nopunchline (
nopunchline) wrote in
orendalogs2015-12-11 10:38 pm
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IT'S YOUR DESTINY!!!
Who: Anyone, everyone? Aoba and Declan to start.
What: Destiny
When: After the House of Wolves, before The Taken King.
Where: Earth, The Last City, The Tower and beyond.
Warnings: Could be sorta zombie stuff (Hive), could be xenophilia? I dunno. Gen warnings, yo.
Earth. 700 years into the future, humanity is all but gone, huddled in a massive city in the mountains, surrounded by gargantuan walls and living in the shadow of the slumbering, perhaps dead, body of The Traveler. The massive being of benevolence and light that came to Earth bearing gifts of knowledge that would bring about the longest Golden Age in Terran history, hovering in geostationary orbit over The Last City of men, protecting what is left from The Darkness beyond with the remains of it's Light.
For those on Earth it is a well-known story. With The Traveler's dying breath it created Ghosts, fragments of living Light that in turn resurrected men and women across the galaxy, bringing to bear the Guardians, warriors to fight the Darkness. Earth and all the nearby planets are populated by humans, the Awoken, Exos and a variety of species of ever more distant origins, some less generous than others. The Guardians make their headquarters in a colossal spire at the edge of The Last City. There, in the Tower, the Vanguard and other factions of humanity work together to hold the line and fight the Darkness and every other threat to the known universe. The little understood Guardians rarely venture beyond the Tower, preferring the company of their brothers and sisters in arms, but all look to the Tower as a beacon of hope.
There is danger and adventure to be had; the likelihood of death and the possibility of rebirth. The future is uncertain, but all who walk in the Light know the Darkness is coming, and the wise life to the fullest.
[ Destiny Wiki ]
What: Destiny
When: After the House of Wolves, before The Taken King.
Where: Earth, The Last City, The Tower and beyond.
Warnings: Could be sorta zombie stuff (Hive), could be xenophilia? I dunno. Gen warnings, yo.
Earth. 700 years into the future, humanity is all but gone, huddled in a massive city in the mountains, surrounded by gargantuan walls and living in the shadow of the slumbering, perhaps dead, body of The Traveler. The massive being of benevolence and light that came to Earth bearing gifts of knowledge that would bring about the longest Golden Age in Terran history, hovering in geostationary orbit over The Last City of men, protecting what is left from The Darkness beyond with the remains of it's Light.
For those on Earth it is a well-known story. With The Traveler's dying breath it created Ghosts, fragments of living Light that in turn resurrected men and women across the galaxy, bringing to bear the Guardians, warriors to fight the Darkness. Earth and all the nearby planets are populated by humans, the Awoken, Exos and a variety of species of ever more distant origins, some less generous than others. The Guardians make their headquarters in a colossal spire at the edge of The Last City. There, in the Tower, the Vanguard and other factions of humanity work together to hold the line and fight the Darkness and every other threat to the known universe. The little understood Guardians rarely venture beyond the Tower, preferring the company of their brothers and sisters in arms, but all look to the Tower as a beacon of hope.
There is danger and adventure to be had; the likelihood of death and the possibility of rebirth. The future is uncertain, but all who walk in the Light know the Darkness is coming, and the wise life to the fullest.
[ Destiny Wiki ]
no subject
“Finish me is what…” the vague mumble might be heard as Desire lolled his head to the side, resting his brow against the back of the couch as that urge to sleep as deeply as Reason currently was finally got its hooks into him. Maybe he could have fought it, maybe he could have even lifted his head and looked and recognized just what, exactly, had Declan so flustered (and been pleased all the more for it)…but right now…oh, hell with it.
He’d just…have to mess with the big guy more…another time….
no subject
He knew what his few friends would say, Mac in particular. That loud-mouth...he'd tell him to go back in the other room and stay hands-on.
No. Not acceptable. He was a host. A compassionate stranger. A stranger in general, which said something on it's own. Aoba was just tired and in pain, Declan told himself. There was no way that the blue-hiared man wanted anything to do with him outside of being grateful for his help. People didn't "like" Declan. Not like that, anyways, and Declan didn't have those feelings or needs, either. He was a Guardian, he was an expendable tool of combat. He was not a man. Not anymore. Not for a long time.
