Mutual Connections [Nishaa]
Posted: 23 Jul 2014, 00:26
--The following transcript was a live chat roleplay--
Pyper: Thumbs pecked away at the keyboards at the single internet station in the Flats. With Roderic still within the range of her peripherals, Pyper searched CrowNet for her probably forgotten inquiry: Could she meet Nishaa? Paige, the blonde hadn't seen properly in weeks, not that she minded. She enjoyed brief conversations; they were easier to manage the pending symptoms that came from social exhaustion. But scanning the lists posted, the names and the numbers, Pyper remembered something Phoenix said. That Paige was happy. Nishaa caused it, and Pyper wanted to see how. Learn from these examples of two people undergoing powerful emotions of love. It's still too foreign of a concept for her. Her hands went from the keyboard to find her phone to tap away. Peck, peck.
Pyper: *Calling, [Nishaa].
Nishaa: Nishaa was busy, her custom blade that Shan had made for her chopped, and slashed at the zombified wolves. It was a great experience for me, it was different than the paladins she usually slew in the sewers. No, this time all she heard was their howls of pain as they bled to death at her feet. Every other wolf she would skin them, or take a paw or too and push it in her backpack. Wiping the tip of the bloodied blade in her black polo shirt. Her phone buzzed within the depths of her pocket as she looked at it curiously bringing it into if the number she didn't recognise. She pressed answer and brought the speaker to her face. "Who is this?" She asked instantly. It wasn't rude but she was a member of Tytonidae and the faction had a lot of haters.
Pyper: Pyper considered whether to give her real name. But Nishaa didn't have the same baritone guttural that Doc had when he'd answered the phone. With Charles, she had lied - an abnormal happenstance - and provided an old alias: Ramona. That was, until she had arrived at his office not long after the phone call, talking about her study of interpersonal relationships. Now, asked of who she was, she said the truth, "My name is Pyper. I know Paige. I asked to know you, too." Although practiced sentences had improved of her speech patterns, the odd breaks were never fully eliminated. And with regressive days leaking into the clarity, the stuttering and physical tics returned. "This is Nishaa?"
Nishaa: "Yes." She said as she moved from the raid area and away from the wolves, heading out of the Catacombs and up towards the surface through the sewers. She needed a better reception; the signal down there was all fragmented so Pyper came out in bits. She nodded her head at the phone, the woman knew Paige which meant she had to be a friend. Nishaa was in an intimate relationship with the vampire. She asked to know Nishaa? How odd. "How do you know Paige?" She asked down the phone as she pushed the sewer grate aside breathing the fresh air of the city and climbing out, the phone still in her hand.
Pyper: The point of the manipulated arrow clicks out of CrowNet leaving her hand open to turn off the monitor. Pyper pushed away from the area and got up to go back and rest near Roderic. He had not been around for several nights and it made her fretful, fidgety and unable to sleep longer than a few hours of daylight. It felt more comfortable to know he was there. "Paige is Axel's childe. But I knew Jesse, before I knew Axel," Pyper's scattered thoughts bleed out without being strained away so that the rational made structural sense. "Paige was also in Phoenix's apartment when she showed everyone me. Other people were there. Leah, Strix. They aren't anymore. Should I not have called?"
Nishaa: Pyper said a lot of names that she didn't even know. Who the **** were all these people, Leah, Strix? They made no sense to her. So, she shrugged her shoulders. "Oh." She said. "No, No." There was a pause. "Not used to random phone calls, thought it was hate mail." There was a chuckle, then a cackle. Nishaa loved hate mail. She got it very rarely she almost felt unloved. She did every now and again get a few bounties on her head. It was fun. "I know Axel, and girly boy." She said with a grin. Jesse in Nishaa's mind was a girly boy, mostly because of his name. She always took the piss out of him.
Pyper: "People send mail to people that they hate? Why would they do that?" That idea itself set her eyelids further apart. To give her tapping hand something to do, the telepath reached over to pilfer the cigarettes from Roderic's available pocket to light one. It steadied her fingers, the tremor that naturally shook her marrow deep. "I have not spoken to Axel since our contract discussion. I have not made my mind about the terms and conditions." Pyper rattled continuously; the speedy deliverance of her words sometimes gave people the impression that she did drugs. The Seroquel that had been prescribed was to slow her down. Tranquilize her,
Nishaa: A contract? She didn't realise Axel was a business man. She didn't know much about the man, but from what Paige had told her in the past she knew what the man was capable in other ways. She shook her head. "Contract?" She was a curious beaver now. Sick and twisted curiosity always killed this cat. It's how she had got sired in the first place. "I'm part of a faction that is hated by 90% of the population here at Harper Rock." She said with a slight shrug of her shoulders. She wasn't even sure if Pyper knew of Tytonidae.
