Toph Bei Fong (
dustonmyfeet) wrote in
cyclicality2014-10-13 06:23 pm
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Entry tags:
- [open],
- avatar: legend of korra: bolin,
- avatar: legend of korra: bumi,
- avatar: legend of korra: korra,
- avatar: legend of korra: opal beifong,
- avatar: legend of korra: wan,
- avatar: the last airbender: aang,
- avatar: the last airbender: satoru,
- avatar: the last airbender: toph beifong,
- gundam wing: duo maxwell
Open to all! Dated before the barrier goes funny.
The girl making her way through the city probably wasn't anyone's image of Toph Bei Fong, and certainly not the image of the statue standing near the police station. She was small, verging on scrawny (an effect compounded by oversized clothing), face marked with at least a couple of layers of dirt. In that clothing, her features obscured, she might even have been taken for a boy -- were it not for the heavy braid trailing down her back.
Frankly, Toph didn't mind the whole arrangement. The makeshift disguise let her explore the city pretty much as she pleased -- or at least the parts she was currently interested in seeing. No one paid much attention to a street urchin, and there were some benefits to being blind; it tended to make others look away, and by the time they thought something of a blind girl wandering around the city by herself, Toph was gone.
So far, she had a good thing going, except for the lack of idol worship.
((ooc: Pick a setting option. Feel free to pose in with whatever your character is doing in that area, and I'll pose back off of you with whatever Toph is up to. Glad to work out anything in advance -- just PM me or poke me on Plurk!))
A. Toph is in the less well-off parts of town, taking stock of the area and probably noting the triads with interest. You might even catch her at a scam. (Hey, new place, money is necessary, and she has to test the limits.)
B. Up near the bending arena. Maybe it's just a practice day; maybe there's a game going on. She's just as likely to come either time. It's enough like Earth Rumble that she'll be interested.
C. Taking a break somewhere in the city (though likely not in the upper class districts). The satomobile vibrations are still a little rough on her, and a girl's gotta eat.
D. Wildcard -- have an idea? Poke me on PM or Plurk!
Frankly, Toph didn't mind the whole arrangement. The makeshift disguise let her explore the city pretty much as she pleased -- or at least the parts she was currently interested in seeing. No one paid much attention to a street urchin, and there were some benefits to being blind; it tended to make others look away, and by the time they thought something of a blind girl wandering around the city by herself, Toph was gone.
So far, she had a good thing going, except for the lack of idol worship.
((ooc: Pick a setting option. Feel free to pose in with whatever your character is doing in that area, and I'll pose back off of you with whatever Toph is up to. Glad to work out anything in advance -- just PM me or poke me on Plurk!))
A. Toph is in the less well-off parts of town, taking stock of the area and probably noting the triads with interest. You might even catch her at a scam. (Hey, new place, money is necessary, and she has to test the limits.)
B. Up near the bending arena. Maybe it's just a practice day; maybe there's a game going on. She's just as likely to come either time. It's enough like Earth Rumble that she'll be interested.
C. Taking a break somewhere in the city (though likely not in the upper class districts). The satomobile vibrations are still a little rough on her, and a girl's gotta eat.
D. Wildcard -- have an idea? Poke me on PM or Plurk!
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"No bending and no tricks, huh?"
She's just a little thing, and as ragamuffin as they come on the mean streets of Republic City. His will always be a soft heart when it comes to children.
"What're we betting?"
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There's a flash of teeth as her lips part in a grin. "Depends on how much you're willing to bet I can't."
Just a charming ragamuffin here, Bumi. No reason to suspect you'll lose your shirt.
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A smile like that is either entirely sincere, or entirely the opposite of that.
Bumi, being a gambling man by nature, knows in that moment he's likely to lose...but sallies forth anyways.
"I'm willing to bet the contents of one of my pockets if I'm wrong. What do I get if I stump you?"
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All right, the attitude was a bit of a departure from the innocent girl bit, but she knows that trick, and she's not about to let some old guy get the better of her. Give her the contents of his pocket, sure . . . and then there's nothing in there. Right. She's not doing this for free.
Her eyebrows rise in turn at his question. There's some smartness to this one; most people haven't bothered to ask what she'll put up in return. "Since I'm doing this as a bet for money in the first place, it's not like I've got a lot to give. What do you want?"
And it had better not be anything creepy, or she's leaving.
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Bumi has opinions about pockets.
Before he knows it his stance mirrors hers as much as it can with the things he's carrying.
"What do I want....that's a good question." And then, as if on cue, his stomach rumbles. "Lunch. I want Lunch. I win you get me lunch. You win you get what ever's in the pocket of your choice."
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She poised the bit of wood in her fingers for him to take. "Ready when you are."