Grunting to himself and hunkering down over the bed again, the Titan put himself back to sensible tasks. In short order he had finished building the new bed, tested the rollers on the trundle and deemed it all safe. Tucking fresh linens onto everything and enjoying the calm that had come over him through honest labor, Decland gathered everything up, put it all away in it's proper place, set the old bed pieces aside for pick up by commissary the next day and headed for the shower. That done and himself freshly pressed, he felt much better and in fact had even forgotten his earlier distress.
That was, of course, until he walked out of his room and saw Aoba on the couch still. Swallowing quietly and turning away, the pale behemoth focused on food again, fumbling in the kitchen to make something edible for Aoba, because the man needed to eat if he was to have the necessary strength for recovery. At least, Declan thought that was how it went. Mostly he just did what Ghost said when it came to people and interactions. Feeding a guest wasn't much different. Fortunately there were at least left-overs to microwave back to some semblance of edible life. That, and he was able to make a nice, cool glass of water without incident.
no subject
He looked rather pathetically bedraggled as he sat up, his bangs crinkled in odd directions from having been moistened by the compress and then drying again, and his ponytail was bedhead-afflicted, too. Aoba’s face was almost zombielike at first, but then something a little more like clarity seeped in and the eyes looking out at the world were hazel.
He smelled cooking. His stomach gurgled tentatively.
no subject
"There you go. I hope this is alright," the Titan mumbled quietly, standing up and backing away a step to loom there uncertainly.
"I didn't know what else to do so it's only leftovers and water, but I didn't want to make anything that might make you feel even more unwell, so experimenting was...not a good idea," he shrugged slightly, clasping his white hands together in front of himself and twisting them uncomfortably. He was afraid without realizing it; afraid that Aoba would comment on the moments before. He could still feel the warmth of Aoba's skin on his fingertips even then and his unease made him unsure of how to even move and speak, so the best he could do was wait for a cue from the blue-haired man.
no subject
Ultimately, Aoba’s tired features resolved themselves into the same warm smile he’d turned on the Guardian several times already. It was a more tired version of it, perhaps, but no less genuine than the ones before.
“You sure you’re a soldier?” Words tumbled over his lips, thoughtless. “You’re a natural at taking care of people.”
Aoba leaned forward, picking up the plate and balancing it on its lap. Leftovers were perfectly acceptable, his stomach giving another bit of a rumble as Aoba murmured, “Even your hands…I don’t even remember falling asleep,” before putting a bit of food in his mouth and chewing.
Yep. Still good.
no subject
"You weren't well. I'm not surprised. Sleeping on the couch probably isn't helping all that much so...well..." he cleared his throat, reaching up with one hand to scratch the side of his neck before gesturing to the bedroom door.
"I finished what I was doing..."
no subject
Desire was the one who had heard—and commented upon—the fact that Declan had some project in the bedroom. Aoba had no clue.
All it resulted in, though, was a puzzled, “Doing? What were you doing?”
no subject
He'd already committed, no sense chickening out.
"If you're going to stay here for any length of time, you can't stay on the couch and us using the bed on a timeshare will inevitably overlap. I know you'll insist on taking the couch in those instances but you should really get as much rest as I do. Your job is no less important and if anything, your health is more important than mine. So...you have a bed, too. Sort of. Mostly. It's one of those...sliding ones. A trundle, I think it said...and there's a few drawers under it as well, so you have storage space of your own."
no subject
“You got…me…a bed….”
A bed. Clothes and food and putting him up for the night, offering the use of his home because he wasn’t often in it—except now he was, taking care of Aoba every time he turned around, addressing needs before Aoba could even think they might be there to be asked…and now he hadn’t even let Aoba “timeshare” his bed for one night before going and getting a whole new…trundle bed.
Not even like a rollaway cot or a futon or an air mattress, but a bona fide piece of furniture bed.
And Declan had told him all about those ‘shader’ things before and invited him to change the color of the rooms….
Aoba was seriously starting to feel like he was moving in and he hadn’t even been here all that long!
This. Guy.
Aoba was embarrassed and touched all together, not knowing what to say…so once again, he said the first dumb thing to come to his lips. “…That’s it. I’m going to start looking for where you’re hiding your wings and halo, because you seriously are an angel.”
no subject
"Was that not alright?" he asked, squinting slowly and tilting his head to the side, silky white hair hanging like a moon-colored veil.
