Romeo (
myblueskies) wrote in
rakuen2011-05-13 02:24 pm
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Day 1 | Memory Garden [Open]
Characters: Romeo and anyone
Format: Prose/action, you pick I'll match
This log is: open, come join him, paint some stones, have philisophical conversations...
Location: The edge of the forest, near the lake
Summary: People have been disapearing and Romeo is scared that he will forget them, even with some of their memories. So he is making a memory garden.
Warnings: Sadness, but it's Romeo so nothing too heavy
Romeo sat by the forest edge, near to the lake. It was a good place, with a nice view. Around him where a pile of sticks, which he had collected from the forest. A pile of stones that he had gathered from the lakeside, some string and some paint in different colours borrowed from a classroom.
He counted the people on his fingers. The people he had known who had disapeared, to be fed to the tiger or otherwise. Thirteen, thirteen that he had met, and he knew there would be more. But thirteen was a start.
Grabbing some sticks and string he began, soon he had a very messy cross and he stuck it into the ground. Since the school had stolen his memory of reading he could not write the names of his friends, but he took a rock and some paint and began painting. He wasn't a good artist, he had learnt that while trying to capture the blue skies for Angeletta. But soon he had a rough picture of a book.
He placed it next to the cross, For Kuchinawa. He would remember. He picked up another two sticks and wondered what picture he would paint for Molly.
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Another stone was picked up, this next person was harder as Romeo had never met them, but he had seen them disapear and he would remember them. "Miss Buckley, what's it like where you come from?"
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She took the rock and sounded out the foreign name a few times, then carefully wrote "Rayko" on it. The names weren't perfect, but she was putting her heart into writing nicely.
"I come from London, in a world filled with clockwork machines and run by steam power. It's beautiful, but...it's somewhat...monochrome. The pollution levels are very high, so there's a brownish haze in the air all the time. It makes things look dingy and dim, and it's in vogue to wear very muted colours, as well. ....There aren't any plants in the city, either. They won't grow for a hundred miles in any direction. Still, it's home."
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"I heard of London in my world, but I don't think it's run by clocks!" Then again he'd never been to London so it might be, for all he knew.
"If we ever escape you should come to my world, to my village Sonogno, it is so beautiful, a hundred different flowers grow there!" He finished Road's stone and handed it over. "She was called Road."
"Even Milano is beautiful, up on the rooftops and the sky is the bluest blue! Not brown at all." The next stone was for Shoujou, and even though they had got off to a bad start he was someone that Romeo should still remember.
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"It would be nice if we could visit each others' worlds, though... I don't really care about flowers, but I like bright colours. Colours are beautiful, they mean so much to me." She smiled, sighing fondly as she thought of the French countryside she'd visited when she was smaller.
She took the rock and painted the next name, then went back to making crosses ahead for him while she waited for the next one to name. "I don't think I'd ever get up onto the roofs, though."
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"Colours are important, my friend Angeletta used to be able to imagine all the colours, and smell the blue skies just from smelling Piccolo's fur." Something that Romeo couldn't remember, something else the school had stolen, the smell and feel of his ferrets fur.
He smiled as he continued painting before handing another rock over, "and Tsuki."
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"I didn't think that colours had a smell... Perhaps I've been away from them for too long. I think...green must smell like fresh linen..." She closed her eyes, trying to imagine it. Then she opened them again, taking the rock to write "Sookey", the worst spelling of all of them, but definitely trying.
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"You're too tall to fit up a chimney, that's why kids have to do it because the adults are too big." He grinned, "They must still have chimney's in London right? Do you have chimney sweeps or do the clocks clean everything?"
They obviously wern't doing a very good job if everything was dirty, Romeo painted the last few strokes onto the other rock. "This one is for Kotorou." He would have to show Huashi, and see if she wanted to paint a rock for her friend as well.
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She huffed a bit, but really Theta was being unfair. Unemployment was running high because more and more jobs were being replaced with clockworks. She was only looking at the unemployment rate and concluding that the lower class was getting less and less willing to work.
Kotorou's rock took more thought, but finally Theta painted 'Cotorow'. "So many strange names...I've never even heard names like most of these."
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He passed over another painted rock, "This one is for Sora," his voice took on a tinge of sadness when he said that, the loss was still new.
He blinked at her words but he guessed she was right, "It's not too dangerous, I only broke my leg once!" He frowned, because even though she was right, and it did teach children the value of work until Alfredo had created the Black Brother's no child had survived their time in Milano.
"Often the bosses are mean though, Luini the man who takes children from their villages to sell them to bosses is called the God of Death because hardly any children who he takes ever survives. But it's more because the bosses are mean, and you don't get enough food, and other children are in gangs when you are alone..." He frowned again realising he was drifting into things he'd rather not think about.
He gave a smile spirits up! "We survived though, because of Alfredo."
He thought about what Miss Buckley had said, about how working as children made people not be layabouts and shook his head slightly. "But sir, Doctor Casella says that education is the way to make sure everyone can get a job and survive. So if the clocks do all the work in your world does that mean all children get to go to school?"
