Hei (Li Shenshung) (
mortemscintilla) wrote in
fuse_box2014-11-16 10:32 pm
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Entry tags:
There must be other hobbies...
WHO: Korra and Hei
WHAT: Post-Book 4. Two crazy kids take a break.
[ A quickie vacation -- that's how Hei floated it to Korra. Don't ask him where the money came from. Don't ask him to justify it. Just say you’ll come. ]
[ They'd (half-jokingly, half-wistfully) planned a similar trip years ago, when still tangled in the mess with the Spirit Portals. It had never fallen through. War, its immediacy and aftermath, meant work, after all. The idea of a holiday was a distant fantasy in the overwhelming rumble of their busy lives. Lives full of conflicts and separations, trials and errors, from which frivolous indulgences were silently excluded. ]
[ Still, Hei had thought about it sometimes, in varying moods of sentimentality and cynicism. Time spent with Korra -- so close, so uninterrupted -- could've been either hellish or heavenly. He could imagine either a long dreamlike trip, driving with her tucked against his side, his arm around her, absorbing her pretty prattle in his ear. Or an interminable torment of sulky silences and shrieking fights, with flat tires, bad directions, shitty motels and worse meals to compound their misery. ]
[ In truth, it falls something in between. It's like they're two sugar-charged teenagers on a roadtrip, instead of adults who suffer from night-terrors and creeping stress triggers. Brimming with antsy energy, bickering over radio stations, greedily slurping noodles from the same bowl, but on the cusp of a perpetual uncertainty, as if they're not sure how long this grace-period will last. ]
[ They make it past the Hu Xin provinces before their rented Satomobile goes kaput. The vehicle, built for lowland city driving, struggles in the thinner air of the mountains, excess fuel backing up into the carburetor. No matter. They hitch a tow-ride until they find an auto-shop. Barely have to drop a penny, after the grizzled mechanic realizes it's The Avatar's satomobile. Fan belts, oil top-ups, lube-jobs -- shucks, they are on the house. ]
[ They come down to the Earth Kingdom in an evening train, stealing kisses between the snores of a grouchy old coot with whom they have to share the compartment. Share a hot bath and a slow, breathless fuck in an inn far from the best, but whose discomforts pale beside Hei's precarious contentment at being here with Korra. In the morning sunshine, they sail for the Mo Ce Sea, a crossing placid as a paddle round a pond -- until he's hit with a horrible sea-sickness. Slumped in their dim little cabin. it is hard to distinguish land from water. The floor seems to dip and roll beneath his feet. The slats of sunlight from the portholes make his head ache. Waiting to reach land, Hei curls up under the sheets of their bed, massaging his temples with both hands, gritting his teeth as he tries to master his heaving stomach -- while not-so-stoically ignoring the twinkle of amusement in Korra's eyes. ]
[ By the time they disembark at the Fire Nation's capital city, the nausea has receded, though his face rivals the color of the wan gray sky. It's almost dusk; he's logy and slow-headed from the long crossing. But the city, like every city, wakes him up. The lit-up buildings, in their towering brilliance, remind him of Bangkok, as does the stop-and-start traffic, the crowds on foot surging in and out of every dazzling golden entrance. Nothing like Republic City -- a place he's only just begun to pronounce with Home-flavored syllables -- but amazing in its own right. ]
[ As amazing as it was the first time he'd visited -- except now, Korra is at his side, bright-eyed and fizzling with energy like a can of soda all stirred-up. ]
[ Twining his fingers with hers, he squeezes lightly, ]
What should we do first?
WHAT: Post-Book 4. Two crazy kids take a break.
