Nova!
Euna Kim eats like she's being tested on it. Every piece of sushi is picked up by chopsticks and then meticulously scraped against wasabi paste. Then she holds it aloft, very gently submerges the bottom into soy, and lifts it to her lips. She chews exactly seven times and then swallows. Every second piece is followed by a slow sip of water. It's slow. Most people can't be bothered to put this kind of attention into the act; they'd have finished the plate in the time it takes her to reach her second drink of water.
But she ignores the criticism (in the form of Cinders' intense stares) and continues exactly at her mechanical, cautious pace. And while she eats, she watches. And while she watches, she writes notes into a tablet sitting to the other side of her legs. She frequently doubles back over what she's written, deleting whole paragraphs of observation or adding clarifying notes every time her thoughts snag on what it is that's actually tripping up Green.
Or if, indeed, anything actually is. Another piece of sushi rises toward her lips on sticks of glory. She covers her mouth with her free hand while she chews, just the same as every other time. All the while, her eye glares across the room at the action, at the explanation, at the issue.
"Hm. Being completely honest, I don't know what 'fixed' looks like either. I'm not sure it's even... no, I don't believe that, never mind. It's maybe outside my pay grade, but that doesn't mean I'll give up."
Euna takes another long and quiet look at her notes. When she looks up again, there's no clarity of insight or sudden epiphany. She is simply chewing on her lip. At last, she sets the chopsticks down next to what's left of her meal. As if that explained anything.
"Do you mind my asking? Why come here to me? Why do you, like, keep coming? I don't think it's... I mean, a hobbyist interest in self defense in no way adequately explains the things I've seen. There's a, uh, a very sincere effort on your part, on all of your parts, that doesn't really jive fit the explanation I got out of White on day one. So if I could just, you know, in your own words. I feel like there's an answer in there. Or at least the beginnings of a meditation, you know?"
Euna Kim eats like she's being tested on it. Every piece of sushi is picked up by chopsticks and then meticulously scraped against wasabi paste. Then she holds it aloft, very gently submerges the bottom into soy, and lifts it to her lips. She chews exactly seven times and then swallows. Every second piece is followed by a slow sip of water. It's slow. Most people can't be bothered to put this kind of attention into the act; they'd have finished the plate in the time it takes her to reach her second drink of water.
But she ignores the criticism (in the form of Cinders' intense stares) and continues exactly at her mechanical, cautious pace. And while she eats, she watches. And while she watches, she writes notes into a tablet sitting to the other side of her legs. She frequently doubles back over what she's written, deleting whole paragraphs of observation or adding clarifying notes every time her thoughts snag on what it is that's actually tripping up Green.
Or if, indeed, anything actually is. Another piece of sushi rises toward her lips on sticks of glory. She covers her mouth with her free hand while she chews, just the same as every other time. All the while, her eye glares across the room at the action, at the explanation, at the issue.
"Hm. Being completely honest, I don't know what 'fixed' looks like either. I'm not sure it's even... no, I don't believe that, never mind. It's maybe outside my pay grade, but that doesn't mean I'll give up."
Euna takes another long and quiet look at her notes. When she looks up again, there's no clarity of insight or sudden epiphany. She is simply chewing on her lip. At last, she sets the chopsticks down next to what's left of her meal. As if that explained anything.
"Do you mind my asking? Why come here to me? Why do you, like, keep coming? I don't think it's... I mean, a hobbyist interest in self defense in no way adequately explains the things I've seen. There's a, uh, a very sincere effort on your part, on all of your parts, that doesn't really jive fit the explanation I got out of White on day one. So if I could just, you know, in your own words. I feel like there's an answer in there. Or at least the beginnings of a meditation, you know?"