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    1. orichalk 10 yrs ago

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Henry was actually pretty normal-looking for the people who showed up at George’s door to couchsurf. Enormous backpack, probably at least fifty pounds; obviously well-worn cowboy hat; red-and-blue checkered shirt, a pair of aviators dangling on the second button; lightweight, deep indigo jeans; beaten-up but lovingly cared-for leather boots. Really, the only thing that surprised George at this point was the unceasing ability of young rednecks and trustafarians to look and dress exactly alike. But Henry seemed nice enough. George invited him inside and showed him around. It was getting late already, so he suggested they head into town and get dinner and maybe some beers. “I bike most of the year but take this bus to work in the winter,” George said as they sat down. “You said you work in IT?” Henry asked, keeping the smalltalk going. “Yeah, I’m a sysadm for one of the pharmaceutical companies in town. Really good benefits — I can’t complain.” He paused for a moment to look at the map above them. “There’s a food truck event every Friday in the town square. I’m pretty sure you can find pretty much anything you want to eat, and it’s pretty cheap.” “Sounds great. I’ve been eating farm food for a little too long. I could use something that doesn’t have any potatoes in it,” Henry said, smiling. “OK, but a word of warning, because you seem pretty well-traveled: the sushi is pretty bad. It’s probably just ‘cause we’re so far from the coast or something, but I can’t bring myself to eat that stuff.” Henry nodded and didn’t say anything for a moment. It occurred to George that, since they’d gotten on the bus, Henry had seemed like he was concentrating on something, but George had no idea what. “Something on your mind?” he asked after the pause. “A little, I can tell you later.” George had expected another pause, but Henry responded immediately, the same slight smile across his face as before. Then, suddenly back to small talk, as if to change the subject, “how’s the music scene around here, by the way?” “Well, that depends what you’re into,” George started on the spiel he’d gone through a few dozen times before. “It’s no Austin around here, but there are some good country, bluegrass-type bands and some weirder artists playing gigs around here. Burning Man-types. No clubs. The place I was thinking of going should have something going on, but I’m not sure. I assume you’re still in?” Of course, Henry was. They spent the rest of the ride talking about which music they liked. They both decided on a taco truck and were pleased with the choice. Henry suggested they get some beers at a grocery store but remembered they were in Utah and suggested they just head straight for the bar. By that point, they’d learned to converse with one another pretty well. “So what are you planning on doing once harvesting is over? Where do you usually go for the winter?” George asked, taking a seat at the bar with Henry. He ordered a couple of IPAs. “You want to just get the next round and we’ll take it from there?” “Yeah, that works. Anyway, usually I just head where it’s not winter. I was in Hawaii most of last year, actually, and I’m thinking of going to Puerto Rico until next summer or so. The problem is the travel costs, though. I usually don’t make much more than room and board, so airfare pretty much kills me.” The beers came and they both took their first sip. “I usually end up doing something else on the side — computer stuff pretty often — to save up for my next big move.” George nodded and didn’t say anything while they both drank about half of their beers. He looked over at the band that was setting up. “I still have no idea what kind of a music a band called ‘Amish Tech Support’ is going to play. Oh my god, look there. I think that’s a theremin.” “You’re kidding me.” “It’s the season.” “I think I’ll need some more drinks for this.” He waved to the bartender for another two beers and downed the rest of his bottle in one gulp. George figured he could afford to let loose tonight and followed Henry’s lead.
Drafting a post. It'll show up tomorrow.
Well, things would just go exactly as planned, despite whatever the hell had just happened. Obviously, Suno was just as in the dark as everyone else, but he was running through some possible culprits in his head: these terrorists might have more interstellar reach than he knew about; someone aboard the ship might actually have done it; or, perhaps most likely, it was some other agent that he didn't know about yet. Still, the timing of the explosion freaked him out. He didn't want to come this far just to be framed for something he hadn't even done. He'd very much prefer to hang by his own noose, thank you very much. With that thought, his attention turned to the planet displayed on the table in front of him. It was really of borderline comical uselessness, so he assumed most of the others had optical augmentations running just like he did. His were giving him overlays from the ship's databases; they displayed information about the atmosphere, landmass percentage, locals' physiques, relations with humans and other species. Except for the last item, they might as well be headed for a planet on any system in the human domain. He'd run some checks in biological databases soon, just to make sure his weapons were properly suited. He hoped there would be enough information. Even with such a reclusive species, there should be some basic medical information somewhere, and if there had been, it had probably been gathered by the humans putting this mission together, cached into the ship's library. If not, he'd do some more searching. He'd collected some petabytes himself over the years, but none of it was very well-catalogued. He could automate something for the search, but... He started running some searches in the ship's library, hoping something would come up quickly. If not, he'd have some work ahead of him. Suno didn't really have any questions. He was pretty focused on making sure he knew his enemy. Once he'd gotten that down, he expected to be able to avoid offending them. He'd had plenty of experience both keeping his mouth shut and shooting the shit.
