Anonymous
Nov 8, 2013 23:53:35 GMT -6
Post by Deleted on Nov 8, 2013 23:53:35 GMT -6
Yutaka paused for a moment to let out a disgusted grunt.
"Please don't call me 'sir'. It's..." He raised his clenched fists and closed his eyes and let out a sound like someone trying to suppress a scream.
"It's...it just bugs me."
He began combing back his hair into something a little less reminiscent of a bird's nest and handed the comb back to Airi before tying it back with a narrow strip of brown leather. He felt a little more composed.
"I hate to be called 'sir'. It makes me sound like I think I'm better than other people...well, I AM better than some people but not everyone."
The pang at being referred to as 'sir' had pushed his ramble button which embarrassed him greatly.
Yutaka blushed and groaned again while hanging his head. From that position he reached out his hand to the woman across from him in the red dress.
"Yutaka."
For fear of looking like a fool for reaching out his hand too long Yutaka withdrew it which upon a second of thought seemed rather rude.
The perfect distraction from his hand-shaking debacle was on the wall right in front of him. He gestured to the drip painting he was contemplating earlier.
"What do you think of this one?"
He could silently hold his opinion for nearly two and a half seconds.
"If you think about it, it's really quite brilliant. I mean, if someone is skilled enough they can recreate any piece of art...this though...it can't be duplicated. Paint will never drip the same way twice. Oh sure, they can make something look like this but this is just a random occurrence that can't happen again. These random paint drips are like the random bits of a person that makes them unique. It's like that old saying that you never step in the same river twice."
He was halfway through his take on the painting before he discovered himself going on like a fool but it was too late to stop.
"Ooookay...I will stop bothering you now. Thank you for the comb."
Anonymous
Nov 13, 2013 0:24:46 GMT -6
Post by Deleted on Nov 13, 2013 0:24:46 GMT -6
Yutaka raised his hands to gesture in awe at Airi.
"You get it! Don't apologize. Most people I talk to don't really think about art, that or they just get things wrong."
He let out a low hum while stroking his chin as he looked at Airi.
"Uh, so, would you perhaps like to possibly maybe look at some more art together? I don't get to talk art at museums with people much...I mean, not without people, you know, wanting to hit me in the face."
It had never actually happened but barely restrained anger was hard to miss, he'd seen so much of it in his time.
The fact that he could talk to a woman he just met with more ease than one he was pressured into dating was not lost on Yutaka. It made him resent his parents even more.
He pointed to a turn leading to another room featuring the sculptures. Yutaka liked the idea of sharing his favorite room in the museum with another person. As fun as the museum was for Yutaka, the idea of sharing the experience with someone else sounded even better.
Though his wallet wasn't nearly as full working in street maintenance Yutaka was allowed some supplemental income. He decided that he could sacrifice eating out once or twice to get the money necessary to pay someone to spend a little extra time with him.
"I'll...I'll buy you lunch after if you want."
He wasn't sure of the talking art/lunch exchange rate but it seemed like a good deal-unless he got too passionate and opinionated and was forced to take her to Kuang's Cuisine to make up for being a jerk.
Yutaka cast his eyes down and mumbled to himself.
"The die is cast. Can't do anything about it now." He took a deep breath and tried to manage his intentional obnoxiousness...the unintentional kind would, as always, do whatever it wanted and would not be controlled.
He raised his head and tried to speak in a calm and easy-going manner.
"How about it?"
Anonymous
Nov 14, 2013 21:38:59 GMT -6
Post by Deleted on Nov 14, 2013 21:38:59 GMT -6
Yutaka found that the promise of a free lunch bought him half an hour of conversation before people began to tire of him-fifteen minutes of he talked about art. This woman, Airi seemed a cheerful sort so he rounded his estimation back up to half an hour before she tired of what one of his dates called "an odious melange of smug superiority and pretension". It wasn't even a date he intentionally sabotaged.
He didn't mean to come across the way he did, it was just difficult to stomach some people's asinine opinions.
"I think it's about death. I mean, the trees were alive at one point, right? Now they're all broken and dead. It could be about the ravages of age or sickness or..." he paused and took a deep breath through his nose. It was tough to be succinct while discussing art.
"Or maybe it's just a warning about the dangers of firebending in a wooded area."
He squinted at the painting further and leaned in closer and pointed to a tiny white dot in the middle of the painting.
"It looks like a speck of light in the middle of the vanishing point." He pointed to the small white dot. "It looks like the further you delve into the broken forest the closer you get to the light. It's really tiny but there it is, shining in the dark forest of dead trees. Maybe it's about optimism."
