Difference between revisions of "Log:Changing Direction"
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{{ Log | {{ Log | ||
− | | cast = [[Gisa]] & [[ | + | | cast = [[Gisa_Cohen|Gisa]] & [[Puzzlebox|Puzzlebox as ST]] |
| summary = Gisa encounters a curious new face giving her much to think about. | | summary = Gisa encounters a curious new face giving her much to think about. | ||
| gamedate = 2017.05.07 | | gamedate = 2017.05.07 | ||
| gamedatename = | | gamedatename = | ||
− | | subtitle = | + | | subtitle = "Also, don't trip over the stump. It is hard. Ow." -Nu'na |
| location = Very long trod in the Hedge | | location = Very long trod in the Hedge | ||
| categories = Changeling, Becoming | | categories = Changeling, Becoming | ||
Line 59: | Line 59: | ||
− | ( | + | Another very, very long silence, and the golem doesn't respond with words. She doesn't directly respond at all, actually, for a very long time. Her answer is one of flickering eye-flames that spark and move, of hands that flex at her sides as if she could, at this moment, tear out the desert's fiery heart with them. (What that would mean for her, sometimes, one doesn't think about in moments of change.) She takes a deep breath, turns her attention back to Nu'na, and for a moment, it's possible to tell where her eyes focus -- the flames move, tracking motion, as they never have done before. "It is a good knitting," she answers, as if that is the answer she needs to give, in its entirety. |
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+ | Nu'na smiled to the Golem warmly and looked up. The smile was genuine and wistful. "I think I will make myself a humming bird. I feel like a humming bird and if I need to give the wings back later I will make something else. But yes right now? That is what I'll do. Did you want to come with me? I can make a cocoon for you too." Nu'na looked at the quills in hand knitting the caterpillar hair if Nu'na's body around their self and then at the ceramic skin of Gisa. Objectivity they warned "It might turn out more crunchy like an egg. I was an egg once. It was lice. Easier to roll where you want to go if you are not done yet. Not as comfortable though. Or a tea pot. Those take heat well! We can knit you into a teapot I think. I am told people love tea." | ||
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+ | Of all the strange 'it's probably a trap' offers that Gisa has ''ever'' gotten, 'do you want me to put a cocoon around you so that you can go on a magical journey with me to be a hummingbird', from someone she's never met before, in the Hedge, is probably one of them. Instead, she answers, "Maybe if you show me, I can knit myself. Change is better if you do it yourself. And I have my own hair. It will be a little crunchy, my hair is copper." She pats her curly, barely-contained hair with her hand, and her ceramic palm makes an almost musical 'ting ting' sound off of her metal locks, wound tight as they are into the braid that hangs down to the middle of her back. She probably has the most amazing jewfro after a shower. | ||
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+ | Nu'na had a hint of a knowing. There was an excitement that didn't seem advantageous so much as it was anxious. Nu'na was excited. from who knows where did Nu'na come up with two porcupine like quills, perhaps sturdy fibers provided from the fuzzy coat that seemed to comprise Nu'na personally. They were offered to Gisa and while bendy like wire, were sturdy enough to not break under emphatic grip. A caterpillar made of moxie and strong nylon perhaps? There was careful instruction on how to start which wasn't unlike actual knitting. "First you make a knot made of where you are from. Then you make little slip knots next made out of the steps you are traveling... I have shorter legs so my loops are closer together" Many steps for one stride. Tiny tiny legs Nu'na was sitting on. "Then you loop your purpose around the quill like this and really think about why you are doing this for you. The draw the material around... the hook- don't... poke your finger. Like... sorta like this. Think about what you will do with that change and the pattern will start to shape itself as you and your cocoon become one. Like playing a flugelhorn. But lighter." These two things had no discernible relationship to anyone but Nu'na. | ||
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+ | These things are metaphorical but also real: in the world of the Lost, what was metaphorical was also real. (This is also true of Judaism, depending on who you ask, so really, Gisa gets these things coming and going.) She takes the quills -- definitely not going to lose those, one way or the other, Nana will likely pay a pretty penny for something like those if she can hang on to them -- and tucks them into her fingers, plucking a single one of her long, copper hairs and pulling it out of her braid with a long, slow ''screeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeee'' of metal on metal. If nothing else, she'll get a knitting lesson, right? | ||
