"Man is part of the nature, and his war against the nature is inevitably a war against himself." Rein, a nymph of metal. Lives next to the rail roads in a small apartment with his cats Copper, Tin and Brass. He's 105 years old, a bit of a hermit, but he enjoys singing and time to time he's singing in the pub to get few coins for food. Sometimes he just asks to get paid in food instead of money. Rein is a bit of an odd bird, but he never found it as a bad thing. RP Character. FC: Oscar Isaac.
Don't wanna be here? Send us removal request.
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ianncarderoâ:
âYou are?â Iann asked, in genuine surprise. It wasnât a sarcastic question, it was more that Rein hardly expressed gratitude, and certainly not for something as abstract as âhelping him on a growth journeyâ. He tilted his head, staring at Rein in some wonderment and a lot of fondness. Â
âRein, you really are changing. Donât let that scare you. Thereâs no going back now, hm? Somethings when you see, you can never unsee.â Even if that âthingâ was Rein seeing himself.
He laughed in jovial sympathy at the idea of Rein being a resting place for voiding birds.  âOh man, that mustâve sucked when you shifted into flesh again. Gyah. No wonder you didnât stay as a statue for long periods of time. Damn birds!âÂ
Iann nudged Rein aside and looked through the microscope again, humming lowly as he tried to process what he saw.  âMust be something like that,â he surmised.  âWhatever it is, alls I can tell is itâs not normal blood. But then what else did I expect - you are a nymph. Of course your blood is gonna be elemental.â It made Iann pause, wondering if Rein even needed blood at all. Magic could be a baffling sort of science. Â
âIâm gonna show these to Ciara, and then weâll find out once and for all if Copperâs an extension of you, hm? For now, the only thing I can see is that you both have a high concentration of metal in your blood - yours more than his, and that your blood isnâtâŠreallyâŠblood. Or it is blood, but just metal.â Iann grinned, and made goatâs horns with his fingers, because saying it was âmetalâ was a pun on the music genre. âRock on, hermano.â
Rein looked Iann right in the eyes and nodded as a confirmation. At first he looked dead serious, but when Iann said sometimes were something you canât unsee, a grin started to form on his lips. âThere definitely are some things you canât unsee.â He wasnât talking about him being whatever he was, he was clearly pulling the topic to the more twisted, yet lighter, one. He didnât want to think the darker topics at the moment.
âGetting bird droppings off of you is surprisingly hard. But hey, some people say itâs lucky if you get shat on by a bird, and then thereâre some who say itâs good for your hair. Iâm not really feeling like either has been a case with me, but then again, I never was just a random person walking around since I was being a statue. So I guess I can only blame myself in that case.â
The nymph stepped aside letting Iann take a better look at the microscope, but he kept a close eye on Iannâs reactions. He wanted to see what Iann thought about what he saw. As they sort of agreed on what was going on with the blood, Rein nodded his head and then nodded again when he said heâd let Ciara take a look. But then all that nodding turned into a shaking head. âI hate metal musicâ, he commented, but there was a tiny grin on his lips. They definitely should have a talk about music one day..
END.
The Tomcat Doc || Rein&Iann
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ianncarderoâ:
âMe neither,â Iann agreed, but he was frowning curiously at Reinâs arm as he took the syringe from Rein. He pointed at Reinâs arm.  âDid you see that? The bit of metal. LikeâŠsome sort of defense mechanism your body instinctively makes.â Twisting his mouth to the side, Iann turned back to his microscope, to prepare the blood for viewing.