It was a risky move on Yutaka's part but he braced himself with a reminder that all opinions on art were completely valid and he didn't carry with him an unimpeachable truth regarding all things artistic, but he decided to ask someone else's opinion.
"What do you think?"
Anonymous
Nov 18, 2013 13:55:41 GMT -6
Post by Deleted on Nov 18, 2013 13:55:41 GMT -6
OOC: Sorry it's so short.
IC:
Switching off? Yutaka's previous conversations about art tended to be one way with either him doing all the talking or all of the listening. As much as he didn't want to admit it, Yutaka decided that maybe being a little nicer helped.
It was a short walk to the next exhibit but Yutaka wasn't sure if normal people made small talk in between looking at art.
"So, uh, you work in a bakery? What's it like? I've eaten at them but I have no idea what goes on behind the counter. Also, how do you do that thing where you stuff stuff inside the bread?"
Yutaka cut himself off before he could ask any further questions. Having grown up with people who did his cooking for him, baking seemed like an impenetrable mystery.
Suddenly, Yutaka found himself in front of a piece of art but was more interested in the person he viewed it with. For some reason he couldn't fathom he waited for Airi to alleviate his curiosity before contemplating the sculpture in front of him. Typically, his opinion of art came well before what anyone else had to say about them self.
Anonymous
Nov 21, 2013 17:21:01 GMT -6
Post by Deleted on Nov 21, 2013 17:21:01 GMT -6
"Um, hey, if it doesn't sound weird maybe some day you can show me what it's like to bake. It sounds complicated but fun."
Until a response was heard Yutaka couldn't concentrate on the angst wrought in metal form.
Even after getting an answer to his request Yutaka couldn't wrap his mind around the metal conundrum in front of him. He couldn't figure what it meant and for a moment that bothered him.
"...I have no idea about this one...I like it. I think I like that it confounds me."
He pondered the metal sculpture for a moment.
"The beast within us all, like you said. I like that. I get tired with obvious symbolism. Sometimes I just want an artist to confuse me and this does that."
Yutaka narrowed his eyes at the sculpture and noticed where the metal bent and where it was welded.
"Do you think this could have been a collaborative effort. One with a firebender doing the welding and a metalbender doing the shaping? Maybe one of the police is secretly an artist? Then again, it could have just been one strong person bending it into shape."
Anonymous
Nov 25, 2013 2:15:19 GMT -6
Post by Deleted on Nov 25, 2013 2:15:19 GMT -6
Yutaka didn't like his face when he had to decide things. His mouth moved side to side like he was swishing around something and trying to decide how it tasted. It shouldn't take that much thought to think of a place with spicy food.
The dry swishing of his mouth stopped when he remembered something.
"Mr. Udon's near the station has The Agni Kai Challenge. It's a huge bowl of ramen. I hear it's super hot. If you finish it in a certain amount of time you get it free. I've always been too afraid to try it."
That was the moment Yutaka realized that transportation might be an issue. If she drove would they have to take two satomobiles? Would an offer to drive her sound like a thinly veiled kidnapping threat? Would Airi start imagining herself chained to a sewing machine making bootleg wallets and purses?
That line of thought continued and only grew more ludicrous and had to be broken through spoken word.
"I have a car outside...unless you'd rather walk." He regretted those words the second he hesitated and foolishly mentioned walking. After a hard day at work any physical activity more strenuous than eating or lifting a few drinks sounded absolutely dreadful.
He then was forced to wonder if mentioning having a car waiting for him made him sound smug and unbearably rich. Such things were only reserved for people he was intent upon alienating and for once he actually wanted someone to like him rather than be left alone.
Yutaka remembered why he preferred art and music to friends. He never, intentionally or otherwise, made a fool out of himself in front of art or music...he had done so because of those things but not so that they could sit in judgment.
Anonymous
Nov 26, 2013 16:26:06 GMT -6
Post by Deleted on Nov 26, 2013 16:26:06 GMT -6
Airi's enthusiasm was positively infectious. In the short time Yutaka had lived on his own he kept discovering things that he took for granted but were, in fact, a big deal to others. He'd been driven around for most of his life so it never occurred to him just what a ride in a satomobile could mean to someone.
Yutaka spent the ride to Mr. Udon's fascinated by Airi's fascination. Hers enthusiasm mirrored his own to an extent but when Yutaka thought about it his own excitement about the things that the non-wealthy seemed different. He couldn't quite put his finger on what the exact difference between Airi being excited about a satomobile ride and him being excited about working-class things like instant noodles and second-hand clothes.
