Wen Qing (
radishlobbyist) wrote in
farsickness2020-02-02 06:20 pm
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first steps in a new home - Wen Qing 001
WHO: Wen Qing and OPEN
WHEN: Catch-all log for arrival and the days of settling in
WHAT: Various prompts around town (including continuations of tdm threads), and a dinner not!date - or choose your own adventure!
WHERE: Gazin and woods
WARNINGS: None so far
Arrival
One moment, Wen Qing is in a cold and damp dungeon cell clinging to her brother and desperately wishing she were anywhere else. Then, one bright light later, she is decidedly not. The crossroads at Gazin and even the sudden transport don’t bother her so much but try as she might, her frantic search in the woods and town just aren’t going to bring a lead to Wen Ning’s whereabouts.
The first thing Wen Qing notices when walking into the town of Gazin is that the people are utterly incomprehensible to her. That makes for some fun wandering around, her in her stained and dirty red robes, looking too pale and thin after months in the dungeons making a spectacle of herself.
Fortunately, she soon runs into a man named Bhalris, who uses a technique she doesn’t know to permit her to understand the locals. It's back to running around town then, calling the name of her brother Wen Ning with ever greater desperation as she hurries through streets and back alleys. "Where are you, Wen Ning? Ah Ning!"
In town
With this, things start going better. Well. Somewhat. Once she finds the inn, Wen Qing can be witnessed arguing with the innkeeper, pleading, “But I’m going to pay you! I just don’t have any coins on me! I arrived with nothing but the clothes on my back. But I'm going to earn money. And I’m not going to be here for long anyway, I need to return home. I just have to figure out where here is and then I’ll be gone.”
She does, in fact, quickly find a job at the apothecary, and cheaper lodgings above the store along with it. She can now be found working at the apothecary and selling its wares at the weekly market as well, as well as searching the woods around Gazin to gather ingredients. These are all just stepping stones, though. Her brother can't be found here, which means whatever brought her here brought only her - thus, she needs to find her way back to Yiling, a place nobody here has ever heard of.
WHEN: Catch-all log for arrival and the days of settling in
WHAT: Various prompts around town (including continuations of tdm threads), and a dinner not!date - or choose your own adventure!
WHERE: Gazin and woods
WARNINGS: None so far
Arrival
One moment, Wen Qing is in a cold and damp dungeon cell clinging to her brother and desperately wishing she were anywhere else. Then, one bright light later, she is decidedly not. The crossroads at Gazin and even the sudden transport don’t bother her so much but try as she might, her frantic search in the woods and town just aren’t going to bring a lead to Wen Ning’s whereabouts.
The first thing Wen Qing notices when walking into the town of Gazin is that the people are utterly incomprehensible to her. That makes for some fun wandering around, her in her stained and dirty red robes, looking too pale and thin after months in the dungeons making a spectacle of herself.
Fortunately, she soon runs into a man named Bhalris, who uses a technique she doesn’t know to permit her to understand the locals. It's back to running around town then, calling the name of her brother Wen Ning with ever greater desperation as she hurries through streets and back alleys. "Where are you, Wen Ning? Ah Ning!"
In town
With this, things start going better. Well. Somewhat. Once she finds the inn, Wen Qing can be witnessed arguing with the innkeeper, pleading, “But I’m going to pay you! I just don’t have any coins on me! I arrived with nothing but the clothes on my back. But I'm going to earn money. And I’m not going to be here for long anyway, I need to return home. I just have to figure out where here is and then I’ll be gone.”
She does, in fact, quickly find a job at the apothecary, and cheaper lodgings above the store along with it. She can now be found working at the apothecary and selling its wares at the weekly market as well, as well as searching the woods around Gazin to gather ingredients. These are all just stepping stones, though. Her brother can't be found here, which means whatever brought her here brought only her - thus, she needs to find her way back to Yiling, a place nobody here has ever heard of.
closed to Jiang Cheng
While she only rents a single room at the apothecary, she is allowed to use the kitchen as she likes and today she makes good use of it, cooking a makeshift meal of rice, soup, vegetables, and filled dumplings, while she prepares everything for the fish he promised to bring. It won't taste like home as too many ingredients have to be substituted but it's closer than what the tavern offers, for sure. Good enough for a peace offering anyway, she decides. After some hesitation she changes into a clean red overdress to go with her white underdress, leaving her red Wen robes locked away. A reminder of her bloodline might be enough to shatter the fragile peace.