âMust be on account ofâŠahâŠwhat happened.â Iann glanced behind him for a moment a Rein.  âWith those nymphs who tortured you.â Perhaps he shouldnât have been so blunt about that, but it was Iann. He didnât see the need to use euphemisms, particularly not with Rein who was so outspoken himself. He smiled, a little sadly.Â
âI suppose developing a little self-preservation is a good thing. Vulnerabilityâs a hard lesson to learn.â Most humans learned it early on, while growing up and getting into some situation where they realized they werenât impervious to injury or danger. Nymphs had to learn in other ways. Not only that, but Rein first learned of his physical vulnerability, and then later his emotional vulnerability. A one-two punch, of sorts. Still, Iann couldnât bring himself to consider this a bad thing. The world was not all rainbows and lollipops. Anyone who lived in this world had to learn that, sooner or later.
When he got Reinâs blood under the microscope, he peered at it, then switched to Copperâs slide, then back to Reinâs. He motioned for Rein to come over.  âTake a look,â he said grimly.
âI didâ, Rein said, frowning a bit at it. Iannâs mention of the events from few years ago Rein went silent for a bit but then just huffed softly. âYeah, probably. Or it might have always been there, I just never had noticed it. That really wouldnât be anything new because we both know thereâs a bunch of shit I know nothing about even though itâs all about myself.â Rein looked at his arm but then looked at Iann in the eye. âBut Iâm grateful youâve been helping me out finding about the stuff about myself for all these years. It means a lot to me.â
âDuring those years of traveling I often just disappeared into different metal structures and if there wasnât any metals around I just turned into a statue. Those always kept me safe. Although it did cause a lot of bird shit on my clothes and my hair, sometimes even on my nose.â He chuckled a bit. âIâd be a really bad scarecrow.â But Iann wasnât wrong that the emotional vulnerability was the one that had hit Rein with a rather heavy hammer. Especially lately. Rein was still sure it was all because he had been letting people getting close to him, getting to know him, and himself getting attached to them. If heâd still be only traveling around there most likely would be no need for emotional vulnerability because youâre always on the move.
Yet again the nymph frowned. He glanced at the microscope, then at Iann and then he just stepped closer to take a look at the sample. He wasnât sure what he was expecting to see considering Iannâs reaction -- his reaction didnât look like a good one. Rein stared at the sample and how all he saw was just purple. He knew how normal blood sample would look like -- how you could see the red cells and white cells -- but this.. this was different. Sure, Iann had put in the catalyst that caused the color to change, but to see all of this turning purple? It was extreme. âIs that..â Rein said, looked at Iann and then looked back in the microscope. âAre there really small metal fibers just swimming around with my blood cells?â It definitely looked like there were these small straight metal fibers just piled on top of each other. They almost looked like that tiny dust you get when you drill into metal. Rein straightened his back and looked at Iann, looking slightly amused. âBut other than that, itâs clear that the whole sample is extremely purple, so it appears I definitely havenât been lying about me being a nymph of metal.â
The Tomcat Doc || Rein&Iann
#iann#// gahahaha#// good to know I'm not the only one coming up with words when I can't think of an actual word in English :DD
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ianncarderoâ:
âAhhhhh, âweirdâ would be an understatement? More like hellish disturbing and intensely painful nightmare,â Iann snorted. He wouldâve made some crass joke about fisting or gerbils, but decided theyâd already gotten well off-track. Although he did make a mental note, if he remembered, to somehow find a way to get Rein to bawk like a chicken. Or maybe crow like a rooster - either would be good.
âIf only everyone was kinky and wise, huh?â Iann said, then looked down at the needle when Rein mentioned doing it himself. The nymph had a good point - sticking an needle into a metal nymph might be counter productive.
âOh yeah, I remember that,â Iann said slowly, as Rein reminded him about that potion, the glow of his blood.  âWhy donât you give it a try then? If only so we get enough of a sample to compare it with Copperâs blood sample, hm? Whatever you can get me.â
Rein just chuckled at the idea of nightmarish egg laying. It definitely would be odd and so many other things if thatâd be a possibility. Right now it definitely was good Iann wasnât able to create eggs in any possible way.
