http://hatngartersnake.livejournal.com/ (
hatngartersnake.livejournal.com) wrote in
trans_92010-05-04 11:12 pm
Entry tags:
Alien Arts Are Appreciated
Jeka had been keeping herself busy; but even the most determined of people are shooed off-duty eventually, and Jeka knows better than to overwork herself unnecessarily. Everything seemed all right now, but everyone on board knew how quickly that could change.
She wasn't tired at the moment however, nor was she hungry. Instead, she was bending her energy toward a more personal project: attempting to locate any Orandian artifacts that Stacy had rescued from the collapsing timeline.
She wasn't having much luck.
Sighing in frustration, she drummed her fingers against the dais of one of the statues. It took her a moment to realize that the inky black material had shifted from a statue of the Legion in mid-flight to one of the Orandian royal family -- a time before her mother had died, and long before her body had been warped into this shape.
"What the--?!"
[[OOC: The shifting statue is currently one of four snakes, posed like a family portrait. None of them look even remotely like Jeka.]]
She wasn't tired at the moment however, nor was she hungry. Instead, she was bending her energy toward a more personal project: attempting to locate any Orandian artifacts that Stacy had rescued from the collapsing timeline.
She wasn't having much luck.
Sighing in frustration, she drummed her fingers against the dais of one of the statues. It took her a moment to realize that the inky black material had shifted from a statue of the Legion in mid-flight to one of the Orandian royal family -- a time before her mother had died, and long before her body had been warped into this shape.
"What the--?!"
[[OOC: The shifting statue is currently one of four snakes, posed like a family portrait. None of them look even remotely like Jeka.]]

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"I, unfortunately, cannot say for certain whether Earth is really 'all that'," Ba'al replied, wary of his human slang. "I do not have a lot to compare it with, after all." In truth, however, he had to agree - there was an appalling amount of humans there, but their culture had proven somewhat amusing.
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She cocked her head at him curiously. "Humans haven't developed space travel yet? What century are you from, if you don't mine my asking?"
If only she'd been able to do more research into Earth history. It was a sprocking shame how much had been lost over the years...
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In his mind, most humans were primitive - but clearly she meant one specific culture and planet, not the race as a whole. Besides, if Ba'al were keeping to his pretence, he would only know of the one anyway. "It's the 21st century, of the Gregorian calendar," he explained, "Space flight is still a fledgling development; possible, but largely for the... privileged few."
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She thought for a moment and smiled. "Would you just like to hear about it, or would you like to see it too?"
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For a moment, he was confused. But then, there was a lot on this ship that might be able to grant a view of a distant (possibly even destroyed) planet, and so he smiled, "Both would be delightful."
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Well, she could include them in the illusion, but that would destroy the ambiance of her homeworld. Perhaps she could just cover them with shrubbery.
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As she spoke, the art hall around them transformed into another place entirely. The two of them were standing on a grassy hilltop under an orange sky. Off in the distance, some dome-like stone structures were build into the sides of other hills. The breeze tugged at their hair and carried on it the scent of strange and alien plants.
"I can effect the senses of living beings," Jeka explained, so that Ba'al wouldn't be too startled.
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"An ability that can prove quite useful, I imagine," he replied to her explanation, but he eyed her out of the corner of her eye. Useful, and perhaps dangerous.
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She gestured at the stone domes nearby. "This is where I grew up. We're a traditional sort of species, so while our technology is certainly advanced enough for more modern-looking buildings, we tend to stick with the classics. Not to mention Orando's population isn't even half of Earth's, so we can afford the extra space."
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"I can see the merit in that," he agreed, with another nod. Ba'al personally preferred his planets to keep relatively simple themselves; he, however, did not prefer a quaint life. "And one would hope. Eath's population has grown disturbingly large..."
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"Earth is the seat of the United Planets, so I'm sure you can imagine that it's a very crowded place," Jeka said. "The amount of diversity is utterly staggering for a new arrival." She gestured at the domes. "Would you like a closer look, or would you prefer to see something else?"
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"I would like to see whatever you are willing to share," he replied, putting on another smile.
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Jeka slithered over to one of the windows -- they appeared to be mere rectangular holes cut in the side of the dome.
"That covers a great many things," she said, shoving her hair back over her shoulder. "One of the reasons I joined the Legion was to educate people about my homeworld. It's not exactly an ambassadorship, but it's close. Is there anything specifically you're interested in?"
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"A valiant cause," he remarked, and he did mean it, really (to an extent, at least). "To allow people a greater knowledge of the universe in which they live is admirable." As for his own interests here, "I... take a great deal of interest in the cultures and worlds of others in general. I think it truly valuable to learn about them."
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She tapped a finger to her chin thoughtfully. "Orando is one of the few monarchies in the United Planets, and we tend more strongly toward the matriarchal than most other species seem to. We're strictly carnivorous, but we do not eat other sentients -- that was one of the worse rumors I encountered."
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Her insistence against the eating of sentients almost made him smile - but he quickly suppressed it. It was an old moral argument, that he had heard many times in different ways, and so it was somewhat amusing - but he had no desire to get into a deep discussion over it.
He would let her talk of what she wished.