Re: closed to Jiang Cheng
Unfolding his robes has him just touching the fabric for a moment before he starts dressing, attaching the bell to his waist, his fingers curling around the small silver ball before his hands move to his hair, pulling it up into the style he preferred at home and securing it.
Then it's just a matter of collecting his sword before he leaves to go meet her, fish wrapped in paper under one arm.
no subject
"You look," she swallows visibly, "you look very nice. Jiang Wanyin." This manner of dress calls for courtesy names, or for titles even. He does look so handsome, every bit the dignified sect leader. He doesn't hold much resemblance anymore to the pale, grieving shell of a man who had lost his Golden Core.
no subject
"Thank you." When he finally speaks, his brief smile more awkward than not. "Did you want to find a place outside of town or was there somewhere specific you had in mind?"
no subject
"I did pack everything up in a basket already," she offers, giving a little nod more to talk herself into courage than anything else. "We could find a nice place outside of town. It's a very nice evening and we shouldn't be bothered by anything hostile as long as we don't venture deep into the woods."
no subject
"I can carry the basket if you want."
no subject
She offers the basket to him and steps outside, drawing a shawl around her shoulders. "There's wine, too. No rice wine but I found a fruit wine that tastes almost like what one of my uncles made." She takes a few steps in silence, just watching him sideways, before asking, "Do you miss it?"
no subject
He falls into step with her, his fingers curled around the handle of the basket, his gaze focused ahead. "I miss my sister." But he doesn't miss the feeling of being weak and useless next to more experienced sect leaders.
"...It's complicated." He continues after a few moments as they head for the edge of town. "But I'm sure you miss your brother too."
no subject
She feels a pang of guilt when he mentions his sister and just nods, staying quiet as they walk, content to leave him to his thoughts. But then he asks after her brother and that has her inhaling sharply, a shiver going through her as she nods again, curt and desperate now. She picks up her pace to reach the woods quicker, not wishing to make a spectacle of herself speaking in public of such things - she's done enough of that in her earliest days while desperately running around Gazin, searching for Wen Ning.
"I miss him terribly. He is still there." She tucks her shoulders in, making herself smaller without noticing it. "I keep thinking about him still in that cell... all alone now. He must be so scared. And thinking I left him behind to escape alone!"
no subject
He knew that.
"...He knows better. Your brother would know you wouldn't do something like that." She's not like the other members of her clan, after all.
no subject
But it's not fair to burden Jiang Cheng with her troubles, so she shakes her head and forces herself to straighten.
"Never mind that," she says, "I invited you for dinner, not to listen to my family's concerns."
no subject
"The last I heard, he was alive. I'm sure you'll see him again."
no subject
"I just need to find a way back soon, then all will be well. I hope it won't be much longer now. You helping me with the needles is a great relief. Once I'm armed I can explore farther." She fixes her eyes on the distance, where their path seems to disappear in the underbrush. "My problem isn't so much where I am, I would be content to just start walking in one direction and keep walking until I come across something familiar... it is when I am. Each one of us seems to be taken from a different point in time, I have never even heard of such a technique."
no subject
"And I can accompany you while you explore if that makes things easier."
no subject
There's an opening between the trees just to their left and she nods towards it. "We could sit there."
no subject
His gaze shifted to the opening before he changed direction, heading that way.
no subject
"Isn't it comforting that forests look the same everywhere?" she muses aloud. "We could almost think we are home." The plants aren't all the same, of course, but as long as you don't look too closely...