"It just didn't make a lot of sense to me. You're a grown man, you shouldn't be stuck on a couch for more than a few days, and if you're stuck here for long enough to seek work, which you already have, then it seemed like you ought to have a bed. But I don't have a spare room so...I just did the next best thing."
no subject
Declan said these things so matter-of-factly, almost like he took it for granted that this was what you did to help someone. No second thoughts, all-out, all charity and asking nothing in return….
And Aoba wasn’t in the best state to be very articulate right now. He looked down into his bowl of leftovers and tried.
“…The only people I can think of who’d go this far for me are my granny, and a friend of mine who’s known me since we were small. You only met me yesterday. You’re just….”
He didn’t have fancy words for it. In the end, Aoba could only say it plainly, looking back at the Guardian again.
“You’re a really, really good guy, Declan. …Don’t ever listen to anybody that says otherwise.”
no subject
"W-well...you have a bed now. It's yours. You're still welcome to use shaders and spruce things up a bit to your liking. But I just thought it was the most sensible thing to do," the large man mumbled, shifting his bulk uncomfortably and longing for an emergency mission call.
Beep beep beep.
Speak of the Devil.
"Incoming message from Commander Zavala," Ghost announced, Declan's gentle white gaze hardening suddenly as he gave a curt nod. Even if he'd been idly wishing, a call that late was never good news.
"I have to go for a while. Probably a mission. I'll contact you and let you know," Declan relayed as he thudded around gathering his gear and tugging things on. No sleep for him, it appeared. No proper meal, no proper rest. He spent his shore leave taking care of someone else.
"You have access to my account if you need anything and you can call me as much as you need. It may be a few days...I don't know. I'll finish as quick as I can. I'm sorry I couldn't stay longer..." he paused at the door, frowning between his communicator and Aoba.
"Are you sure you're okay? I can send a medic in to do an evaluation? I don't like leaving you when you're not well..."
no subject
What on Earth had to happen to a guy this strong and kind to leave him so emotionally meek? Or was it really just the kind of person that Declan was, with nothing to blame for it but his own nature?
But Aoba didn’t have time to try and keep convincing him, except between one moment and the next something started to beep and then suddenly Declan was moving around in a hurry. Now he looked more confident. He didn’t look hesitant or timid in the least, but Aoba got a sinking feeling in his stomach and the plate of leftovers no longer had his appetite to appeal to.
By the time Declan was dressed, geared, and at his door ready to go, could do little more than stare back at him in dismay.
“I… yeah, sure, okay. Go ahead. Couldn’t hurt,” he clumsily agreed to the offer of a medic, though really, he found himself more inclined to it by that worried expression than for any thought that a medic might be able to help him. But hey, this was the far-flung future, so maybe it would be worth a shot. Mostly, though, he didn’t want Declan to be off on a mission and distracted by worrying over him.
“Just… come back safely,” Aoba went on to add, far more worried about his new friend than himself. I’ll be here when you get back, went through his thoughts, but what he said instead was, “I’ll be here waiting.”
no subject
He had never experienced ( to his current life memory ) the sentiment of someone wanting him to return home, nor wishing that he didn't have to go. While certainly too early in their meeting to form any deep bond that could be considered credible, it didn't mean things couldn't simply click. Something suddenly did for the pale behemoth, and he silver gaze soften a moment, a mix of confused gratitude.
"I'll come back. I promise. If it would make you feel better, I'll contact you occasionally when I'm on missions. A lot of surfaces in the place are adapted for communication and things." He pauses, thudding back across the room and double tapping a gloved finger on the coffee table, bringing up a display on the glass. A flick of his wrist threw the main screen up into a holographic display. Another flick and it was on the far wall.
"It's integrated almost everywhere. When I call, if it doesn't go to your own communicator, you can just answer it anywhere in here. I'll have a medic come by...see if they can synthesize your medicine somehow. Take care of yourself, Aoba." He stood up with a nod, walking back to the door and adjusting his bag before pausing again, looking over his shoulder with the vaguest hint of a smile, nodding again, then heading out and down the hall, feeling lighter than usual.
It would be two weeks before Declan could return.
