latersonsonafrote replied to your post: ((IT IS TWO AM AND I AM JUGGLING SENDING ASKS,...
DID YOU BEGIN THIS BECAUSE IF SO I TUP MY HAT TO YOU FRIEND
((I DID BECAUSE IT HAD TO BE DONE AT SOME POINT))

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latersonsonafrote replied to your post: ((IT IS TWO AM AND I AM JUGGLING SENDING ASKS,...
DID YOU BEGIN THIS BECAUSE IF SO I TUP MY HAT TO YOU FRIEND
((I DID BECAUSE IT HAD TO BE DONE AT SOME POINT))
blessedinsularity
inunoonara
latersonsonafrote
nangvangtuoi
spanishtomate
"안녕하세요! Ah... so many people! Welcome~" Yongsoo looked up from his laptop screen for a moment to greet the few people that filed in to greet him. It was rare he got so many visiting him.
Iron to Bind
Perhaps that's imprecise.
This story, like all stories about human beings if you go back far enough, begins in a cave. One could argue the point that the story should really take place on a beach then, since evolutionists like to dispute this point, but fish with legs are not human beings. Or at least not yet. Or perhaps not at all, ever. That's not the important part. The important part is that this story begins in a cave and it has nothing at all to do with human beings.
Or at least it won't for another forty centuries or so, but there's no need to be splitting hairs over a handful of years.
(But in the interests of correctness, human beings would not really enter the story until four thousand three hundred sixty seven years and four days later.)
For a cave, it was a rather nice cave. It wasn't particularly dank nor damp nor prone to caving in at inopportune moments. Its opening began very high up on a particularly steep mountain, so it was prone to drafts, but that was a negligible flaw when its occupant was immune to most fluctuations in weather and the passing of time as a general rule.
(He was not actually immune; he was just apathetic enough about time as a general construct after bending to its whims for four thousand three hundred sixty seven years and two days.)
The occupant of this rather nice cave was a dragon. He was a very old dragon and immensely large. Dragons never truly stop growing for as long as they live, but even he was enormous for one of his age and always had been. If one were to take a very large male elephant (one around four meters tall) and stack him atop five other very large male elephants of around four meters tall, they might just barely brush the underside of this dragon's chin. Fortunately for the animals involved, the dragon would've been far more amused by the sight of elephants imitating tiddlywinks than feeling the inclination to eat them. But six elephants is rather excessive.
Just a bit.
The dragon's name was Ivan and he was currently preoccupied with two things: one was the amount of sunlight pouring over the backs of his wings.
The second and more absorbing preoccupation involved him squinting through a pair of pince-nez spectacles perched on the end of his nose and fashioned from magnifying glasses as he peered down at a very small (proportionally) book written in human script that he held carefully, turning the thin pages with a set of tweezers so as not to tear the pages.
He'd been attempting to read this book for the better part of thirty five years (it had had fantastic reviews three decades ago), but it had been difficult going when the text was so small and the typesetter had been very obviously drunk.
Ivan gave a rumble of discontent when he turned the page and saw the minuscule text rambling over the page in untidy rows. His gusty sigh was littered with sparks of fire, one of which landed on the page and that he hastily extinguished.
This, he thought to himself as he stared at the book lying abandoned on the carpet, was really getting to the point of being absurd.
Actually, this whole business of living in self-imposed seclusion up in a cave like some kind of odd species of hermit crab was absurd, but Ivan was far too comfortably set in his ways to do something sensible like call in a realtor to appraise the place.
But, he mused, glancing about the richly furnished abode, it could do with some tidying. The library had been out of sorts for nearly eighty years since Ivan's last growth spurt, the hoard had become horrifically unorganized, moths and rodents were nibbling through his large collection of exotic fabrics, and the larder was completely bare of everything except an old tin of beans that had gone off around seventeen years ago (or whenever it was he had last attempted to go down the mountain to shop for groceries).
What he required, he decided, were the services of a caretaker. Cleaning person. Factotum. Maid. Or if nothing else, at least someone to read these damnable books to him before he turned them into very rare and expensive kindling in a fit of pique.
But the question remained: how would he find a maid when he was very decidedly Up Here and they were very pointedly Down There?
So he decided to put an ad in the paper.
The first few sounded far too much like desperate personals, so Ivan shredded them idly beneath his claws as he mentally composed his next draft. It took six hours and enough shredded paper to fill a hamster cage for a decade (though God forbid one ever live that long in the first place), but he at last had an advertisement that didn't sound like the metaphorical lowing of a cow from loneliness.
There were two flaws in this. Firstly, it was unlikely that any newspaper advertisement division would be able to read draconian script (if, of course, they could read in the first place). Secondly, the size of the paper was rather large and domestic mail was not up to the standard it had been a thousand years ago, new expenses aside.
So Ivan then rewrote his letter into passable English inside an email and sent it off, rolling his large eyes at the slowness of his internet connection. It was always slow when there was another war on and there was always a war on. You could set your watch to human predictability insofar as warmongering went. The well-off ones treated it as a game for their honor and the poor treated it like a disgusting puddle of vomit that had to be continuously mopped up and that they were obligated to clean out of professionalism.
It was admirable, he thought, that kind of work ethic in such short-lived creatures. Personally, if he only had roughly five decades or so to live in, he'd likely spend it in debauched hedonism--probably. Only if it weren't too much effort, which it might very well have been.
Either way, as long as one of his soon-to-appear interviewees had some semblance of a work ethic and book-reading ability, he'd have little enough to complain about.
The only reprieve from this hell was the faint promise of rain later to tamp down the fire.
The fire, of course, was only a metaphor and not actually extant, however real it felt as it burned both above and below his skin.
If he had spoken the words aloud (and he might've, at some point; everything seemed to take on a smoky haze of unreality when it was this hot), his companion would've accused him of melodrama, perhaps. As it stood (or languished in the shade like a wilting Romance-era heroine, in his case), it was 26° outside, the humidity was at an intolerable high, and Angelique had at some point climbed on top of him, complaining of a chill.
His thoughts were having a difficult time stringing themselves together coherently, but his body was fully capable of detecting the ludicrousness of this: he had protested, pushed at her gently (not hard, but she held on tenaciously), and felt his internal temperature gauge slide up a few degrees.
"Solnyshko please--" he groaned, twisting slightly beneath her weight as though this would dislodge her. As a surprise to no one at all, it did nothing. His head fell back against the cushion and the pervasive sense of defeat filled him. Sweat-dampened hair clung to his face and humidity prevented it from simply being pushed out of the way.
Ivan realized with no small amount of trepidation that he might potentially die at least three times today: twice from heat and at least once from sheer exasperation of his current circumstances.
what if in order to wake up my desire to rp outside of xmentalia again i remade pirate sey
latersonsonafrote said: Can I start callin’ you “Lexi" now.
Please no.
I am not a suburban American girl.
latersonsonafrote replied to your post: star trek au who’s on board? 8)
omfg the acll of my people
8)
come hither u beautiful bueaituflfdasfg person
latersonsonafrote replied to your post: Just look at all of you.
Ain’t we pretty?
So beautiful and gorgeous and oh-
Just look at you! You are so precious. You come here now, Angelique.