• Last Seen: 4 yrs ago
  • Old Guild Username: Ramzam
  • Joined: 11 yrs ago
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    1. Ramzam 11 yrs ago

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Ah. I'm slow.

Most Recent Posts

“I suppose they are,” Adrian mused as he leaned back in his chair with one leg crossed over his knee and his hands clasped together in his lap. Wait, defensive position. Get comfy some other way. When he began to speak again, his foot slid back to the ground and he returned to his original, skewed position against the arm of his seat. “They’re not as heavy, but if they got any more dense, we may as well switch over to live ammunition.” He grinned at his own joke as his ears turned to scan the room—and quickly snapped back to their previous positions when they met the loud music once more.
“I’ve never used the simulator. I’m pretty unfamiliar with that video game stuff overall, really. Are you allowed to adjust the settings on it? How accurate would you say it really is?”
Cosworth gently leaned against the counter, offset from the register as he briefly fussed with his mane. “Oh, the usual,” he sighed in most casual manner he could manage. “Just moved into town. The house needs a bit of interior decorating and I’ll need to stop by the hardware store for some materials. Then I have my business to setup. I kind of left home in a hurry, so I didn’t plan much. When I saw real estate for sale here, I jumped on the offer without thinking too much of it.”
Snapshot tipped his hat and smiled as gave off a quiet, “Hello!” beneath Settin Stone’s voice.
“Tales, I want you to meet Snapshot. Snapshot, this is Spring Tales.” As Stone spoke, Snapshot casually held out his hoof to Spring. “You know how things work around here, so be sure to show him the ropes. Also, loathe as I am to admit, you’re gonna get promoted, now that you can do some real reporting.” Out of Stone’s view, Snapshot’s muzzle subtly crumpled up at the mention of, ‘real reporting.’ Snapshot had seen a few newspapers when he first dove into pony society and he was hardly impressed. Stone did not appear to be the pony that had any interest in paparazzi gossip articles, but the possibility always remained. Whatever real reporting was, Snapshot had no frame of reference. “Expect more hoofwork on top of your editorials.”
Oh jeez, Minder's post really snuck up on me! I've been checking my subs for at least the past four days straight and I only just now noticed their post. >_>;;
“Huh…” An old, graying stallion stared down at his cluttered desk with his lower jaw pushed out. The more he studied the photographs laid out in front of him, the farther his mouth slid open until, finally, his cigar made a daring escape attempt. The sudden movement jarred him from his trance and he spoke as he caught the falling smoke in his hoof. “What was your name…? Snapshot?” he asked as he looked to a much more youthful pony on the other end of the office.

“Yes sir, Mister Settin Stone,” Snapshot replied with a quick nod and a broad smile. He could tell his portfolio had made an impression. Even if that portfolio was just a few odd photographs he’d developed the day before. Nevertheless, he assumed, what a pony didn’t know wouldn’t hurt them.

“You’re not really an amateur, are ya?” Stone asked. Snapshot squirmed in place as his ears folded back and, suddenly, the loose thread on the bottom of his cap’s visor became very interesting. “Any particular reason you didn’t mention any of your old jobs on your resume?”

“It’s a bit of a long story,” Snapshot said. Not like you’d believe it if I told you the truth, he thought as he rubbed one foreleg against the other. When it became clear that Settin Stone was going to wait for a real answer to his question, Snapshot sighed and continued, “I had a bit of a disagreement with my old employer and I might have, sorta, left on a bad note?” The office was silent for a moment after that.

“Are you in trouble, son?” Stone asked in a grim tone and Snapshot’s eyes popped wide open.

“No!” he shouted with a hoof outstretched. “Ah—“ he quickly regained his composure before he continued. “I uh, didn’t include my last job, because I thought that if I did, you’d call for a recommendation or something. And I thought that they would probably say bad things about me. Out of spite.” His hoof returned to the floor. “Because they kind of don’t really like me all that much.”

“I shouldn’t hire you,” Stone said as he set his cigar down in an ash tray and put his hooves together. Snapshot frowned and considered that, perhaps, he should have disguised himself as a construction worker. “But I will.” Snapshot’s frown turned upside down. “After those sharks at the Times nicked our photographer, we’ve been down a mare.” Stone grumbled a few choice words under his breath, before pressing a small button on one of the corners of his desk and speaking into a small microphone. “Lackadaisy, get Miss Tales in my office, she’s got a new partner.”
Well, in the sheet you used as reference, you have your character's name listed as Mocha Chip. I'm just a little confused is all.
Name: Snapshot
Gender: Male
Tribe: Pegasus
Appearance: A regular, if slightly athletic, stallion with overlarge wings. His coat is a very light brown, while his mane and tail are a darker, redder shade, cut at medium length. His mane is entirely without style, priority given to keeping the hair out his way, going so far as to cover it with a hat, on most days. His fetlocks are cut short, exposing his dark brown hooves.
—-—