The first night, an Exo medic came calling, a sweet-voiced woman robot with gentle hands and extraordinary patience. Jolene-9, she said, tapping details into a datapad and gathering as much health information about Aoba as possible. She puzzled to herself over the genetic coding; nothing like she'd ever seen before, but with the wide array of life in the universe, she kept her questions to herself and focused on looking for any obvious health abnormalities and traced what she could of what little medication still sat in the man's blood. She asked questions about his circumstances and what the medication was for so far as he knew, and set about synthesizing what she could based on the details and the corroborating chemical information. Eventually she gave him a needle-free injector and told him to call when he used it to let her know the results and she would keep tweaking it until something helped. Meanwhile it was just a waiting game.
Declan called that evening just before sunset, gauging it likely the best time to catch Aoba at home but also awake. It was a video communication, his face covered by a mirrored glass front to a smooth helmet. In space, he explained, turning the view so Aoba could see out the ship cockpit that Declan was in orbital drift over Saturn. Beautiful didn't begin to describe it. He explained that he had a mission he couldn't talk about in case the call was intercepted, apologized, then simply sat there for a bit to talk about mundane things Aoba might come up with, obviously pleased just to have anyone to call in the first place. A little while later and he had to go, a call coming in from someone named Cayde.
"Good night, Aoba. I'll call again when I can." And that's how it went for two weeks, Declan checking in when it was safe between things, sometimes having his call burst into by commanding officers like Cayde, who turned out to be a very personable Exo that was less "boss" more "bro", and a man Declan referred to as his "cousin" Mac Journey, another Awoken - though a Warlock, not a Titan - with far more vibrant coloring and a personality to match. That individual made sure to clarify that he and Declan were genetically distantly related, but with no idea in what way. He also openly and unabashedly flirted with Aoba, though obviously more to get a rise out of his team-mate, who spent a great deal of the conversation hiding behind his hair and blushing in embarrassment.
When things were extra quiet, Declan would call alone, using video to show Aoba the things he found beautiful; the sunlight playing off the green seas on Venus, the red plants and white stone plateaus of Nessus, the roaring blue-black oceans of Titan. All with promises to show Aoba one day, of course. Events finally got too heated for calls, and it was Cayde that leaned in, promising to make sure "the little Titan" got home safe. Eventually he did return, the door to the apartment hissing open as a tired-looking Declan thumped in and dropped a massive pack by the door, leaning on the frame to tug his boots off while Ghost zoomed in and bobbed around the space, looking for Ren and Aoba.
The Titan kept his promise.
no subject
Urgent or not, maybe it really wasn’t so bad of a mission. Aoba had trouble imagining someone being able to call back home every day if some kind of war erupted back home.
What was going on back home, anyway? Aoba had already been gone for a month, and nothing in the Guide’s message had told him (that he could remember, anyway) that time wasn’t continuing to flow just the same in his home era. Was it too much to hope that falling through that first portal had been like hitting a big ‘pause’ button on his normal, mostly safe, only occasionally irritating life? Could the world he’d come from still be aging even though he supposedly wasn’t?
Two weeks was a lot of time, but at the same time, it absolutely flew by. Aoba wasn’t kept bored and idle, after all, as if he nothing to do but waste away and worry.
Medical examinations with Jolene-9 were just a drop in a bucket. Aoba found himself with cause to use her injectors—and report on the results—only thrice in that time. As weird a feeling as it was, to go days at a time without medicating, all he could decide and admit was that the future had more effective medication than his home time. Granny had done everything she could for his unique systems, but Declan’s world was years—and probably timelines—apart from theirs.
He had no way to know that some nights he was up and about anyway, strolling the balconies of the Tower and drinking in the world with golden eyes. Desire found himself… oddly mollified by the medications, but not quite buried. If anything, it was more like the holes he’d punched in Reason’s barriers were being shaped into guarded doors, rather than completely sealed up again. As if the robot-woman’s medications somehow truly healed, despite her not knowing what she was healing. Despite her scans continuing to insist nothing was physically wrong with Aoba’s brain. Desire could still break through, and that was still the way he was strongly inclined to after being ignored so long, but when it came to experimenting with carefully leaning those doors open while Aoba was asleep… well, results were results.
