Post by Deleted on Nov 10, 2016 8:00:25 GMT -6
The day was warm and bright, too beautiful to spend inside. One should always make use of the last mild days of the season before the winter winds set in. It could also be one of the last days of the season that Mei Ling could wear her mother's dress. Several months ago, she received the gift from her parents. It was not made of silk, and its belt was a simple strip of cloth, but to Mei Ling, it was worth its weight in gold and silver. The dress was a delicate pink that belied its sturdy fabric, and the embroidered leaves of bronze and jade and amethyst that drifted along her skirt were perhaps less ornate than most - all the same, Mei Ling knew her mother's stitches like she knew her own handwriting.
So though Madam Song never meant to wear or own the dress, her daughter cherished it as if she did.
After dressing and concealing her charm necklace beneath the collar, Mei Ling decided she'd start by making her way to the library. She had noticed an archive of the Republic Times the last time she visited, and resolved to sift through some of the dusty copies. She bid her neighbors good day as she strode from her flat, making her way towards the street. Rumbles and coarse honks echoed from the main road a few blocks away, but she kept to the side street, which suited her just fine.
She waved hello to the café owner and the florist sweeping her front stoop, and went on down the street towards the newsstand. “Good morning, Deng,” she greeted the man, whose grin gleamed through his beard. She set a pair of yuans on the counter and snagged a copy of the Republic Times. “Anything fun in the news today?”
“I would ask you the same,” the old man joked, shrugging. “I just sell the darn things.” Still, Mei Ling thanked him and took a step back from the stand to make room for other customers. She flipped past the headline (Future Industries Stocks Soar with Biplane Breakthrough!) and the first few pages, settling on the small news and opinion pieces. Her eyes eventually settled on Ask Rohana. Mei Ling was a fan of the column, not just on the grounds of satisfying her desire for gossip. From what she’d learned, Rohana had been in the city for decades responding to the citizens. The firebender could not imagine the wealth of information she would have gathered, having so many citizens pour out their fears, concerns, desires, joys. Her advice tended to have a nonbender slant, but generally erred on the side of equality and justice. She must have a unique perspective given the current events in the city.
“I’ve always wanted to meet Rohana,” Mei Ling said offhand, half to herself. “She always seems so calm and level-headed. It’s like she knows just what to say… She must be a brilliant woman…” Though Deng teased her on her choice of reading material, she paid it no mind, and skimmed the day’s concerns. Mei Ling didn’t always agree on Rohana’s opinion, but that didn’t stop her from appreciating the wisdom and knowledge she must have accrued.
So though Madam Song never meant to wear or own the dress, her daughter cherished it as if she did.
After dressing and concealing her charm necklace beneath the collar, Mei Ling decided she'd start by making her way to the library. She had noticed an archive of the Republic Times the last time she visited, and resolved to sift through some of the dusty copies. She bid her neighbors good day as she strode from her flat, making her way towards the street. Rumbles and coarse honks echoed from the main road a few blocks away, but she kept to the side street, which suited her just fine.
She waved hello to the café owner and the florist sweeping her front stoop, and went on down the street towards the newsstand. “Good morning, Deng,” she greeted the man, whose grin gleamed through his beard. She set a pair of yuans on the counter and snagged a copy of the Republic Times. “Anything fun in the news today?”
“I would ask you the same,” the old man joked, shrugging. “I just sell the darn things.” Still, Mei Ling thanked him and took a step back from the stand to make room for other customers. She flipped past the headline (Future Industries Stocks Soar with Biplane Breakthrough!) and the first few pages, settling on the small news and opinion pieces. Her eyes eventually settled on Ask Rohana. Mei Ling was a fan of the column, not just on the grounds of satisfying her desire for gossip. From what she’d learned, Rohana had been in the city for decades responding to the citizens. The firebender could not imagine the wealth of information she would have gathered, having so many citizens pour out their fears, concerns, desires, joys. Her advice tended to have a nonbender slant, but generally erred on the side of equality and justice. She must have a unique perspective given the current events in the city.
“I’ve always wanted to meet Rohana,” Mei Ling said offhand, half to herself. “She always seems so calm and level-headed. It’s like she knows just what to say… She must be a brilliant woman…” Though Deng teased her on her choice of reading material, she paid it no mind, and skimmed the day’s concerns. Mei Ling didn’t always agree on Rohana’s opinion, but that didn’t stop her from appreciating the wisdom and knowledge she must have accrued.