The Xavier Institute Mod Journal (
astonishing_xmods) wrote in
xavier_institute_ooc2014-08-24 07:19 pm
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THE TEST DRIVE MEME
This is for anyone wanting to test out their characters in the setting before the applications open, see what clicks. Multiples will be allowed for this post, and you can generally assume any threads are a self-contained continuity unless you feel like getting creative.
Just post a thread with your CHARACTER NAME and CANON NAME in the title with a prompt and others will reply. Prompts and threads can be action spam or prose or whatever. These threads can be used on the sample section of your application, as well. Go out and have fun!
We also ask that you please pardon our dust. We're working very hard to get this game up and running and hope to be open by September 1st!
Just post a thread with your CHARACTER NAME and CANON NAME in the title with a prompt and others will reply. Prompts and threads can be action spam or prose or whatever. These threads can be used on the sample section of your application, as well. Go out and have fun!
We also ask that you please pardon our dust. We're working very hard to get this game up and running and hope to be open by September 1st!
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"I'll see to it that I don't." He dressed well as a matter of habit, though always with a casual sort of edge that seemed to say oh, this? I just had it lying around. That said, his suits weren't cheap, and he cared for them well.
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Lighting up and taking a long drag from the black cigarette, she exhaled with a sigh before handing the lighter back. "Seen many familiar faces?"
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He gave her question a moment's thought in companionable enough silence, with a long, slow drag on his own cigarette. Many of the staff he'd worked with from years and years ago had moved on, but a few had returned, and a not insubstantial number of his previous students were beginning their own careers here now. He'd even seen a few of the ones who'd been in stasis, up and about, the same as they'd been before the incident (if somewhat shaken up).
"And I've seen a few. A couple I hadn't seen in a while. What about you?"
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"The children seem excited for the school year."
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"It's a bit of a homecoming, for many of them."
Things had, perhaps, improved marginally in the past few years, but there was still no shortage of mutant children who didn't really have a home, even if their human parents didn't kick them out. Few children were ever really excited about coming in and writing essays, but coming back here could be a respite from the outside world, one that was at times sorely needed.
That included him, he supposed. He didn't imagine he'd ever be going back to Tokyo.
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So did he still have a home?
Still, this was easily the nearest thing he had. He had no doubt that, if he got on a plane tomorrow, either of his brothers and their wives would have an empty room and open arms. But what would he do then? His whole career had been teaching in America. He didn't have professional contacts there. Would he have imposed on their hospitality?
Besides, he'd left Japan with his shadow. It didn't seem right, somehow, to go back there without him.
And besides that, Xavier's had welcomed him in as a reckless, hardheaded teenager, quick to take offense, over-eager to prove himself. It was here that he'd learned the best parts of himself, and here that he'd been the happiest. It was here, too, that he still had work to do -- less in the sense of a means of supporting himself, and more in the sense of a way to support others. The students were still here, and so, he felt, should he be.
"I suppose it is. It's been some time since I was ever really away from it for long." Long enough that his own accent had faded away into nothing many years before.
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She herself only had dim memories of her former life in France and not all of them were pleasant. Xavier's was possibly the first place she'd ever felt safe and somewhat accepted despite her quirks (but then what's a mutant without some idiosyncrasies?). While she had yet to really find her feet, she supposed that if she were allowed to, she wouldn't mind staying and calling it her home as well.
"You 'ave good taste."
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"Yours doesn't strike me as so bad, either. How are you finding it here?"
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He took another drag, long and slow, feeling it numb and soothe him as usual.
"If there's one thing they do well here, though, it's finding places for 'odd ones out'." The 'dream' of immigration was hardly as rosy as some might wish, especially for mutants, but even after all these years, he was still sometimes taken aback at the kind of community that people in the margins could have here, at all of the people who thought that the audacity to live openly was simply par for the course.
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She had vague memories of the various places she'd visited while undercover, the different cultures she'd had to hastily assimilate to blend in. It had been quite the experience to just wander about America and see those same cultures, altered of course, all jumbled together in one place. They stuck out like sore thumbs yet were part of the fabric of the community nonetheless. She had no doubt that if she ever chose to leave the school to eke out a life of her own, she'd adjust to it quite easily, possibly far more easily than she had in her own home country.
"Still, as long as I can find my cigarettes and coffee, I 'ave little to complain about."
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He wasn't joking, not really. If he couldn't get his brand of cigarettes, he was an absolute nightmare to be around -- he always traveled overseas with as many packs as he was legally allowed to carry duty-free, just in case there was an issue finding them.
Nowhere, of course, was perfect. Not here, and not Tokyo. But this... this was home, and he found an odd sort of contentment in the thought that he hadn't expected to find.
"How long have you been here now?"
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Shaking herself, she took a quick inhale of smoke to calm herself, confident she wouldn't show any of it on the outside but wanting to match it on the inside as well. "What about you?"
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It struck him that there were people who'd turned up around that time who he'd never really gotten around to getting to know. He hadn't spoken much to anyone at all after that whole incident, aside from classes and missions, for months that stretched into years. Even now, he felt a distance between himself and the arrivals too recent to have ever known him without his grief.
"I came here when I was seventeen. Wanted to make sure I'd make it through college without incident." And he simply couldn't have guaranteed that a Japanese university of comparable quality would have accepted him, no matter what his test scores looked like, if the truth got out. He didn't like hiding -- that was one way in which America had appealed to him. "Suppose I never got around to leaving, even after I did."
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"I visit my brother and his wife in Tokyo, about once a year. New Years, or Obon."
But he hadn't been back there to live for longer than the odd summer in his school days, which was probably more what she was asking about.
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He thought back to the Tama River, kept low in its bed by all the floodgates, glimmering in the summer sun. He thought of the bustle of the city, the glow of the seedy bars and clubs, the simple familiar flavors that were so hard to find here, the constant shifts of Tokyo fashion. The temples, the gardens, the sense that, beneath the hyper-modern facade of the city, hidden away somewhere, lay the beating heart of an old, old culture.
He thought, too, of an old adage: The nail that sticks out will be hammered down. He'd always stuck out, ever since he was a loud and ambitious and willful child, and part of him had always felt trapped by the threat of that mindset -- had wanted to make himself known, and to Hell with the looks old people on the street gave him and the young people's jealous gossip. It was freeing, to be somewhere where different didn't mean useless.
Going back to Japan on his own didn't feel right, but he supposed staying here on his own didn't really, either.
"At times. It's somewhat complicated."
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"And what about you? Do you miss France?"
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... So perhaps that last bit had been more sarcastic, but nonetheless she was being quite honest. She missed little things that had made France 'home', but on a whole... She had no family, no friends she could recall, no lovers - no one that would cause that aching desire to return to them. Of course there was the spirit of the city that might still tug at her, but she'd grown used to ignoring it. "It's complicated," she repeated.
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"It's been a long time since I lived there. I think here seems as normal to me as anywhere else, at this point."
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God knew she hadn't come across such variety, or any mutant in general before coming to Xavier's.
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