Pyper: Doc had mentioned that he needed permission for them to speak, Pyper had forgotten to ask for written documentation. It was something Axel had pushed for, to cover whatever consequences he may have coming to his door. Doc had said that when people talk, and they enter an agreement, it shouldn't be discussed. Was this the same thing? But then she never signed her name, or gave a definitive answer at the end of their talk. "A contracts about limitations of abuse. We were having a disagreement on the act of penetration. I'm granted time for consideration, before signing." The engrossing amount of detail Pyper shared is a personality flaw, developed during her earlier years under various caretakers. "I don't hate anyone," she states, voice falling into a meek hushed utterance.
Nishaa: Nishaa blinked. The way this girl spoke on the phone made her sound young. Was she young? Nishaa didn't make a sound. Listening. She heard the agreement and almost fell down in the middle of the street as she walked along who the **** in their right mind needed a agreement on the in's and outs of a sex life. Though it was Axel. She shook her head. She didn't know Pyper so she couldn't give her any advice. She was a total stranger to Pyper so instead of saying what was really on her mind she said "Okkkkkk." It was dragged out, unsure of what else to say. "You don't hate anyone?" She asked after a moments silence between the two. "You’re so adorable." It wasn't sarcastic it was actually a compliment.
Pyper: Adorable? Pyper didn't understand that sort of reply, as was illustrated in the way her face scrunched itself up. The smoke left in twirling tendrils, weaving twin tornadoes meant for the minute insects. "It is an intense emotion I cannot grasp. I think I hate someone but I don't know for sure. What does it feel like? When you think of people you possibly hate?" The ash flaked off the end of the cigarette and dropped onto the pants stolen from Phoenix's closet. As all of her outfits were.
color=#666666]Nishaa:[/color] Hate. Hate was a really strong word she did have to agree with the woman, it was odd having a conversation with someone she barely knew over the phone without really seeing their face. Their expressions. Judging a person just by the tone of their voice. "Hate." She repeated rubbing at the back of her neck with her free hand. "It's an overwhelming sense of anger towards one person." She said, trying to explain it. "You could swear at them, stab them or just ignore them." Nishaa's barrier dropped a little. "I hate my human parents. I have an overwhelming anger towards them because they treat me like a murderer." That was her example.
Pyper: The lingering hold that resurfacing memories had on her conscious states conjure up visions that blot out her surroundings. Movies, she sometimes liked to think about but only when they were able to be controlled. Anger hardened the facial contours of both of her biological carriers, slides of them screaming during the short span of time they were together. Pyper wondered whether she hated them. The answer never came to her in the ongoing stretch of silence on her end of the phone call. "How do you know between someone you love, and hate then?" A topic she and Charles dove into, and without alluding to their conversation specifically, the twenty-four year old tried to grasp at a second opinion.
Nishaa: Nishaa was no therapist. She usually said the wrong things at the wrong time. Nishaa was the kind of person who was blunt, would tell you how she felt there and then at that precise moment. She was the worst person to come to for advice, heck she was a sucky sire. She gave her childe blades, guns, ammo but she didn't dote on the mini-me. Her mind flew back to Pyper and her question. It was like asking her the meaning of life. "Uhm." She didn't know how to describe it. "Hate is anger, as I explained before. Sometimes it can lead to you ignoring the person." She ran her tongue along her lips. "Love, is adoration. Compassion, the willingness to do anything for them." She shrugged. "Why do you ask?" The question was simple, her tone gentle.
Pyper: "I ask because I don't know either. I prefer some people to be around, and not others but I don't feel strongly oppositions’ to them." Stubbing out the end of the flaring filter, Pyper pocketed the snuffed orange wrapping. She knew better than to litter the floor with it. Phoenix held less disapproving looks to her habits and the hobbies she chose to share. Although never one to falsify information unless given the wrong facts at the beginning, or through misinterpretation, Pyper was guilty of omission. Not often but the rarity of it usually stemmed from a obligatory urge to preserve a coveted object or individual from harm. In this case, not telling Phoenix about those nights she taunted hunters to draw blood, or looking for the alpha beast - Doc said it had been killed - was the best thing. Pyper chose not to say anything more about her curiosity. "Can I see you?"