Because that would make Miss Buckley's world not so bad at all, despite the lack of colour and flowers.
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Theta believed, mistakenly so, that anyone was capable of pulling themselves up if they tried. While that was true to a certain extent, how were the poor to afford school tuition when they couldn't find jobs to begin with and could barely afford food? Partly, her views were based on ignorance. She knew very little about the lower class, as the lower class wasn't something she had to deal with. Also, she agreed with the majority thought on the lower classes as held by people of her own class.
Partly, her views were based on an inherent disdain for anyone who wasn't educated. The fact that the poor couldn't get an education translated in her mind to wouldn't, as an education had been an inherent part of her childhood. Willing ignorance was one of the most disgusting things in her mind, second only to refusing to devote one's self to something.
"Perhaps if more children worked as chimney sweeps to afford their school fees, the lower classes would be better off."
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"They sell themselves for a price but that goes to their parents, and parents selling their children need to buy food for their other children," Romeo wondered why his parents had sold him, he couldn't remember and it made his head go all fuzzy when he tried.
"But if everyone got an education then they would have jobs, and then their children wouldn't have to sell themselves as chimney sweeps. It's like doctors, Doctor Casella always helped those who couldn't aford to pay him, but other doctors don't and let people die!"
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She sighed softly as he explained about Doctor Casella, shaking her head. "Doctors are important people, but it's a profession as well, and just as irreplaceable as chimney sweeping. You wouldn't want to sweep a chimney and not get paid for it, would you? Or...whoever you work for that bought you. But if the chimney doesn't work, then there's no fire, and people can die of cold. Did you think of it that way?"
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"If someone asked me to clean a chimney and they couldn't afford to pay I would do it anyways!" He said stubbornly, but he had already thought it through and seen how it wouldn't work. "But Mr Rossi wouldn't have let me I guess... and if Mrs Rossi found out we'd worked for no money she'd flip!"
He sighed, he guessed things couldn't be fair, he was interested that Miss Buckley had said that slavery, and by that he thought she was talking about parents selling their children, was banned where she came from.
"I'm going to learn everything and be a teacher and then I'm going to teach all children even if they have no money! Then everyone will be free and happy!" He had a stubborn glint to his eye but he was still smiling.
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"Or perhaps you'll teach the ones that can't afford it for free, but charge the ones that can. They'll get jealous, you know, and they'll start telling you they can't afford it either. Because why should they have to pay when others don't? How is that fair?"
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He didn't want to be unfair! He wasn't to be kind to everyone! To help make a world where children didn't have to be sold as chimney sweeps. "But if I had money, and could afford to go to school I wouldn't be jellous of the ones who couldn't afford it!"
"Utena," he handed the rock over. "Did you go to school sir? I guess you did, you're a noble lady right?"
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She kept her tone even and somewhat gentle. She didn't want him to think she was being cruel. Even when she was, she never wanted people to think she was cruel. That would ruin her ability to pull this with them. She couldn't crumble dreams if she didn't have people's trust.
"Perhaps you might manage it if you made your wife get a job as well as you, but...women are meant to run the home, nothing more nothing less..."
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A moment later Romeo's eyes went wide as he realised that he wasn't teasing with the Black Brother's but talking to an adult! His smile faded and he edged away ever so slightly. "I'm sorry sir! I didn't mean to be rude. I'm sure your right, it will be hard." He stared at the ground for a moment. But then his eyes took on a slightly stubborn glint.
"But I promised Alfredo that I would realise my dreams, and the dreams he was not able to fulfil himself. So I have to become a teacher and help make a world where all children run free under the blue sky. Because you should always keep your promises, right sir?"
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"A nurse is a fine profession. Perhaps if you had a wife like Bianca, you might just manage to scrape by." What was she doing? What? She could have smacked herself. This wasn't how it went. She wasn't supposed to offer pointers, she wasn't supposed to back down until his dreams were smoking rubble! Just what had gotten into her lately?
...Oh right. Romeo was the one who dutifully called her 'sir', and every time she heard the word it warmed her icy heart. "It will be devilishly hard, all dreams worth dreaming are. But people are stronger than that, if they try to be. ...Would you like to see my hardest dream?"
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"My dream has always been to walk," she explained. "If I didn't dream that, then I would probably give in. And it's a difficult dream, every day."
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"Does it hurt lots?" He asked, worry tinging his voice. "Why couldn't you walk before?" He dreaded the answer really, because when he had asked Grenn that she had told him a disease had eaten her legs, and that she was lucky because sometimes it ate peoples heads!
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But given his concerned expression, she decided to tell him one lie. "It doesn't hurt much any more. Just if I overdo it."
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He looked at the contraption before it was tucked away again, it looked strange and like nothing he had seen before. "It's good that they managed to fix it like that, I'm glad that you can walk now!" It was nice when people where able to relaise their dreams.
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