She pulls her cloak tighter around her and perches on the ground, giving Jiang Cheng a small, somewhat hesitant smile. "I hope you'll like it. I had to improvise with our meal."
no subject
"I'm sure you made something good. Things are so different here, I'm not surprised you couldn't find things from home."
no subject
"And then there are some things which are nearly as good as at home. I hope you like fruit wines. I found a very nice apple wine on the market that tastes almost like what I remember one of my uncles ma..." She trails off, belatedly realizing that to him, her family is the enemy.
She coughs, putting down the jug and pulling out soup and pots with vegetables and even rice which had been far more expensive than she would spend on a normal day. "The man who sold it to me insisted I would want to make rice pudding," she adds, mostly just to fill the silence.
no subject
'What is rice pudding?"
no subject
She wrinkles her nose a little, declaring scathingly, "I don't know what it is and I'm not sure I want to find out. Some of the food I've had here is delicious, some other..." She trails off, making the face she knows best from her patients when she makes them drink her medicinal brews.
no subject
"There are tolerable dishes, but none as good as the food from home." He picks up one of the bowls to serve himself some rice and vegetables.
"Although I imagine they'd say the same thing if they were presented with what we consider good food."
no subject
She looks down at their makeshift meal. "But you're right. They wouldn't like our food any better. And even the watery stew the innkeeper serves is better than..." Another shake of the head.
no subject
"Better than what Wen Chao provided?"
no subject
"It would be difficult for this place to provide worse than what Wen Chao provided," she finally says, her voice clipped and curt with the effort not to show any emotion at all. "All the same, I can't complain. He could have done worse for treason."
no subject
"You've been working at the apothecary, though. Are the medicines here very different from the things you prepared at home?"
no subject
"I never said I'm sorry," she says quietly, ignoring his attempt to change the topic to something safer and more pleasant. "For what you suffered. And your family. At the hands of mine. Or for... for before, when I witnessed your humiliation every day." She'd had a lot of time to think in her cell. "I told Ah Ning we're not like that. But I never said sorry."
no subject
"I didn't... I don't want to talk about that with you." His voice is tight, his fingers digging into his palms. And while he knows she wasn't responsible for it, that she been as trapped as they were but the wound was scabbed over, not healed.
It might never heal.
"...I know you..weren't willingly part of it, but I...don't want to talk about it."
no subject
Her head is bowed and she gives a tiny nod, then a stronger one. She doesn't dare look at him. If he is looking at her with loathing now, she doesn't want to know.
"You don't have to talk about anything. It was a mistake to bring it up." Her fingers twitch around that ridiculous mug of fruit wine as she struggles, wanting to reach for him and uncurl his tightly clenched fingers, to soothe his pain... but knowing her touch won't be welcome. "Forgive me."
no subject
"I saw it. My parents, every single member of my sect, their bodies piled into mounds, the damage they did to my home... I didn't know it was possible to hate that much until that day and even knowing they're all dead, I would drag them back and kill them with my own hands if I could.
Over and over." Because it might actually make him feel like they've paid enough.
no subject
Wen Qing raises her head, her eyes large and vulnerable as she looks up at the man towering over her. "Jiang-zongzhu, I'm..." No. Sorry isn't good enough. She presses her lips together and swallows hard. "I don't blame you either," she ventures, her voice soft but steady. "I don't blame you for your hate." It hurts, of course, this hate may not be aimed at her but she is still Wen.
And through it all, she still yearns to offer comfort. She slowly lifts her hand, wanting to brush her fingertips over the back of his hand. If he will permit even this much.
no subject
But it doesn't work, his eyes closing as he exhales a slow breath, gaze drifting to her for a long moment.
"...I've lost my appetite. Will you walk back with me?"
no subject
"I'm sorry," she whispers. She's asked for too much, too fast again. A skilled healer of the body but with people's hearts...
She packs up, her movements precise and efficient despite her inner turmoil, for she takes pride in not letting her emotions interfere with her actions. It's a necessary skill for a doctor as much as for a Wen.
