st_paladin (
st_paladin) wrote in
strangetrip2018-02-21 01:36 pm
Entry tags:
[EP] Learning about Humanity - OTA
Adrian had found a lot of the 'guests' at the Inn were quite pleasant and he wondered if that was how his father had found them in the beginning. When they had no idea he was a vampire, just a wanderer among them. It fueled his curiosity and he wanted to learn more about humanity. The only examples he ever had was his mother and the other villagers, besides what he had encountered here.
The best way to learn, was to observe. He didn't want to draw attention to himself, so he settled onto a small table in the restaurant area with his ever present notebook beside him. It was what he used to take notes, trying to decipher turns of phrases and words that were foreign to him. Up until this point he'd used a pencil, but on the way down he'd realized that he didn't have it with him. Instead, someone had offered him a writing utensil, they called it a pen but it looked nothing like a goose feather and he couldn't understand how it wrote without an inkwell.
As he pressed the end to the piece of paper there was nothing. Adrian's thumb accidentally moved across the end of the pen and he heard a click sound. Suddenly a point appeared at the bottom where there had been nothing. "Odd." Curiously, he moved the end over the paper and gasped when a mark appeared. Was the ink hidden?
The best way to learn, was to observe. He didn't want to draw attention to himself, so he settled onto a small table in the restaurant area with his ever present notebook beside him. It was what he used to take notes, trying to decipher turns of phrases and words that were foreign to him. Up until this point he'd used a pencil, but on the way down he'd realized that he didn't have it with him. Instead, someone had offered him a writing utensil, they called it a pen but it looked nothing like a goose feather and he couldn't understand how it wrote without an inkwell.
As he pressed the end to the piece of paper there was nothing. Adrian's thumb accidentally moved across the end of the pen and he heard a click sound. Suddenly a point appeared at the bottom where there had been nothing. "Odd." Curiously, he moved the end over the paper and gasped when a mark appeared. Was the ink hidden?

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His reaction to the pen did not go unnoticed. She smiled a little. "New to the inn?" A little nicer than asking him about the pen outright.
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"It's called a pen." Mary did note he looked a little different than the others at the inn. He seemed like he was taken right out of history. "I have a list of words, too, though just in my head." Like, what was a twitter?
"Would you like some help with some of the words?"
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"English is not my first language, and while I can understand the words, I do not know their meaning." He pointed to the first - what's up. "Someone asked me this and I said ceiling. They looked at me as I had spoken another language and I knew that wasn't the right response."
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Mary actually felt for the guy. Maybe she wasn't as bad off as he was, but she understood the idea of being thrust into a different time and having to play catch up around you.
"It's slang. We have a bad habit of taking English and making it mean different things. My father once explained to me the true meaning of terrific when I was a kid and I was blown away." She paused, then decided to explain. "Now it means great, but before it meant filled with terror." She looked at his list. "What's up is something like, 'how are you doing?' but you might not always be looking for an actual answer. Sometimes it's kind of like 'hi'. "
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"It is a greeting without expectation of an answer." He nodded, "such as when someone asks how are you, but doesn't wait for an answer or listen for a response."
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"From what I gather, since the computers became really popular people sort of stopped talking to each other a lot." Mary shrugged. "I'm from a time where phones were still really basic"
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"What time are you from?" Because it was definitely further back than the 1980s if he wasn't used to phones in any form.
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It was the look of pain that brought him to his feet, much quicker than a human and was by her side. "Are you all right?"
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It took her a second to compose herself. "Why does everything have to have chicken on it?" She looked disdainfully at the chicken, then closed her eyes for a moment as if to wipe the memory of it from her mind and opened them again to focus on the man.
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"Or the chef is out to kill me." She said wryly and decided to push the whole plate away - her appetite was entirely lost.
"Although I'm sure most people would find this delicious on a normal day."
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Zahra sighed. "I'm still hungry, but the thought of food makes me want to hide in a deep dark hole." She managed a faint smile for him though
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The reaction to the pen got a little smile out of her. "You're not from around now, are you?"
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"I am from the 15th century, many things are quite different for me."
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That wasn't the case for everybody. And before she got too down on anything, it'd serve her right to remember that. "That's got to be more than a little disorienting."
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That got Sunny curious. Her head tipped slightly to one side. "What kinds of things haven't changed?" Other than people being dumb, panicky animals, that she assumed had been true through all of human history.
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While his mother wouldn't be burnt at the stake in this time, he was under no illusions that some other punishment might be mete out for those that were viewed as 'different'. He'd listened or overheard too many tales of others speaking of their home worlds and times.
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"Curiosity would be the reason we made it out of East Africa," Sunny agreed. She decided to sit down, at least for a minute, if for no other reason than., small world, her mother was a doctor. "I'm Sunny, by the way."
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"English is not your first language then?" He assumed since she'd spoken of East Africa. "Do you find the translation to English difficult or is it more that I am from the distant past that I sometimes do not understand the words?"
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