[ A quickie vacation -- that's how Hei floated it to Korra. Don't ask him where the money came from. Don't ask him to justify it. Just say you’ll come. ]
[ They'd (half-jokingly, half-wistfully) planned a similar trip years ago, when still tangled in the mess with the Spirit Portals. It had never fallen through. War, its immediacy and aftermath, meant work, after all. The idea of a holiday was a distant fantasy in the overwhelming rumble of their busy lives. Lives full of conflicts and separations, trials and errors, from which frivolous indulgences were silently excluded. ]
[ Still, Hei had thought about it sometimes, in varying moods of sentimentality and cynicism. Time spent with Korra -- so close, so uninterrupted -- could've been either hellish or heavenly. He could imagine either a long dreamlike trip, driving with her tucked against his side, his arm around her, absorbing her pretty prattle in his ear. Or an interminable torment of sulky silences and shrieking fights, with flat tires, bad directions, shitty motels and worse meals to compound their misery. ]
[ In truth, it falls something in between. It's like they're two sugar-charged teenagers on a roadtrip, instead of adults who suffer from night-terrors and creeping stress triggers. Brimming with antsy energy, bickering over radio stations, greedily slurping noodles from the same bowl, but on the cusp of a perpetual uncertainty, as if they're not sure how long this grace-period will last. ]
[ They make it past the Hu Xin provinces before their rented Satomobile goes kaput. The vehicle, built for lowland city driving, struggles in the thinner air of the mountains, excess fuel backing up into the carburetor. No matter. They hitch a tow-ride until they find an auto-shop. Barely have to drop a penny, after the grizzled mechanic realizes it's The Avatar's satomobile. Fan belts, oil top-ups, lube-jobs -- shucks, they are on the house. ]
[ They come down to the Earth Kingdom in an evening train, stealing kisses between the snores of a grouchy old coot with whom they have to share the compartment. Share a hot bath and a slow, breathless fuck in an inn far from the best, but whose discomforts pale beside Hei's precarious contentment at being here with Korra. In the morning sunshine, they sail for the Mo Ce Sea, a crossing placid as a paddle round a pond -- until he's hit with a horrible sea-sickness. Slumped in their dim little cabin. it is hard to distinguish land from water. The floor seems to dip and roll beneath his feet. The slats of sunlight from the portholes make his head ache. Waiting to reach land, Hei curls up under the sheets of their bed, massaging his temples with both hands, gritting his teeth as he tries to master his heaving stomach -- while not-so-stoically ignoring the twinkle of amusement in Korra's eyes. ]
[ By the time they disembark at the Fire Nation's capital city, the nausea has receded, though his face rivals the color of the wan gray sky. It's almost dusk; he's logy and slow-headed from the long crossing. But the city, like every city, wakes him up. The lit-up buildings, in their towering brilliance, remind him of Bangkok, as does the stop-and-start traffic, the crowds on foot surging in and out of every dazzling golden entrance. Nothing like Republic City -- a place he's only just begun to pronounce with Home-flavored syllables -- but amazing in its own right. ]
[ As amazing as it was the first time he'd visited -- except now, Korra is at his side, bright-eyed and fizzling with energy like a can of soda all stirred-up. ]
[ Twining his fingers with hers, he squeezes lightly, ]
What should we do first?
no subject
[ Words to live by. At least where his stomach is concerned. ]
[ He loads his plate with a cornucopia of steaming protein and starchy titbits. The other diners appear to be mostly Fire Nation citizens: for all the interested glances he and Korra get, they are clearly the only tourists at the resort right now. The local reaction to this, as during his last visit, consists of toasts from other tables encouraging Hei and Korra to down their mulled wines in one swallow, and the prompt refilling of their glasses. Another reaction is to cheerfully force the hottest dishes at the buffet on them. Hei is at least somewhat familiar with this sport from back in his homeworld: watching unfortunate white foreigners take a mouthful of food, almost choke at the spiciness, guzzle copious quantities of whatever liquid is on their table, while the locals laughed their asses off. ]
[ Against his better judgement -- and his vows to stay away from the fiery stuff -- he piles chicken with chili and lemongrass, eye-wateringly hot, into his plate. Smiles innocently at the neighboring table as he scoops up a spoonful of the raw, sliced chilies from the condiment tray and adds them to his bowl. If he can survive those spicy scorpions back in Republic City, he can endure this. ]
[ To Korra, between placid bites and watery eyes, he murmurs, ]
I hope the firebender in you likes hot stuff.
[ Because this is going to turn into a pissing contest, and he's damned if he's going to let a bunch of snooty Fire Nation jerks win. ]
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What makes you think I'm participating in this madness? [She's Water Tribe; they don't do these crazy spices. She'll stick with the foods she recognizes as on the mild end, thanks.
But hey, she's totally cheering you on in this little quest of yours. You can tell because she's helping him pile spicy food on his plate.]
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[ Chewing ostentatiously, his expression -- despite the flushed cheeks and moistened eyes -- does not alter. But he makes a brief tch-ing sound of perfunctory disapproval when Korra doesn't join in. ]
At least try the soup. [ He nudges the bowl -- blood-red with gold trim -- toward her. ] Good for stamina.
[ Not spicy, either. Just loaded with the usual Fire Nation nutrients. Spring water. Mountain vegetables. Turtle blood. Caterpillar fungus. ]
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Mmm. What kind of fish is this? It's good.
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Not fish. Bug fungus.
[ He slurps his own with gusto, his spoon barely clinking on the edge of the bowl. (Don't freak out, Korra. Those Fire Nation boys and girls must be feisty and smoking-hot for a reason. If it's good enough for them, it's good enough for you.) ]
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Bug fungus?
[What on earth is bug fungus?!]
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It's a fungus that eats the bodies of caterpillars, high up in the mountains. It leaves behind this dried brown husk that tastes like fish. It's supposed to cure cancer. Help people with fertility issues.
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I'm pretty sure fertility is not something I need to worry about.
[Of course, how would she know if she's infertile now? They use condoms and she takes herbs to prevent pregnancy. The lack of pregnancy scare since the miscarriage could be a hint that the poison damaged her reproductive system, or it could just mean that what they're doing is working. Either way, since the ultimate goal is not to get pregnant, it's not a problem.]