She might normally have made a comment about how he should probably put his stuff down, but. There was an act to keep up.
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"Do I get a count down from five or anything?"
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He looks right.
If he hunches his shoulders just so no one should be able to see what he's attempting to do next. No one except maybe...
"Could you turn around?"
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His face is screwed up in thought, as he tries his best to remember exactly how he felt the last time he managed to airbend.
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She lingers for a long moment on that absolutely flat expression before she turns. Slowly. One foot. Then the other. She'll make sure he knows that this is stupid at a high level.
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Even if she can't "see" he can't have her watching while he does this. It's too much pressure.
He keeps his focus on the piece of wood in his hand, shifts his stance until he finds what he thinks is the right position.
And then, when she gets to 10, forces everything in his reservoir of willpower to make a small ball of air to lift and spin the wood between the palms of his hands.
Rutting badgermoles, it worked!
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At the count of ten, Toph turns with that same exaggerated exasperation that she gave him initially. One foot. Two.
Before her eyes widen. And her brow furrows. Because he's not holding it. It's like it disappeared.
How . . . ?
Normally she'd say he put it down, accuse him of cheating. But she should be able to pick it up somewhere. She can pick up an ant walking up a tree 50 feet away; she should be able to pick up a tiny bit of wood even if he has hidden it.
But . . . it's gone.
How?
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So focused is he that he's not even paying the slightest bit of attention to the girl.
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[Until.]
[That stance . . . Absolutely familiar . . .]
[Almost without thinking, her hand reached up, skirting the edges of his -- to the current of air like breath between his fingers.]
You're . . . an airbender.
[Her eyes are wide; her voice is absolute wonder.]
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It takes a second for Bumi to catch his breath after that level of exertion.
"Not a very good one," he says finally. "But...you didn't say I couldn't bend."
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Toph appreciates both intelligence and guts.
A small smirk emerges, and as the wood chip strikes the ground, she reaches to gather it back up, easily picking it out of the dirt.
"You're right; I didn't."
She'd heard there were other airbenders in the city, but it's still startling to her. She's lived in a world where airbenders have been extinct for a hundred years, where Aang is the only bender of the medium she's ever known.
And this one may be worth getting to know.
"I'll tell you what," she proffers, tucking the chip away, "I won, but I'll still buy you lunch."
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"Well that all kind of depends on which pocket you choose, doesn't it."
That smirk. He knows that smirk. Where does he know that smirk from?!
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Hand stretching outward, palm exposed, she's still for a moment. If Bumi is extremely attentive, he may feel small bits of metal in his pockets quiver in response, barely enough to register. Under normal circumstances, she would have asked him where they were -- but she's showing off, just a little. Besides, she's already given him at least one strong hint that she's more than she appears . . . and that was not by accident.
"There." Her fingers reach forward, stretch up (how do these people get so tall, anyway?) to a pocket hidden to the side, under his jacket. "That one."
She already knows it's a good choice.
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Having said that, there are some items he has on him at all times:
- A pocket sized leather folio containing photographs of his family
- A Fire Nation dagger
- A small metal flute given to him by his father
- A metal money clip commemorating his 45th year of service in the UF.
It's the last three of these that react the most strongly when the girl in question is making her choice of pocket.
His eyes follow the path from her finger to his pocket, and then reaches in for the moneyclip.
"Good choice." Which it is, because Bumi does not travel light. There's not a whole lot to spend money on when one's room, board, and clothing budget is covered. It's one of the reasons that Bumi doesn't feel a whole lot of loss as he tosses the large wad of bills over to the girl. And he does toss it, just to put the last nail in the coffin of her being a metalbender.
"So, where are you taking me? Or should I make a suggestion, as I'm willing to also wager you're new in town."
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At his statement, her shoulders lift. "Actually, I don't have a preference. Food is food, as long as it's not tofu."
Added as an afterthought, tucking the bills away after the chip, "Yin, by the way."
Because while he's interesting, she's not ready to give him who she is. Yet.
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As he's leaving he tosses a coin from another pocket onto the counter of the stall that was nice enough to hold his stuff for him.
"For your troubles," he adds as he turns and walks away. He's kind of trusting Yin to follow him.
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Always open a door for a lady, his mother told him.
Always open a door for other women too, his uncle would add, and then a few seconds a swat from his mother would follow.
The proprieter, a grizzled man named Jin, stands behind the counter. The wooden club the man usually keeps concealed behind the bar is now displayed on top of it, a sure sign that things haven't been easy since the city closed off.
"Jin," Bumi greets the man with a grin.
"Chong," Jin replies in kind.
"You got room?
Jin looks about the room. The empty room, and then deadpans, "No."
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