He shook his head at his friendâs comment, still grinning at this whole kinky -thing, and took the needle from him. The nymph investigated his arm a bit, tapped the inner elbow -area to find a good vein and once he was quite sure there was one to poke he outstretched his arm a bit more and went for it. Sure, he probably should have put somethign on his upper arm to slow down the blood flow and make the vein appear more, but he didnât feel like trying to find something right now. Plus Rein was quite sure he would be able to get it right even without that.
As the needle was about to pierce the skin a tiny dot of silver color appeared right under the tip of the needle. Rein just raised his brow, glanced at Iann, then looked back to his arm and with a deep frown and extremely intense consentration he managed to make that dot disappear and let the needle go in. The first poke didnât go in the right spot, but luckily the second did and Rein did manage to get some blood in the syringe, probably like one third of the size of it. âMmyeah, I wouldnât be a good doctorâ, he said with a chuckle as he offered the needle to Iann. Rein put his thumb over the spot where the needle had been at, just in case it would decide to bleed for a reason or another.
The Tomcat Doc || Rein&Iann
#iann#// I don't even know is that area called inner elbow or what the heck it is 'cause there is an actual word for that area in Finnish but#// according to translators there is no such word in English.. :'D
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xxtuaharjunaxxâ:
âIâm glad you liked it.â A smile on his face at Reinâs words, beaming proudly that he was able to introduce part of his tradition to his friend through cooking. Tuah crouched in front of the fridge, inspecting the ingredients carefully to make sure it hadnât gone bad. âHmm, how about I learn how to cook lamb stew with orange for you,â He looked up and showed Rein the lamb, âit might be a little late for me to cook that for you now, since itâs going to take quite a while to cook. So, for now, letâs have⊠ah, garlic chicken stir fry.â He grabbed the chicken and passed it to Rein as he took out other ingredients as well.
âAnd you can help me cook rice if you want. I bet itâll go great with the stir fry.â Tuah moved around the kitchen easily since he was familiar with where things were kept, grabbing the knife and started chopping and slicing the vegetables. He popped some of the bell peppers and carrots into his mouth as he chopped them, before doing the same to Rein.
âI never say no to lamb stewâ, he said with a soft smile, âAnd you should learn it only if you want to learn how to cook one.â Rein didnât want Tuah to use time learning the recipe just because of him. He should do it only if he wanted to do it. Rein would eat whatever Tuah came up with anyway, so there really was no true need for him to learn something new just because of the nymph.
Rein gave a nod when Tuah came up with what heâd cook and garlic chicken definitely sounded good. âAlright, Iâll be on rice chargeâ, he said and started to prepare the rice, eating some of the veggies as Tuah offered him some time to time.
As the food was cooking Rein leaned his back on the kitchen counter, watched the foods cooking on the stove next to him and then glanced at Tuah. â..you wanted to hear about Jacob?â he asked, his tone more serious now than a moment ago. âSo.. if youâre ready to hear, Iâll tell you.â
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ianncarderoâ:
âI wish! I wish I could lay eggs,â Iann sighed wistfully, then bubbled into a small laugh. It was truly nonsensical talk, but it was fun nonetheless. He and Rein had that sort of dynamic sometimes, when they just wanted to be foolish for the sake of being foolish. It was mild and harmless and maybe a little Latino, the constant joshing at each other for a laugh.  âIf I laid eggs youâd have to come keep them warm for me.â
He nodded and pat Reinâs hand, never quite knowing how to take nice words spoken about a relationship that Iann himself felt so shaky about. It was different with his second wife, with whom Iann had been so sure, only to have that knocked out for under him. And with Tuah, it had been a needy sort of sure, someone to cling to and point at and say âyes, this is mine and I am hisâ. With Ciara it was different, and yet Iann couldnât say it was a bad or ominous different. Â
Just new. Which, being Iann, fascinated him even if he didnât know how to socially handle it. Â
But Reinâs last words - that even if it didnât last long, at least it would be worth it - struck Iann and he looked over at the nymph. Iann pat at Reinâs smooth face.  âI stand corrected. Youâre kinky and wise. Sometimes, when youâre not trying ot be wise.â He grinned, turning his pat into a cheek-pinch.