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[ Of course, as time passes, it might not be. She's caught up right now with getting her mojo back, coasting on a wave of self-pride and fulfillment a mile high. It's gratifying to witness. But sooner or later, as her life grows less volatile, as she settles into herself ... what if she wants another baby? He doesn't want any more truck with bringing up brats. Especially after she'd nearly died the first time. But ... There was something miraculous, wasn't there, about that period? About knowing there was a ball of churning cells inside her, busy and vibrating with life, forming into something entirely theirs? ]
[ He keeps the confused furor of thoughts off his face. Stirs the soup, then lifts a neat spoonful out of the bowl, cupping his hand beneath to catch the drip. He extends it to Korra. ]
It's also a tonic. To rebuild your strength after a bad injury or illness.
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Tell you what. Beat me in arm wrestling and I'll eat that bug fungus.
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Suppose I let you win on purpose?
[ It's not his usual way. But neither is it a juvenile relapse into testing who's stronger. With his enemies, it was not about counterpunching, because that meant they were still making you fight their kind of fight. The way to win was to change the game entirely. ]
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More for me.
[ (Maybe he can shanghai her into trying some of that snake-wine on the menu. It's supposed to be an aphrodisiac.) ]
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The waiter comes by, asking if they'd like anything to drink.]
Water, please. And maybe some milk for this guy? [She be trolling.]
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No milk. [ He places a hand over his glass, while directing a small, sidelong scowl Korra's way. It lacks its usual edge, though: underneath his sullen surface, there's a small bright spark of something almost playful. ] We'll have a bottle of shéjiu.
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Do you mean to get me drunk so you can have your wicked way with me? [Because you don't have to get her drunk to do that.]
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Maybe it's so I have a chance to actually win at arm-wrestling.
[ His voice is matter of fact, but somehow conveys in even its most bland and ordinary tone a touch of innuendo. He breaks his gaze only when the waiter arrives, bearing a lacquered tray with a glossy red bottle -- one of those ridiculously enormous ones, bigger than a magnum -- and two golden cups. When the tray is set before him and Korra, Hei can see the dead cobras floating around in the bottle. ]
[ Dryly, without looking at Korra, ]
At least it's not bug-fungus?
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I am not surprised that that is a drink. You would have to be drunk to think drinking fermented snake juice is a good idea.
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[ The waiter lifts the large aquarium-like bottle, pouring into the small silver cups. The liquid is a radiant green and yellow cocktail resembling the shades of lime and mango jell-o. It glows almost eerily, the overhead lights reflecting on its surface like a shimmering ring of sparks. ]
[ Quaffing the blood of an irradiated god, Hei thinks wryly. He takes one cup, nudging the other toward Korra. Clinks the rims gently together, before sniffing at the liquid in his cup, letting his eyes slip half-shut, and downing it in one smooth gulp. ]
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So she gulps it the way he does. And nearly spits it out.]
BLECH — [She looks around frantically and sees the next table has a glass of juice.] Excuse me I'm sorry I'll pay you back — [She grabs the cup and downs it. Not juice, unfortunately... but as a wine, it tastes better than the snake piss he put in her cup.]
That was disgusting. [And. Uh. Now she's going to sit down, because that's going to hit her soon.]
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[ A baffling affliction, love. It's already tamed him enough to accept a semblance of liabilities in his life -- allies, a visible homefront, interactions with individuals who bear no practical use beyond being Korra's family, a stable if not shady career. But Korra's recent illness feels like it's turned him downright mush-brained, at least between the tough love and prolonged separations. Good thing his capacity for intense emotion is, by nature, tightly-trammeled -- or else they'd probably be swapping Hallmarks and stuffed teddies by this point. ]
[ (Still, it's hard to deny that without Korra, he'd have gone round the bend fast -- back in the City, and out here.) ]
[ Dryly, ]
It's an acquired taste.
[ Yes, do sit down. And don't pass out on him. ]
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[Bread. She needs bread. Something starchy. Rice works too — she scoops some more rice into her bowl and shovels it into her mouth. Soak up the liquor before it really hits her brain.]
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[ The end being drunkenness. ]
[ He watches her take starchy countermeasures, brushing off the fresh amusement tugging at the edges of his lips. Pushes his own plate, polished clean, aside, to prop an elbow on the table, chin nestled in his palm. ]
You don't need to be carried, do you?
[ His voice is slightly mocking but lacking condescension. He'd planned to sweat the meal off with a run -- (all right, more like subtle recon) -- along the mountainside and the perimeters of the resort, before taking a plunge in the hot springs with Korra. But he knows better than anyone how much of a lightweight she is. ]
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If you want to go do your little run thing [yeah she knows you want to go do recon, you've been together for how many years now?] I think I'll lay down for a bit.
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You sure you're okay?
[ He sounds somewhat more concerned now -- and once upon a time, it might've been more for the sake of the resort's glossy marble floors. Logically, he knows she's just dizzy; after years of watching her melt into a giggly, jelly-legged languor after a few drinks, he's well accustomed to measuring how much alcohol she can handle, and when she'll be fine versus when she'll spend the night praying to the porcelain throne. ]
[ Still, despite her glowy sheen of good-health, his mind will always make those associative quantum leaps to the days of her illness, where the mildest surface ache could signal the innermost burgeoning of something terrible. He hasn't yet abandoned that silent paranoia. ]
[ Under the table, he lightly nudges the tip of her boot with his, ]
They have a herbalist here. And a pharmacy.
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