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http://zouichi.livejournal.com/ ([identity profile] zouichi.livejournal.com) wrote in [community profile] trans_92011-07-29 01:59 am

Back in black

The young woman who had looked after Zouichi and his siblings had taken it upon herself to instruct them in quite a few areas that were not strictly part of their curriculum -- areas regarded by many of the personnel at Toha Heavy Industries as impractical, even pointless.

Better that they should be taught one more way to kill an opponent without a sound, or log additional hours in test simulations.

But because it would have been disruptive and costly to switch instructors halfway, and because she was the daughter of a scientist of some importance to the project, she was allowed to continue with her eccentricities.

Some of the most peculiar of the lessons she insisted upon centered around an old Earth instrument, one that by the 31st century had become more of an amusing anachronism than anything else. Something you saw in old movies or read about in books, not something you kept in your house or paid to go listen to. It wasn't something he had time to practice, once he was released, but there seemed to be nothing but time here.

So Zouichi had found himself visiting the Sensoriums more often, not to destroy imaginary enemies in ever more creative ways, but to play -- mostly when he could reasonably be sure everyone else would be asleep, and therefore unlikely to come look for him. Today, however, he wasn't in the mood to bother waiting for people to turn in. There was one other oddity -- a bandage wrapped neatly about his forehead, half-covered by his bangs.

He shed his customary gloves, placing them on the surface of the polished black wood. Then he closed his eyes, placed his hands over the cool ivory keys, and began to play. Satie's Gymnopédie No. 1, a slow-paced, melancholy piece. He didn't know why, but playing it always made him remember the ocean. Or at least the simulated version of it; he'd never seen the real thing. The quiet ebb and flow of the tide, the breaking of each wave into sea foam upon the shore. The sea at early evening, perhaps, when all its visitors had gone home and the sun cast everything in long shadow.

Then, on a whim, he focused on summoning up an orchestral accompaniment: a crowd of black-clad musicians in which he might more easily blend in. Or maybe hide, if such a thing were possible on an open stage with a stern-faced conductor watching over all of them. For a moment, the musicians were still. Then, together, they began the first movement of Rachmaninoff's Piano Concerto No. 2 In C Minor, Op. 18. It was easy, once they began playing, to simply lose himself in the swells of sound. The dreamlike ebb and flow of the violins, the rich, deep murmur of the cellos, the brassy reports of the trumpets, the clear, concise flurry of the flutes. Fascinating, the way the sounds of so many different individuals could come together to create a coherent narrative.

It was too bad he'd never get a chance to play with the real thing.

[identity profile] vissernone.livejournal.com 2011-07-31 12:48 am (UTC)(link)
She pauses for a moment, not willing to show her hand on the most painful secret in a long line of painful secrets kept in Cassie's house. About the motherhood she has that's only borrowed time.

"Tom and Rachel Berenson," she finally says, voice low. "But we'd rather they not learn how dead they were."

Tom knows, or at least highly suspects. Rachel may not. Eva hasn't had the heart to bring it up.

Marco? Marco doesn't know he's as good as dead.

"Well, plants can't really use their last breaths to beg for mercy," she says, equally dry.

[identity profile] vissernone.livejournal.com 2011-07-31 02:17 am (UTC)(link)
"I'm not convinced the entire thing isn't just one gigantic social experiment. But it doesn't really do to dwell on conspiracy theories you can't affect any change in." She shrugs one shoulder, grabs a clip from her purse and pulls her hair up into a sloppy bun. "No one's walking away from this experience unscathed, if they came in whole at all."

She laughs. "Dead. Like half the things I try and care for. I may need to come get another cutting from you, if you're up for giving me another sacrificial lamb."

[identity profile] vissernone.livejournal.com 2011-07-31 06:35 am (UTC)(link)
"What do we call it? 'The Aristocrats'!" she says and laughs. "Orchids survive anything, even me. You'll notice that none of the orchid's flowers survived. How has yours been faring at the Inn?"

[identity profile] vissernone.livejournal.com 2011-07-31 04:44 pm (UTC)(link)
"That's good. The stems and leaves are hardy plants. That's why I like them. I'm pretty sure you just have to wait until the plant is damn well ready before it gives you flowers, though." She shrugs. "But once it's blooming, tend to it and those flowers last for weeks."