I mostly used the bolded categories for the sake of organization. You can feel free to use it as well or do your own thing.
[-b]Name:[/b]
[-b]Gender:[/b]
[-b]Tribe:[/b]
[-b]Appearance:[/b]

I’ll have an IC post in an hour or two, most likely. If not then, then by the end of the day, for sure.
The length of my posts will fall off a bit whenever Cosworth isn't interacting just with NPCs.
Also, is your character Coffee Bean? Or is Mocha Chip a different pony?
After parting ways with Sunny, Cosworth had been on the town for much of the afternoon, cramming as much information into his brain as he could manage: streets, the names of them, landmarks, manhole covers, guards, neighbors—everything. He immediately drew up several contingency escape routes for if he ever failed his mission; if he ran out of energy before he could find a proper source to replenish it, his disguise would falter and he would have to slink off, back to the changeling kingdom and beg for a second chance. Which was hardly an appealing prospect, as he was fond of life. Eventually, after introducing himself to the closest neighbors and managing to convince the local post to run an ad for his machinery repair services, he made it to the slightly industrial sector of Hoofington. There, he took it upon himself to fix the inner workings of a water wheel that had just recently broken down, and the owner, Steady Flow, was beyond thrilled.

“Uh, this is very generous, Mr. Flow,” Cosworth said as he eyed the bag of bits that floated in the green glow of his magical grasp. Without counting and judging by weight alone, he could tell that he was paid far above the asking price for what he had done. According to his training, at least. The middle-aged, blue and gray stallion that guided him out the door only laughed at the suggestion of overpay.

“Son,” he drawled, “I’m downright horrified, the master assembly is on the ground in pieces, and somewhere in the background, a bank has just caught fire. In you walk and say, ‘I can fix that in a jiffy!’” Steady lightly pressed one of his blue hooves into Cosworth’s shoulder as he spoke. “And then you do some crazy unicorn nonsense and fabricate a whole replacement out of scrap without batting an eye. I don’t think you quite understand the value of that if you think that’s too much money to be paying you.” Cosworth looked at the old stallion beside him and furrowed his brow.

“Really?”

“Really! It’s a bit stupid, but there’s nopony in town that can service those things,” Steady Flow said as he gestured back at the wheelhouse the two had just stepped out of. “I would’ve had to call a mechanic from a big city like Canterlot or Manehattan to come down here.” He began repeatedly jabbing at the ground with his hoof as he explained the process. “They would’ve taken a day or two to show up, they would probably ask me some stupid question, like whether or not I’ve tried unplugging it and plugging it back in again,” he paused to whisper in Cosworth’s ear, “Whatever the hay that means,” before continuing. “Then they’d look at the real problem with this bored face and go, ‘yep, it’s broke!’ and say they would have to take measurements and order replacement parts from a metalworker if we didn’t have none. Then, eventually the town wouldn’t be missing a water wheel no more. You just did it, no questions asked, then ask for pocket change. That’s not right! Cosworth, son, I don’t care what you think, but you’ve saved me time, money, and a week’s frustration and hair splitting. That’s worth the money and then some.”

Cosworth stood, silent for a moment. “Oh,” was all he could say at first. “Hey, is this a problem anywhere else in town?” he asked as he tucked the bits into one of his saddlebags as he felt the money slowly grow heavier in his grasp. “This sort of stuff is sort of my special skill…sort of.” He scratched the back of his head as he glanced down the river at a few more water wheels in the distance.

“To varying degrees,” Steady Flow said without missing a beat. “I’ll put in a good for you, don’t worry. My partners’ll be thrilled to hear we’ve finally got an industrial mechanic who works locally. You have a nice day now, Cosworth.” With that, the two ponies bid each other farewell and Cosworth once again found himself wandering the streets of Hoofington.

As he built his map of the town, it occurred to him that he hadn’t eaten at all. It was not that the emptiness had any effect on him; it was a reminder that normal ponies did things like eat food in addition to drinking and sleeping. It would be unlikely that anypony would notice that Cosworth ran on literally nothing, as though he were some sort of magical robot, but, he reminded himself, “safe is better than sorry.” He eventually found his way into a coffee shop, not out of preference, but proximity.

As he stepped up to the counter, the interior of the building didn’t particularly blow Cosworth away. Must have arrived during a quiet hour, he thought as he noticed that, other than the staff, he was on the only pony around. A quiet, “huh,” escaped his lips before he turned back to the attendant pony. “I’ll take the strongest brew you can make. I’m gonna have a long evening.”
Okay, then, I'll get to work on a thread for us..
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