I'm about to get on a three-hour train ride, so I'll post then. I don't plan on letting it die.
Name: Henry Grimwald Moore Gender: Male Age: Approximately 24 Lineage: Unknown/Irish-American (Psychic: Telepathy which will expand to telekinesis) Fate: 2 Relationship Status: Single Occupational Status: Employed as a farmer. He wanders around working, generally with on small family farms that offer him room and board, saving up enough money for transit when he decides to uproot himself again. Previous Occupations: He tried working as a lifeguard during high school but found it was too much time alone and a bad way to escape his thoughts. He worked for a while in a thrift store during college, which wasn’t much better, but he really needed the money. During a couple summers in college, he worked as a firespotter in a national park, this time trying to avoid people. That was a definite success. Physical Description: Henry is a pretty normal-looking guy. He’s a little tall, around 178 cm (5’10), but that’s about the only exceptional thing about him. His hair and eyes are both dark brown; a complexion that may have been on the light side of Middle-Eastern or Latino has been darkened by his recent time in the sun. His face and jaw are rather square; his eyes are sunk beneath a strong brow and beside a slightly-larger-than-normal nose. All in all, what he’s been born with manages to be cohesive enough to make him look pretty average. This hasn’t had much effect on his life, though. He generally keeps himself well-groomed. Normally, he shaves every other day, but that can change depending on his employer. He keeps his nails and body hair trimmed but existent. He usually gets his hair cut every two to three months; every time, it’s the same style: about three centimeters left on the top, two on the sides and back, and a part on his right side. As a result of his recent line of work, he is reasonably muscled, but there is little definition to his physique. Psychological Profile: Henry could be doing worse. If he didn’t have all his psychic shit to worry about, he would be reasonably social, perhaps a little on the quiet side — though certainly a good listener and with a dry and sarcastic sense of humor. He’d be reasonably confident with groups large and small, and he’d be on the patient side, but someone who trusts his instincts. Instead, he has to worry about letting his little psychic abilities come to the fore. There’s some great irony to what he experiences: he can perceive the emotions of those around him, and he finds they’re rather beautiful, to the point that he may be the most avid humanist on the plant; however, the greater the concentration of people around him, the more the perceptions fill him with a kind of deep, perhaps even physical pain and dread. Through very careful meditation, he has learned to control some of it, but he still feels pained by the presence of others. He tries to avoid large groups, but has a knack for forming very close friendships because of his affinity for empathy. A drive never to stay in one place — which has only grown stronger in recent years, as if the threat is growing nearer — forces him to abandon most people he comes to know. Background: Since his earliest memories, of being found on that doorstep in rural Ireland, unable to speak in any language but able to understand any of them, Henry has never felt safe. For a long time, he thought it was just something everyone dealt with: the fear, the rush of emotions whenever he was in a crowd, the strange feeling of something haunting him — something from before. As he grew older, he found it was just him, and the drive deep within him to always keep moving — to flee— grew stronger. Already having immigrated to America, his family moved several times to accommodate his feelings. It never really worked, but they at least managed to get him to finish school and go off to university. Not that he was bad at it — no matter how much he applied himself (maybe as a distraction from his other issues), he often longed to simply drop out and go far away. He transferred twice, majoring in astrophysics, as if he were trying to get off the planet. Recent History: That didn’t really matter now, though. After a bit of a breakdown during and after his commencement, he bought a plane ticket and started working on a farm with some homesteaders in the Midwest over that summer. He liked the distance from people and from the roaring in the back of his mind that had grown ever stronger. It came back, though, so he went and found somewhere new to work the next season. And the next one. And the next. In the two years he has been wandering parts of Europe, the Americas, and a few Pacific islands, he has tried to distance himself more and more, putting oceans and language barriers between him and civilization, but the dread deep in him returns, now largely independent of how populated his surroundings are. But he still keeps booking those tickets, because even a couple weeks’ respite is what he really wants.
This is gonna take a bit longer. I'm refining the backstory. Sorry.
I'm definitely interested and I could get a character sheet in within 24 hours. However, I live in Germany and sleep between now and 8 hours from now or so. Other than that I can respond quickly, but tell me if that's a major issue.
It sounds kind of fun to think of a bunch of minor characters. I'd be interested.
I'm interested too.
Sorry it took so long for me to write a post. I've been away from home and it's been been a little too hectic to find a little while to just sit and write, even though I've been able to keep up with reading others' posts.
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