Pyper: Thumbs pecked away at the keyboards at the single internet station in the Flats. With Roderic still within the range of her peripherals, Pyper searched CrowNet for her probably forgotten inquiry: Could she meet Nishaa? Paige, the blonde hadn't seen properly in weeks, not that she minded. She enjoyed brief conversations; they were easier to manage the pending symptoms that came from social exhaustion. But scanning the lists posted, the names and the numbers, Pyper remembered something Phoenix said. That Paige was happy. Nishaa caused it, and Pyper wanted to see how. Learn from these examples of two people undergoing powerful emotions of love. It's still too foreign of a concept for her. Her hands went from the keyboard to find her phone to tap away. Peck, peck.
Pyper: *Calling, [Nishaa].
Nishaa: Nishaa was busy, her custom blade that Shan had made for her chopped, and slashed at the zombified wolves. It was a great experience for me, it was different than the paladins she usually slew in the sewers. No, this time all she heard was their howls of pain as they bled to death at her feet. Every other wolf she would skin them, or take a paw or too and push it in her backpack. Wiping the tip of the bloodied blade in her black polo shirt. Her phone buzzed within the depths of her pocket as she looked at it curiously bringing it into if the number she didn't recognise. She pressed answer and brought the speaker to her face. "Who is this?" She asked instantly. It wasn't rude but she was a member of Tytonidae and the faction had a lot of haters.
Pyper: Pyper considered whether to give her real name. But Nishaa didn't have the same baritone guttural that Doc had when he'd answered the phone. With Charles, she had lied - an abnormal happenstance - and provided an old alias: Ramona. That was, until she had arrived at his office not long after the phone call, talking about her study of interpersonal relationships. Now, asked of who she was, she said the truth, "My name is Pyper. I know Paige. I asked to know you, too." Although practiced sentences had improved of her speech patterns, the odd breaks were never fully eliminated. And with regressive days leaking into the clarity, the stuttering and physical tics returned. "This is Nishaa?"
Nishaa: "Yes." She said as she moved from the raid area and away from the wolves, heading out of the Catacombs and up towards the surface through the sewers. She needed a better reception; the signal down there was all fragmented so Pyper came out in bits. She nodded her head at the phone, the woman knew Paige which meant she had to be a friend. Nishaa was in an intimate relationship with the vampire. She asked to know Nishaa? How odd. "How do you know Paige?" She asked down the phone as she pushed the sewer grate aside breathing the fresh air of the city and climbing out, the phone still in her hand.
Pyper: The point of the manipulated arrow clicks out of CrowNet leaving her hand open to turn off the monitor. Pyper pushed away from the area and got up to go back and rest near Roderic. He had not been around for several nights and it made her fretful, fidgety and unable to sleep longer than a few hours of daylight. It felt more comfortable to know he was there. "Paige is Axel's childe. But I knew Jesse, before I knew Axel," Pyper's scattered thoughts bleed out without being strained away so that the rational made structural sense. "Paige was also in Phoenix's apartment when she showed everyone me. Other people were there. Leah, Strix. They aren't anymore. Should I not have called?"
Nishaa: Pyper said a lot of names that she didn't even know. Who the **** were all these people, Leah, Strix? They made no sense to her. So, she shrugged her shoulders. "Oh." She said. "No, No." There was a pause. "Not used to random phone calls, thought it was hate mail." There was a chuckle, then a cackle. Nishaa loved hate mail. She got it very rarely she almost felt unloved. She did every now and again get a few bounties on her head. It was fun. "I know Axel, and girly boy." She said with a grin. Jesse in Nishaa's mind was a girly boy, mostly because of his name. She always took the piss out of him.
Pyper: "People send mail to people that they hate? Why would they do that?" That idea itself set her eyelids further apart. To give her tapping hand something to do, the telepath reached over to pilfer the cigarettes from Roderic's available pocket to light one. It steadied her fingers, the tremor that naturally shook her marrow deep. "I have not spoken to Axel since our contract discussion. I have not made my mind about the terms and conditions." Pyper rattled continuously; the speedy deliverance of her words sometimes gave people the impression that she did drugs. The Seroquel that had been prescribed was to slow her down. Tranquilize her,
Nishaa: A contract? She didn't realise Axel was a business man. She didn't know much about the man, but from what Paige had told her in the past she knew what the man was capable in other ways. She shook her head. "Contract?" She was a curious beaver now. Sick and twisted curiosity always killed this cat. It's how she had got sired in the first place. "I'm part of a faction that is hated by 90% of the population here at Harper Rock." She said with a slight shrug of her shoulders. She wasn't even sure if Pyper knew of Tytonidae.
