Entry tags:
homeless.
It was swell of you to say hello. (This is novel, isn't it? Is this what it's like to feel young?)
I would like to move out, though. I'm a little peckish.
Regards,
Mr. —
I would like to move out, though. I'm a little peckish.
Regards,
Mr. —

HELLO, may I just say that is a very interesting character concept you've got there. :V
thank you kindly!
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[ Briefly, Mr. —'s hand finds his eyebrow, fingers fluttering there for an instant as though adjusting an invisible pair of glasses. He seems curious more than he does surprised. ] I can't say I've had this happen to me before.
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[ Instantaneously, Mr. —'s customary polite smile breaks into something wider. Regarding the comment as to '[his] kind': ] Can you tell?
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I see you.
Not all of you, but enough.
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Interesting. Most can't, although I assume you know that already.
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Peckish. Heh.
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He holds one hand up, pointer finger and thumb indicating an increment to accompany his next statement. ]
The tiniest bit.
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Whether she's here to chat or to collect — it's not obvious or clear.
Famine holds up her fingers, mimicking his gesture, then pulls her fingers slowly apart. A hankering begins to rankle his insides but it's gone as soon as she drops her hand down again to her side. ]
Could help out with that, y'know.
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It's when he's hungry that he becomes his most dangerous. (It's an odd effect, in some ways. The hungrier he gets, the sweeter he becomes, mindful of his Ps and Qs and as polite as the devil himself. He has to be, to be invited in. He has to become impossible to deny.
On the other hand, when he's hungry, that's when his teeth get long, that's when the shadow of the demon becomes the clearest at his feet. Blood, it says. I need blood.)
Mildly: ] In which direction?
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In the end, that's what's important; because even though there's work and then there's work work, all roads eventually lead to death. The higher the body count, the quicker Famine makes quota and while she's not a completely paperpusher the way some of her siblings are, there's something to be said about doing good work and taking some sense of personal pride in that.
Famine shrugs. ] Haven't decided yet. Feel like makin' a pitch?
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For a long moment, he remains silent, blinking at Famine with eyes that are too black. ]
I have to say I was happy enough with our previous arrangement.
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Pushing herself up on tiptoe, she tries to look him eye-to-eye but still comes up short. ]
Good. [ Cheerfully. ] Me too. Why ruin a great thing, right?
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I'm glad we agree on the point.
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You're okay, you know that? Not a lot of your brothers and sisters are. [ Dropping back to flatfooted, she considers this a minute and then shrugs. ] But. You are what you are, I guess. Can't really blame you; everything's gotta eat.
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But thank you. I appreciate the sentiment.
[ A beat, and then, in simple curiosity: ] Where are you headed next?
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You're way more polite than the rest of them, too, [ she notes and then backtracks to her perch on the wall, hoisting herself back up onto it with both hands. ] I've got a place to be in about a week. Figured I'd hang around here in the meantime. Take in the sights. Y'know— [ she gestures at the pristine suburban houses around her. ] —spread the love.
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Or there's a bowling alley down the way, if that's more your style.
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A week, huh? [ Famine waggles her head while she considers moving her appointments around. She knows what'll happen in a week. ] Would hate to miss the show.
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Would hate for you to miss it, [ he says easily, the statement in itself an acceptance of that we, an okay. ] I won't keep you long.
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A beat then: ] Ever meet my sister?
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A couple of times, I think, [ he allows, with a slight tilt of his head. (He can't really avoid her, not with what he does to survive.) ] But I've never really talked to her.
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(Needless to say it's complicated.)
Still: ] Would you like to? Could totally set that up, if you wanted.
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[ He'll only die if he starves to death or someone really puts their mind to it, but otherwise, he'll just keep going, from host to host, that series of little-big crimes following him wherever he goes. ]
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I like you. You're not so gloom and doom, like some of the others. Which I get, yeah, is part of the territory, but— [ Famine holds up her hands. What're you gonna do? ] I gotta ask, though. Do you always say thank you?
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Always, [ he says easily, glancing once at the houses that surround them. ] I think it's the polite thing to do. [ His inflection is careful, making the sentence almost a question. ]
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Doors will open more readily to him now. And when they do, he'll feed and feed well. ]
And you're big on polite, huh?
I know this is ages late, ignore if you don't want to continue
[Cooper's head tilts at a curious angle, examining the other man, as if he can discern clues about his existence and identity from an identical face.]
Though I'd very much appreciate an explanation.