"Yes, I would still like to walk with you," she says, deliberately keeping her voice mild. Once he is in a state of mind to care about such things again, maybe he will remember and know that she doesn't hold a grudge for how things ended today.
no subject
And anything he finds will regret crossing his path.
the next day
It turns out Wen Qing had greatly overestimated her self-control, for it doesn't even take a full day before she finds herself picking at this wound again. She just can't help herself, it isn't even noon when she makes her way to the smithy, having talked herself into an urgent need to add further specifications for her acupuncture needles order.
If it were anyone else, she would be telling them it's pathetic and yet... But maybe he won't even be there. It's a possibility. If she were truly as pathetic and desperate as she feels, she would be hunting him down in his room at the inn, right?
Stepping into the smithy, she lingers by the door, suddenly a lot more nervous and almost hoping Jiang Cheng really isn't in. "Excuse me?"
Re: the next day
Although he's definitely favoring his left side as he works, only pausing when he hears a familiar voice and wipes his hands off.
"..Wen-guniang."
no subject
"Jiang-zongzhu," she greets, her voice crisp with the need for professionalism. "I have come to add further details to my order. For the acupuncture needles." Her fingers flutter slightly at her sides, fingers smoothing her dress though it isn't even creased. Heavens, she feels ridiculous. The excuse is so weak now, so transparent. "But it's not important."
no subject
"Is there anything else?"
no subject
"I..." She takes a deep breath, her brows all scrunched up with the sheer effort of steeling herself. She gulps. "I'm sorry." A moment's pause. "For yesterday. For... ruining..." What exactly? What had it even been? "For causing you discomfort."
no subject
Not now. Maybe not ever, I don't know."
no subject
"I'll talk about my sect. But... maybe not with you." Her fingers knot together. "Maybe we can speak of other things." Another gulp. She's never been a coward, this is no time to start. She meets his eyes, face steeled with determination. "If you're still willing to try?"
no subject
Not yet.
"I'm sorry I can't speak about that yet and it's not fair to burden you with the hatred I have for your sect in general when you've done nothing but try to help me and the others when you were able. I don't lay their crimes at your door, though. I just..." Jiang Cheng trails off, shakes his head.
"I need more time."
no subject
She takes a small step closer towards him, not wanting to get close enough that he might feel crowded but wanting to somehow show the urgency in her words.
"Please don't believe I hold your behavior against you. It's not easy. But I don't hold it against you... and you've never been cruel about it." Not even right after, when she cared for him. "Outright cruelty is the one thing I wouldn't stand for."
no subject
"That wasn't how I wanted yesterday to end. I just ...I couldn't talk about that and if I'd stayed, I might have done something I would have regretted."
no subject
But it hurts. Being a Wen has cost her so much she should be used to it by now but your very presence causing pain to others is not something you can grow numb to, or if you can, then it's a skill she lacks.
She smiles a little sadly. "I would have wished for a different ending, too."
no subject
"If you'd be..agreeable to that."
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"I would." She lifts her eyes to meet his and permits the cautious hope she has been nursing since their first run-in in the smithy to shine through. "I would like to learn with you how we can speak to another without causing hurt." She straightens her shoulder, finding some of that resolve of hers again to give voice to thoughts she would usually prefer to keep to herself. "There will be learning. There are too many pitfalls to fool ourselves into believing we won't err again. But I want to try."
no subject
"Self control isn't exactly my best feature, Wen-guniang, and my temper tends to get the best of me at times." Especially when it came to certain matters, but he's trying to rein it in here.
Because it serves no good for him to have that little control. His position here isn't as secure as the one he held at home, after all.
no subject
"I won't stand for cruelty," she reiterates, as she had told him before in the forest. "I've seen too much of that, and endured enough of it. I won't when I have the choice to walk away instead." She edges a little closer and this time she does reach for his hand, though it is a mere brush of her fingers against his. "But I'm not afraid of difficulties. I wouldn't be here if I wanted easy... and I'm not easy either." Her face twists into an almost-smile. "My self-control is excellent. But I'm not terribly good at... at being warm."
She runs too cold where he runs too hot and that's off-putting to people, too.