Pyper: Doc had mentioned that he needed permission for them to speak, Pyper had forgotten to ask for written documentation. It was something Axel had pushed for, to cover whatever consequences he may have coming to his door. Doc had said that when people talk, and they enter an agreement, it shouldn't be discussed. Was this the same thing? But then she never signed her name, or gave a definitive answer at the end of their talk. "A contracts about limitations of abuse. We were having a disagreement on the act of penetration. I'm granted time for consideration, before signing." The engrossing amount of detail Pyper shared is a personality flaw, developed during her earlier years under various caretakers. "I don't hate anyone," she states, voice falling into a meek hushed utterance.
Nishaa: Nishaa blinked. The way this girl spoke on the phone made her sound young. Was she young? Nishaa didn't make a sound. Listening. She heard the agreement and almost fell down in the middle of the street as she walked along who the **** in their right mind needed a agreement on the in's and outs of a sex life. Though it was Axel. She shook her head. She didn't know Pyper so she couldn't give her any advice. She was a total stranger to Pyper so instead of saying what was really on her mind she said "Okkkkkk." It was dragged out, unsure of what else to say. "You don't hate anyone?" She asked after a moments silence between the two. "You’re so adorable." It wasn't sarcastic it was actually a compliment.
Pyper: Adorable? Pyper didn't understand that sort of reply, as was illustrated in the way her face scrunched itself up. The smoke left in twirling tendrils, weaving twin tornadoes meant for the minute insects. "It is an intense emotion I cannot grasp. I think I hate someone but I don't know for sure. What does it feel like? When you think of people you possibly hate?" The ash flaked off the end of the cigarette and dropped onto the pants stolen from Phoenix's closet. As all of her outfits were.
color=#666666]Nishaa:[/color] Hate. Hate was a really strong word she did have to agree with the woman, it was odd having a conversation with someone she barely knew over the phone without really seeing their face. Their expressions. Judging a person just by the tone of their voice. "Hate." She repeated rubbing at the back of her neck with her free hand. "It's an overwhelming sense of anger towards one person." She said, trying to explain it. "You could swear at them, stab them or just ignore them." Nishaa's barrier dropped a little. "I hate my human parents. I have an overwhelming anger towards them because they treat me like a murderer." That was her example.
Pyper: The lingering hold that resurfacing memories had on her conscious states conjure up visions that blot out her surroundings. Movies, she sometimes liked to think about but only when they were able to be controlled. Anger hardened the facial contours of both of her biological carriers, slides of them screaming during the short span of time they were together. Pyper wondered whether she hated them. The answer never came to her in the ongoing stretch of silence on her end of the phone call. "How do you know between someone you love, and hate then?" A topic she and Charles dove into, and without alluding to their conversation specifically, the twenty-four year old tried to grasp at a second opinion.
Nishaa: Nishaa was no therapist. She usually said the wrong things at the wrong time. Nishaa was the kind of person who was blunt, would tell you how she felt there and then at that precise moment. She was the worst person to come to for advice, heck she was a sucky sire. She gave her childe blades, guns, ammo but she didn't dote on the mini-me. Her mind flew back to Pyper and her question. It was like asking her the meaning of life. "Uhm." She didn't know how to describe it. "Hate is anger, as I explained before. Sometimes it can lead to you ignoring the person." She ran her tongue along her lips. "Love, is adoration. Compassion, the willingness to do anything for them." She shrugged. "Why do you ask?" The question was simple, her tone gentle.
Pyper: "I ask because I don't know either. I prefer some people to be around, and not others but I don't feel strongly oppositions’ to them." Stubbing out the end of the flaring filter, Pyper pocketed the snuffed orange wrapping. She knew better than to litter the floor with it. Phoenix held less disapproving looks to her habits and the hobbies she chose to share. Although never one to falsify information unless given the wrong facts at the beginning, or through misinterpretation, Pyper was guilty of omission. Not often but the rarity of it usually stemmed from a obligatory urge to preserve a coveted object or individual from harm. In this case, not telling Phoenix about those nights she taunted hunters to draw blood, or looking for the alpha beast - Doc said it had been killed - was the best thing. Pyper chose not to say anything more about her curiosity. "Can I see you?"