on the East Coast, if not the country altogether. Although he'd taken to working under Ianto far better than someone would expect of a peri who had held his level of title, it was lacking in that very specific respect, and so while on his self-maintained patrol, Ishiah always made sure to stop by the largest of trees, waiting for birds to approach as he scattered crumbs nearby.
Hearing someone coming down the path, Ishiah was careful to raise his head slowly, so as not to disturb the rather excitable animals. Upon seeing a young woman, he offered a small smile, even as the birds began to hop away from the stranger's direction, stepping closer to the base of the tree.
"Hello," he greeted with a slight nod, and it was a peaceful greeting, for all that his surroundings held the peri at ease.
Hearing someone coming down the path, Ishiah was careful to raise his head slowly, so as not to disturb the rather excitable animals. Upon seeing a young woman, he offered a small smile, even as the birds began to hop away from the stranger's direction, stepping closer to the base of the tree.
"Hello," he greeted with a slight nod, and it was a peaceful greeting, for all that his surroundings held the peri at ease.
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"Oh, I suppose that would make sense, given cross-breeding and that sort of thing. We might end up responsible for an entirely new species of bird," she considers. "Like a red-breasted raven, or a toucardinal."
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Fortunately, regardless of whether or not the suggestion is a serious one, the image of the cross-breeded birds is amusing enough to Ishiah that he smiles in her direction. "As long as we steer clear of flamingulls," he muses. "I'm not certain that the world would be ready for those."
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She crouches down slowly to make herself less of an intimidating tower for the birds, trying to get a glimpse of the ones that have landed in order to feed, while more still linger in the branches above. "Do you keep any personally, or do you just enjoy taking care of the island's population?"
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He carefully folds his legs in the lotus position, elbows resting momentarily on his knees. "My name is Ishiah. It's a pleasure to meet such an avid avian fan. Most people here seem to prefer dogs and cats. Wolves too, inexplicably."
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She takes the crust of bread from him and assumes a seated position a short distance away, knees nudged to one side to allow for the skirt of her sundress, and starts tossing crumbs underhanded towards the milling crowd. "Wolves kind of give me the creeps. No offense to wolf-lovers or anything, but - there's something about birds that is just so calming."
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"As for New York, I have a fondness for it, but I'm afraid that it's more closely linked to the people than the location itself. My friends and family are there. The general state of the city, I could probably do without."
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"I probably couldn't stay for more than the length of a short trip," she admits. "I'd feel - too cooped up. Too confined. Like one of these guys trapped in a cage."
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Letting his gaze sweep over the island, as though to draw quick comparisons between this place and the high, towering buildings of New York, Ishiah nods slowly. "If New York would make you feel caged, then may I ask— how does this place make you feel?"
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"Honestly?" She pauses, taking in their surroundings for a short moment. "Free. Open. Maybe even a little too exposed, and sometimes a bit nervous as a result. I'm not entirely sure why, though."
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After countless years of being capable of telepathy, it's being chained down to the earth that the peri finds himself most unaccustomed to. Only two years, and already he feels like he hardly remembers what it's like to fly.
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"I don't know. It sounds silly when I say it out loud," she replies, shaking her head quickly. "I don't even know how to explain it, really, it's just - wondering if I should be watching my back."
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His brows furrows.
"In fact, I still have my doubts as to whether all of this peace will really persist for long. So far, we haven't had an event so catastrophic as to lose many people at once, but sometimes I feel that someone is merely biding his or her time."
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"Someone. So you think the island is a person, then - or some kind of being?" she asks, curiosity edging into her voice at his particular usage of the word.
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With an exhale, he nods. "Which is precisely why I think there is something sentient responsible for the ongoings of the island. Whether you choose to call it a person, a being, or so forth, there is some force that specifically makes these decisions and knows well how to torment the people here."
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"Torment? But why would anyone want to do that, deliberately? To try to ruin others' happiness?" Something about her own question strikes a chord, and she clears her throat, tearing off a piece of bread somewhat more harshly than she intends to.
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It doesn't actually work like that.
"People who seek to make others miserable often have some problem in their lives that they cannot seem to solve. An ache of something missing, an inability to find happiness in a solid, consistent way. The ones who cause pain are often among the most pitiful. And from our perspective, that 'why' may never be truly clear."
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"I feel like I know someone like that," she says, her voice still slightly faint. "Someone who experienced a great hurt, a great offense in their life - and then did all they could to ruin that for everyone else. But I - "
Faces swim in her memory and she can't linger on just one, and now she's having a hard time breathing. Is this like what's happening to David? Memories returning that she has no explanation for, no basis for other than the fact that she happens to feel them?
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"What's happening?" he asks, eyes narrowing as he leans inside, hand reaching out to squeeze her shoulder, a few birds scattering from his sudden movement. "You appear troubled. Are you in pain?"
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"I see - I saw something, for a minute. I don't know," she finally adds, lifting her head. Was it a memory? It had felt very real, that darkness, that evil with its undertones of pain and rage, that black cloud threatening to overcome. "It's gone now, whatever it was."
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He thinks of Caliban as well, years gone from his life without any recollection at all. People hide from themselves, Ishiah thinks, when it's too much to process.
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Her gaze falls, for another beat, turning over the bread in her hands before the last word slips out. "Impossible."
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"Something similar to the feeling you just had from your visions?"
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She doesn't add the part where the feelings she has in regards to these memories of his are occasionally strong, as though there's a piece of her that's reliving them too.
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He ends his words with another nod of his head, as though trying to have her consider the possibility, at least. She seems level-headed enough to try and take some of it in.
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"And what are you, in your world? Were? Is that a more appropriate - I mean, you do look very, um, normal."
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"No," he says, frowning. "'Kin' is the term that weres in my area tend to use, but I am anything but. I was personally a peri."