His days were busy, but at the same time, only felt like even more drops in some vast bucket he couldn’t even see the bottom of. Tess did indeed take him on for courier jobs to help him earn his keep, but after a few days of puzzling his way around with Ren and the maps Declan’s Ghost had given them, Aoba had finally conceded that… maybe upgrades were the way to go. He’d held off out of concern for his ancient little Allmate and a worry of him no longer matching up with the technology back home, until one moment where it occurred to him: he was acting as if the next portal he tried might magically dump him back in the Old Residents District when the chances of that were, in fact, infinitesimal. Upgrading Ren might not just benefit him in this world, but in every other one he’d have to pass through.
So Aoba ran routes, earned money, coordinated with recommended Exos for custom parts that cost all his money, and worked on Ren. He also spent time in the library that The Speaker had invited him to peruse, though he ultimately learned little of any use. Mostly he was just left confused and small-feeling, ever more distant from home.
Declan’s calls home, without any real conscious recognition of it, became the closest thing Aoba had to a feeling of stability and regularity. Even though it was foolish, Aoba sometimes even allowed himself a delusion: Declan couldn’t possibly be in danger in such beautiful places. It was comfortable to update his new friend on the things he’d spent the day on and ask about the sights he was seeing, as if he were doing nothing more threatening than vacationing for a while. Even the people that sometimes interrupted his calls seemed too at ease to cause stress. Even the overly flirty one, who ordinarily would have grated on Aoba’s nerves to no end. Oh he was still grating in a way, earning dry you’re a familiar sort look from Aoba, but the wayward wanderer’s eyes usually drifted back to Declan anyway, watching the Guardian’s embarrassed expressions with a softer sympathy.
The day that Declan returned home, it would be to an apartment only barely changed. Because the Guardian had seemed, to Aoba, to want him to make use of the shaders, he had finally taken the time to play around with what he’d found until the apartment had added some gentle blues to its existing grays. Accents, rather than taking over the place completely. Aoba and Ren themselves weren’t hard to spot at all. Both were at the little table by the couch, the latter in sleep mode while the former worked over his latest hardware installations. Aoba, himself, had applied shaders to his clothes that rendered them the bright whites and cyan shades he’d worn most back home, but he heard no one’s entry because he had his headphones on and drowning out the world with Goatbed beats.
no subject
A little while later the Titan padded back out on bare feet, wearing heather grey sweatpants and nothing else, a small towel around his neck draped over his shoulders, catching any leftover dampness from his hair. His body remained the massive wall of muscle Aoba had seen peeks of under shirts and armor; the white skin made him look like some Mr. Universe mock-up of Michelangelo's David, and the way Awoken skin literally shimmered, Declan was a lot more stunning than he knew. Of course the people he traveled with weren't the sort to compliment him or have personal interest outside a soldiers generic camaraderie.
When he saw Aoba still tinkering, the Titan went to his gear bag and pulled out a satchel loaned to him by his Warlock friend, holding it under one arm. Then he had Ghost send a notification to the blue-haired man's coil, the communication alerting Aoba with a plain text.
Are you busy?
He waited standing behind the couch and over Aoba, smiling faintly before following up.
Can you see if I left anything behind the couch?
Not a duplicitous person in any way, it didn't mean Declan couldn't have a tiny bit of fun at Aoba's expense. Not that he could say why inspired him to something so frivolous, but he wanted to surprise the other man.
It wasn't as if he believed Aoba would be excited to see him in particular, but the gifts he'd collected might be an enticement.
no subject
The blip of his Coil on his wrist was barely a distraction, a bit of vibration rather than sound. Aoba didn’t know Declan was behind him to witness him tapping the message just a moment after its arrival, a prompt reaction rather than an overly excited one. Still, that polite little are you busy? prompted a chuff of amusement from him, some idle little expression to himself of that’s just like him.
Something behind the couch? Aoba’d been alone in this place for two weeks now and had been pretty careful about keeping things tidy and not letting and clutter spread from the pieces of work he kept doing. If something had been back there this whole time, wouldn’t he have noticed already? Well, better to check and—
Aoba’s arm went up and back first, to brace himself on the couch for a simple pivot and backwards-leaning peer over, but he only got partway through the motion before his periphery registered something very large and very white and his calm turn became something far more startled and jerkier as he completed the motion. His attention whipped up to Declan’s face first, his expression going through shock, amazement, and delight all in very short order.
