Post by Ren on Jan 15, 2017 17:25:52 GMT -6
Ren sat by her window, head resting on the sill as she watched snow flurries pile up on the already-snowed streets below. It had been a few weeks since she had visited Republic City and found Hangetsu's apartment completely abandoned.
For the umpteenth time since, she replayed the events of that day in her head: arriving at Lemurland, running to the apartment, barrelling her way through the door, landing in a cloud of dust. She hadn't seen or heard Johar come up behind her as she sank to the floor; what happened after was a haze. She had vague memories of a cab ride back to Johar's shop, a cup of tea she couldn't remember the taste of and only knew was hot because of its inability to warm the chill in her soul. Her friend had said little, seeming to understand she needed time and space.
Somehow, she had made it back home. She slept for an entire day straight, though it felt like a year. When she woke up, she had a few moments of unconcerned bliss before the memories came flooding back.
It took a few days to be able to get out of bed. Even now, discarded just-add-water Flameo bowls were littered around her futon. Her apartment was even more of a disaster than usual as she had stopped all attempts at keeping it tidy.
The newest edition of the Times sat on her kotetsu, its headline of little concern. A few days ago, she might have been worried that someone was targeting police officers. Now, while it was tragic, she found she had barely any empathy.
Still, a small voice in her head reminded her. It's better to know now, than wait another year or more.
"Yeah," she muttered in annoyance to herself. "Still feels awful though."
A knock at the door nearly made her jump out of her robes. She hadn't noticed anyone walk up, though now that she looked there were footprints in the fresh snow, rapidly fading as more fell.
"Who — who is it?" she demanded, her voice hoarse.
For the umpteenth time since, she replayed the events of that day in her head: arriving at Lemurland, running to the apartment, barrelling her way through the door, landing in a cloud of dust. She hadn't seen or heard Johar come up behind her as she sank to the floor; what happened after was a haze. She had vague memories of a cab ride back to Johar's shop, a cup of tea she couldn't remember the taste of and only knew was hot because of its inability to warm the chill in her soul. Her friend had said little, seeming to understand she needed time and space.
Somehow, she had made it back home. She slept for an entire day straight, though it felt like a year. When she woke up, she had a few moments of unconcerned bliss before the memories came flooding back.
It took a few days to be able to get out of bed. Even now, discarded just-add-water Flameo bowls were littered around her futon. Her apartment was even more of a disaster than usual as she had stopped all attempts at keeping it tidy.
The newest edition of the Times sat on her kotetsu, its headline of little concern. A few days ago, she might have been worried that someone was targeting police officers. Now, while it was tragic, she found she had barely any empathy.
Still, a small voice in her head reminded her. It's better to know now, than wait another year or more.
"Yeah," she muttered in annoyance to herself. "Still feels awful though."
A knock at the door nearly made her jump out of her robes. She hadn't noticed anyone walk up, though now that she looked there were footprints in the fresh snow, rapidly fading as more fell.
"Who — who is it?" she demanded, her voice hoarse.