Post by A Long Display Name Here on Jun 18, 2012 1:44:22 GMT -6
Another reason to have Mei here, Ling thought in annoyance as Hyuk-jae questioned her motives. The younger Yao sister had patience only for gambling and fighting, and her companion had just used up the little she had for other things. Their food arrived, and she stabbed her chopsticks into the bowl viciously. "Look here, Hyuk-jae," she said, her grey eyes cold. "If I wanted to ask you about your dratted parents, I would. If you don't see cards in my hand and a woman and ale by my side, I play no games." As curious as she was about his parents, it wasn't her place to ask. She didn't care where people came from, what they did, who they bedded, or where they lived; they'd share what they wanted to share when they wanted to share it. She took a ravenous bite of her hot noodles, adding a mouthful of ice-water into the mix to soothe her burnt tongue. Swallowing, she waved her chopsticks at the silent paperboy, punctuating her words by jabbing the sticks in the air.
"It ain't my business," she said, lapsing into slang as she always did when annoyed, "whether you ran away, your folks died, or if they flew up into the moon on the back of an air bison. You want'ta tell me about your life, that's on you, but I ain't gonna ask unless it could potentially hurt my own family."
Hyuk-jae dabbed his mouth with a napkin, and Ling couldn't help but see blood come away from it. She held her tongue, wondering what on earth the Spirits had against this boy. A home bad enough to run away from, a less than pleasant living arrangement, lack of food, and now a busted lip? Ling had seen --and had-- her share of busted lips. She took another mouthful as Hyuk-jae proudly refused charity. Ling barked with humourless laughter, coughing as some noodles went down the wrong way. Her eyes watered, and she took a drink, trying to clear her airway.
When the coughing fit subsided, she glared at the dark-haired boy, her mouth drawn in a tight line. "I said nothing about charity," she snapped, leaning in. "I offered those things in exchange for information. You have none, you get none." The Yaos would never force help on an unwilling party; it became a burden rather than help, and it wound up creating more problems than it solved. Her companion sighed and sullenly said that he wasn't qualified for anything else. "My sister would say some kind words to you here, I'm sure, but I ain't her." Ling took another bite, talking around her mouthful of noodles. "If you want to do something and people won't let you do it for them, do it yourself. Y'think that Mei and I have training being detectives?" She snorted, slapping her hand on the table. "No way. We wanted to do it, we practised doing it, and saved up our money to make it happen when no one would hire us." Swallowing, the freckled girl shrugged. "Look at these people," she gestured. "Republic City ain't all it's cracked up to be, but trying sure as the Avatar cycle counts for something."
She looked at him, her grey eyes intense. "If you want something, no matter what, never give up." Her voice was low and fierce. "Even if you feel like you can't do it, don't get stuck. Figure out an alternative way to get the same results." She tapped her left temple. "It's that, right?" Ling guessed. "If it's dangerous to other people, then do the same thing, just smaller so that won't involve other people. I don't know what it is you want to do, but just because you don't want to hurt anyone doesn't mean you have to give up on your dreams entirely."
Ling leaned back, her face a lot softer and kinder. "I don't mean to tell you how to live your life," she said softly. "But don't mistake my offer for pity, or my kindness for charity. If you don't want to be friends, then that's your business and I ain't gonna force anything. What I said was business. You took food over money this time, so maybe there might be a time later when you'll do it again, or would prefer a place to stay, or a hot bath, or something that isn't money." The young woman slurped up some more of her noodles, eyeing Hyuk-jae over the rim of her bowl. "But the offer of friendship stands if you want it. Everyone could use a friend."