“Declan!”
Aoba’s only response to the harmless little joke was elation. He was home! He was home already! Aoba hopped up from the couch in a hurry to greet him, but it was only when he was upright and a few steps into the motion that he finally realized Declan was barely wearing anything, and something about this fact was far more than Aoba could ignore outright. It didn’t… embarrass him, really, because that would have been dumb, but… geez. Why did he manage to look even bigger outside of his armor than in it?
He was… beautiful, really. Statuesque. Not that Aoba really had any business making an opinion like that, but, there it was.
It slowed him down, but only put a hint of color in his cheeks that he didn’t even feel happening as he wound up about halfway around the couch, a hand down on the backing of it. Maybe Aoba’d been on the path for a ‘welcome home!’ hug, but the lack of clothing stopped him. That would have been a bit much, for sure, but although Aoba stood a little awkwardly, it was with an excitedly fidgeting energy. A ‘I’m happy you’re home but I don’t know how to express it’ sort of thing. Words just scratched the surface.
“Welcome home!”
no subject
"Thank you. It's good to be home." And he meant it. He never would have cared, before. Now he had something to come home to, which made the missions less dull, less repetitive.
A few moments of silence stretched between them, both thinking to themselves about the near miss. It was Declan who finally cleared his throat and held out the stuffed satchel.
"Souvenirs?" the large man offered with a tilt of his head, damp hair tucked behind his ears actually showing his face in full, for once.
Inside was a wide array of items from everywhere he'd gone; anything he thought might interest a non-native from a less explored Terran galaxy.
There were rocks from every location, of course, and he was prepared to detail the specifics of every item, if asked. More curious were the artifacts he'd procured. Wrapped in a piece of cloth, there was a smooth black orb, cracked and glittering blue inside like a mineral geode. Rolling around in the satchel, a pale, prickly, chitinous scale as big as Aoba's hand, from some alien creature. In a small case, a pin made from alien metal with an almost sinister-looking design. At the bottom of the bag, a shoebox-sized stone totem and a badly scuffed metal box. Another cloth-wrapped stone that once uncovered, pale green moths seemed to coalesce from nowhere, fluttering around the dimly glowing thing. Another small box with a dazzlingly sparkling artifact sitting on a cushion of fabric, the pieces floating independent of one another, somehow. In a little leather wrap, a stunning blade that shifted colors when turned in the light. A palm-sized vial of shimmering, glowing, purple dust that moved like smoke in it's stoppered container. And a carved amber bird skull wrapped in a torn bit of fabric. It wasn't even everything he'd wanted to bring, just the things it was safe to stop for.
no subject
He looked from the bag, to Declan’s stunningly exposed face, skipping past his bare chest (why did he look like he’d just taken a shower, anyway?) and to the bag again before finally taking it with an uncertainly begun, “You….”
…Was it going to be more ‘pretty’ things? Things Declan had looked at and for whatever reason thought of him? Of course Aoba wasn’t about to ask that, but the errant thought had him briefly coloring as he turned away to reclaim his seat upon the couch. Once there he set the satchel upon a free stretch of the table, and patted the couch beside him. Inviting Declan to join him, naturally. Whatever his friend had brought him, Aoba was prepared to make Declan tell him about each piece, in case the meek fellow didn’t volunteer much on his own.
He wasn’t expecting that to be the case, but he was prepared for it. He’d said he was going to be Declan’s friend for as long as he was here, and this was definitely part of it.
“Just let me finish this bit with Ren,” he said, giving the man a chance to join him. It didn’t feel right just leaving his Allmate open and nearly-finished while he got distracted by something else, but Aoba was also glad he was so close to done. He didn’t want to risk hurting Declan’s feelings by delaying looking at the souvenirs for too long, either, so in hopes of keeping the Titan feeling included, Aoba added, “Everyone you recommended has been amazing. Ren’s working better than I ever got him to before, and everything’s more compatible with him than I thought was possible.”
no subject
"I'm glad. I wouldn't recommend anyone I don't trust implicitly. That, or at least people Mac has vetted. Either way." He paused, nodding once and taking a seat next to Aoba, dwarfing the other man as he rested his hands on his knees and watched.