While his driver didn't speak through the drive Yutaka could see his smirk and knew there would be some comments about him being a ladies man or some such thing. Spending time with women was somewhat rare and usually consisted of him intentionally offending them in order to banish the evil specter of marriage. All Yutaka wanted was something to talk art with for a little bit.
The driver broke his silence by announcing they had arrived and couldn't resist poking some fun the man he was paid to chauffeur.
"Careful, miss, it's hot." He paused, turned and grinned at Yutaka. "Probably kill you."
"Noted."
Growing up wealthy, Yutaka was not used to small restaurants. Even compared to the smaller places he had eaten in Mr. Udon's was small. It seated ten people at best. There was only one customer lying his head on the table which was obscured by a large bowl. A low, steady moan escaped. He feared this might have been the Agni Kai challenge he had heard about.
Some men liked to prove their mettle via the ingestion of spicy foods. The spicier the food the more manly the man. Yutaka Mifune was no such man. He'd leave the painful intake and discharge of spices to others.
"So this is the place? Agni Kai challenge, right?"
Yutaka couldn't stop looking at the person he assumed to be the last person who ordered the Agni Kai. "Uh...I think so, yeah." He looked up behind the counter and saw a poster of bowl on fire and tiny burned people attempting to escape it. It read simply: "The Agni Kai Challenge."
When the waiter, an old gentleman with salt and pepper facial stubble walked up to them and handed them their menus. Yutaka knew exactly what he didn't want and assumed that anything else on the menu wouldn't be nowhere near as hot.
"I don't like spicy things so I'll just have the phaal."
The look the waiter had given him could not have been any stranger had Yutaka been a talking, three-headed cat.
Anonymous
Nov 29, 2013 0:59:21 GMT -6
Post by Deleted on Nov 29, 2013 0:59:21 GMT -6
It even hurt to smell. Yutaka didn't understand why a dish such as this phaal didn't come with a copious amount of warnings...unless that was what the fireballs on the menu were meant to represent.
With rice on one side and what looked like lava on the other Yutaka decided to try a spoonful of rice with a tiny dab of lava. The dab ended up taking up half of his spoon and he had to eat his mistake.
Yutaka imagined smoke must have been shooting out of his ears because his mouth felt like it was corroding from some harsh acid and threatened to melt him into a human puddle. A few minutes after Airi asked how his food tasted Yutaka responded with a muffled groan after burying his head and sliding his small plate of phaal over to Airi.
"....Too hot...need ice cream." He vowed to look closer at the menu next time and to stay away from anything that had fireballs next to the name.
After three glasses of milk, as there was no ice cream served at Mr. Udon's, Yutaka finally felt well enough to talk.
"That was beyond amazing." It felt like he was talking through a freshly opened wound forcing the pained man to take another drink of milk.
"Are you a firebender? Do you have a volcano stomach? Part dragon maybe?"
For a moment Yutaka forgot his pain and embarrassment at not being able to eat his meal and began humming a few notes of a song.
"I'm reminded of the song 'Fire In My Belly' by Gum Sing Mo. Are you a jazz fan by any chance?"
Anonymous
Dec 5, 2013 3:27:50 GMT -6
Post by Deleted on Dec 5, 2013 3:27:50 GMT -6
Yutaka awkwardly chuckled at Airi's dragon comments while drinking his milk and to his great fortune did not shoot any out of his nose. Things were awkward enough without nasally propelled dairy products.
He felt even less composed when Airi responded to his question about music.
"I don't get that. I HAVE to know who is singing and what song so I can track down the album."
Yutaka swung him arm around to point to his driver standing beside his four door satomobile.
"If I can't remember a name or a song he usually does. I think he should get paid extra for that but I don't have discretion over his pay."
After a fourth glass of milk Yutaka felt better.
"I have to loan you my Gum Sing Mo albums if you liked my lousy hummed rendition of 'Fire In My Belly'. Blind Lemur and Yoko Kanno are also wonderful. Wait, do you have a phonograph? You need a phonograph. Everybody needs one. Radio's great and all but they leave out a lot. Only popular artists make it and unpopular but great musicians get ignored. Also..." Yutaka sat with an open, wordless mouth once he felt a tirade coming on. It was usually after such tirades that people left.
"Nevermind. Just...you know...radio is no substitute for buying records...and records are no substitute for seeing someone live."
The inferno in his mouth finally subsided by the time the check arrived. This raised in Yutaka's mind: What happens now? Conversation? Going their separate ways? The problem with experimenting with how he dealt with people was that Yutaka had no idea how to deal with success.
"Tell me about yourself, Airi. Like, uh, what you would name your autobiography."