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+ | She listens, she watches, she follows along. Slim, bendable copper wire around nylon Hob needles. | ||
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+ | There was a hum partly like a bee and maybe in part a humming bird. Nu'na was blythly focusing on the knitting checking in on Gisa, "Where you want to go. Remember it is not taking from others, it's about adding to you. This has nothing to do with desert gulls. It is about what is ours, and what we will be. I don't want the gulls to say say in that or I'll wind up a baby turtle and move so much slower than I already do." Nu'na signed and paused, eye...twitching... at the scratching of metal on ceramic but seemed to be less startled as it settled into being a regular sound rather than a sudden one. | ||
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+ | The hum is a nice pitch, pleasing to the ear, and on a similar pitch to one of her favorite songs. Gisa sings -- not tunelessly, but she's never going to be on Tamarack Falls' Got Talent or anything -- along as the Nu'na is humming: ''"Mi chamocha Ba'elim Adonai? Mi chamocha ne'dar bakodesh."'' Songs of freedom are a particular favorite of goylomim, after all, and Miriam's Song is the ultimate song thereof. The metal on ceramic between her fingers is an odd little sound, like a fork against a plate, but gentle enough once she is comfortable with the knitting. "Mmm," she agrees, but then is humming ''Mi Chamocha'' instead of singing it. Humming is better for goylomim than singing. They are not especially musically talented. | ||
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+ | And she knits. | ||
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+ | The knitting was slow and the sky was getting darker or maybe it was that the cocoon was going rather well. How much time was passing at the crossroads of the trod was anyone's guess. There were visions that visited, the purpose becoming singular of focus and eating concepts of time. And it was night. Was she still knitting, or paused in thought? When Gisa looked up it was dark and the ocean could be heard still faint and far away. In this shroud of change through the shadows afforded by the knit wires there was a like cocoon that looked more like an orange upright acorn. As the morning light crossed the horizon it bounced through out the inside of the metal shell, heating it up with refracted light and intensity. Was it a fire sparked by the rays of the morning sun refracted through the reforming of the Dawn's purpose of self? Perhaps. Either coincidence or deliberate who was to say. | ||
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+ | From outside there were words from a messenger that felt more... home than they have before, ringing like a calling bell inside the metal shell, "Shalom." | ||
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+ | She hadn't really ''intended'' to keep knitting past the time when the messenger showed up, but maybe they never did show, or showed and missed her, or ... it doesn't matter. The golem got lost in a task, simple as that. The warmth of the fire spread through her limbs, loosening her joints, heating her muscles, as if she had just stretched her entire body, that fully-oxygenated feeling muscles get. Ah, yes. | ||
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+ | And then she realized that -- oh -- she had knit herself into a shell. How did she not... actually really notice that? She had noticed things during the night but gone back on to knitting. If this had been a trap, well. It would have been a good one. | ||
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+ | She stretches inside the shell, and answers, rather blithely, "Shalom!" The flames in her eyes dance, following where she looks, as she seeks a way out of her... cocoon. | ||
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+ | Sometimes the way out is easier than the way in. The coils of copper seemed to loosen enough to unravel like a sweater. There was a messenger dressed in attire that was lose to move in swiftly, but also in subtle layers to keep his burden light and adjust to heat, cold, and wind accordingly. He looked concerned while trying not to be rude or intrusive speaking in her fist tongue "It would please me greatly if I was able to offer you any assistance." As the cocoon fell away Nu'na was nowhere to be found. On the stump was a note though and two quills. | ||
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+ | The note read: ''Thank you for helping talk me through my choice. I picked a road. It will be your turn. There are no bad choices, there is only what we do with what we find. These are my last quills and my first. Take them just in case. Also don't trip over the stump. It is hard. Ow. -Nu'na'' | ||