"A lot of things are very simplified in this age. The Traveler taught us a great deal about flexible technology, elevating society with better works. The easier the complicated parts are, the more the species can focus on improving itself. I guess that's the idea?" The massive man shrugged pale shoulders, sliding the towel from around his neck to finish rubbing at his hair.
"So Life got easier to live, and then people started being better to each other. Centuries later, you've got a lot of good people, willing and happy to do good things. Be good to strangers. That sort of thing." Guardians in particular were prone to that behavior, practically hard-wired for sacrifice, it might seem. Really it was just that the people the Ghosts returned to life were already predisposed to goodness, easier for the Traveler's Light to reach. Not that any Guardian could articulate as much. Least of all Declan.
"Was it easy for you to work with? That's more important. I'd hate for you to have complications with your friend."
no subject
It felt good, that awareness of Declan’s truly titanic form at his side. The Guardian’s presence didn’t feel threatening or intimidating or anything like that. It was definitely welcome. Definitely safe-feeling, and reassuring to know that he was right there and safe, himself.
“Yeah, it’s great,” he agreed. “Practically plug and play. He’s got more storage and RAM than any full-size computer I ever worked with back home, but still runs ten times faster. More than great, it’s amazing.”
And now done, too. Aoba closed up the panel in Ren’s belly, smoothing his fur back into place, and rolled the Allmate back into a natural-looking position. With a pass of his hand between Ren’s ears, the little dog immediately came awake with his usual sound, dark eyes somehow bright. Screens popped open in the air around him, scrolled rapidly, then disappeared again all before he’d even gotten his tail wagging.
“Installation complete,” intoned his deep little voice as Aoba held him up for their usual ritual.
“Thanks for your patience, Ren.”
“The pleasure is mine.”
After the touch of foreheads, Aoba lowered Ren to his lap, where the Allmate immediately focused upon the company that hadn’t been there before he’d deactivated. After a look exchanged with his owner, Ren hopped free and right across to Declan’s lap—or leg, really, perching there as if upon a sturdy grey-swaddled log.
“Welcome home, Declan,” he said to their host, tail wagging again.
no subject
"Thank you, Ren. It's very good to be home." He nodded, meaning it, and ran a hand gently along the dog's back, marveling at the soft fur. Without really meaning to, he glanced at Aoba's hair, wondering if the feathery mess was as soft as it looked. With an upward tick of his eyebrows, he looked away quickly.
"Ren! If you're got the space now, you and I can go over information from the Guardian vaults and see if there's anything relevant to extrapolate!" Ghost intoned, zooming over from where he'd been staring out the massive windows up at the Traveler. Declan paused in his petting, looking to Ghost, then Aoba, nodding slowly.
"It isn't *all* the information we can access, but it's a great deal of it. The most comprehensive collection, at any rate. The Ishtar library on Venus will have all the rest. If you two can't find anything here, we're bound to find something there."
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He may not have thought of Ren as so solidly human as Declan did, but Ren was still his friend and partner. If Ren hadn’t been willing, Aoba wouldn’t have forced him. Tried begging him, maybe, but not forced.
And on Ren’s part, it helped that Declan and Ghost were much, much more palatable company than Yoshie and Clara. On that note, when Ghost came zipping over, Ren looked up with interest that was all his own.
“I was going to ask you about that, in fact,” he said, while a half-distracted Aoba reached for that satchel of mysteries and pulled it onto his own lap. (He didn’t open it just yet, but smoothed his fingers over the exterior, wondering again what had caught their host’s eyes.) “Now that my capacity is increased I wanted to ask you for the additional information you were unable to include along with the maps I accepted before. I’m ready to collaborate in any ways necessary.”
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Declan lifted his hand, making sure Ren could go if he liked. Of course when the two constructs went, that left he and Aoba alone, the Titan quietly watching the other man, not sure what to talk about.
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Imagining Declan carrying on the way Koujaku did around women was pretty impossible, too. Presenting them with gifts and compliments and—
—and something about that thought skirted in too weird a direction as Aoba looked at the satchel in his lap again, so he tried to avoid it even as he was opening the bag up and putting a hand blindly inside. It felt like a surprisingly large number of objects shifted around under his exploring fingers. Geez, how much was in here…?
“So, you wanna tell me about what you brought back this time?”
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