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+ | She smiles somewhat awkwardly at the messenger, happier with herself for a moment as she climbs out. "I am well, I am well," she assures him, speaking in easy Sephardic-inflected modern Hebrew. "I just need to gather this all up, and then we can talk." Like she's leaving anything of herself in the Hedge? No. Lots of wire -- unless it starts to disintegrate or something -- and then she picks up the note, her eyes flickering back and forth as she reads the note. "Oh. Wow." The ''shin'' on her forehead overflows with fire for a moment, flaring so brightly, and the golem laughs a little as she reads the note. "Oh my." | ||
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+ | She has already chosen, in the long hours knitting, and at some point she'll notice the way her eyes now track the direction she looks, and that her studies go so much faster every morning. She literally ''will'' read more Talmud before 8 am than most people do all day. | ||
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Latest revision as of 02:46, 9 May 2017
Changing Direction | |
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"Also, don't trip over the stump. It is hard. Ow." -Nu'na | |
Participants | 7 May, 2017 Gisa encounters a curious new face giving her much to think about. |
Location
Very long trod in the Hedge | |
There was a thing when one is taken by tragedy. One reinvents their self in order to find a way to move forward. Sometimes it is a bad relationship, sometimes a durance, or kicking addiction. Sometimes the matrix doesn't work because the matrix itself is what needs help in how one thinks or feels. That change is what allows one to move forward again. For others, like Gisa, the road is long and full of curves but never truly stops. There is a journey that will propel one forward that brings us all to a moment to make us question the direction of our path or the way we walk it. The hedge was full of these moments; beautiful and tragic, curious, and terrible. Today was no exception.
And over the decades, she has gone back to British Palestine, to the partitioned territories, and finally to Israel, time and time again, to help those torn apart by The Desert. After Yom Kippur, she even helped another clay person make themselves a golem. She meets messengers every so often in the Hedge, often but not always Sacred Couriers, to get updates from Old City -- only people in a city like Jerusalem name a freehold something like 'Old City' and assume that everyone knows where and what Old City is. And today? Today is a scheduled update day. The first Sunday of the month. She pulls her coat around herself and moves through the Hedge; her feet in her Hedgespun shoes touch the earth. She's swifter than usual -- she doesn't let people see how fast she can actually move, usually, and today? Today the ground falls away under her feet, her strides no less purposeful for all their speed. And she is quick, on her way to the meeting spot in the Western Hedge, near the Freehold. Quick like fire through dry grass.
Small things cleared way for a golem on the move except one. Maybe they were there to obstruct the path. Maybe it was portent or obstinate, but there was a small creature sitting on a stump that was prominent and unmoving in the path of the trod before it forked off in three directions. One path seemed to lead up into a hilly area that seemed more rocky. The one forward seemed to fold rolling hills into a forested and shadowed area. Shady, not unwelcoming. The last seemed to stretch down where the trees fell off into a rocky outcropping and the wind promised the smell and tang of water and salt with it. The figure though was perhaps four and a half feet tall, and while moderately dressed for the weather. with long hairs that seemed to fall back from shortened, plump arms, and a fretful face, full and pleasant. They seemed to be looking at the paths before looking up to see someone approaching. Knitting needles were lowered and all three fingers wiggled in tentative greeting.
She listens, she watches, she follows along. Slim, bendable copper wire around nylon Hob needles.
And she knits.
From outside there were words from a messenger that felt more... home than they have before, ringing like a calling bell inside the metal shell, "Shalom."
And then she realized that -- oh -- she had knit herself into a shell. How did she not... actually really notice that? She had noticed things during the night but gone back on to knitting. If this had been a trap, well. It would have been a good one. She stretches inside the shell, and answers, rather blithely, "Shalom!" The flames in her eyes dance, following where she looks, as she seeks a way out of her... cocoon.
The note read: Thank you for helping talk me through my choice. I picked a road. It will be your turn. There are no bad choices, there is only what we do with what we find. These are my last quills and my first. Take them just in case. Also don't trip over the stump. It is hard. Ow. -Nu'na
She has already chosen, in the long hours knitting, and at some point she'll notice the way her eyes now track the direction she looks, and that her studies go so much faster every morning. She literally will read more Talmud before 8 am than most people do all day. |