Excited now, Iann got another needle, and prepared it.  âWe should check and see, hm? Give me your arm and letâs do a little comparison. Iâve never analysed nymph blood before, this is exciting. Iâll bet you all have completely different ideas of what blood cells look like and behave like.â
âWouldnât it be weird that one day youâd just shit out an egg?â It was somewhat disturbing thought but then again, it was something that was definitely a possibility. Maybe not in case of Iann laying eggs, but in this world of supernaturals it probably would be possible that there was someone who could do that, for a reason or another. âWarm your eggs?â he asked, trying really hard not to start laughing at the thought that popped in his head because of that. âIâm not going to cluck like a chicken tho.â
Hearing that he was âkinky and wiseâ Reinâs brow raised and he definitely looked a bit too amused by those words. âI never thought to hear those words in the same sentence, even less as words to describe me.â He made a face when the cheek patting turned into a pinch, but you could still see that he was smiling despite all of that.
The nymph gave a nod, took off his cable knit sweater and offered his hand to Iann. âOr should I do it?â he asked with a slight frown. âI mean, someone poking me with metal might cause my body to block it going through and the needle would just bend or something as it hits steel.â He poked his own arm, sort of like testing was it the same squishy one it normally was. âNo one has tried to poke me with a needle before or take a blood sample. Like the last time we tested the amount of metal in me, you know the heart situation, I just drank some liquid that made me glow because we didnât try to take blood. Or did we talk about it but then the same thought came in return that my body wonât let something poke me? I donât know. But anyway, do you want to try or should I just do it myself?â
The Tomcat Doc || Rein&Iann
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ianncarderoâ:
Iannâs eyebrows raised at Reinâs proclamation, which to Iann seemed to come out of nowhere. He gave the nymph a down-turned smile, unsure what to say until Rein countered his praise with a tease. That, Iann knew better how to handle, and he grinned too.  âWell, cuckoos also secretly lay their eggs in the nests of other birds, so when their babies hatch, the other bird has to raise them with their own chicksâŠa little impostor. So âcuckoo owlâ seems really apt. Iâll take it.âÂ
Rein was definitely right about the stigma, an on-going circle of suspicion and distrust and countless examples to demonstrate why all types of carrion witches shouldnât be trusted. Iann himself could list a few right off the bat - and some of those examples, in a way, even came from Ciara herself. Â
Iann looked through the microscope, then turned on more light in the basement and looked again, making some adjustments. He also took three drops of blood on a dish, and then found other liquid reagents to drop into the blood, inspecting the results of reaction of Copperâs blood. Â
He couldnât help the grin on his face chocking slightly as Rein - Rein! Of all people - loaded his follow-up with innuendo.  âYou kinky old bastard!â Iann laughed, but then added a shrug, using his hands to motion as he talked.  âAll three! All three - weâre, ah. Weâre together I guess. And sheâs incredible. Plus she says she loves me which yâknow, is always kind of a bonus when youâre thinkingâŠahâŠwhen you love them back.â
Iann was about to say âthinking long-termâ but the truth was he didnât know about long-term, with Ciara. Unable to stop himself, he said,  âThing is, sheâs never had a relationship longer than a year. Not that I have so great track record myself. Longest relationship I managed to keep was likeâŠthree years. And that was when I was a dumb kid.â
He then shrugged continually and said,  âYâknow, just magic. LikeâŠhealing and blood-related stuff. ProtectionâŠâ Â
Lifting the dish with the drops of blood, he pointed at one - âAh-ha! Here we are. This is supposed to indicate a high metal content, turn the blood a bright purple. Wellââ Iann pointed to the drop of blood, which was now a virulent purple.  âWhat I see in under the microscope kind of confirms it, take a look. Those blood cells areâŠdefinitely not just animal.â
âAre you laying eggs in othersâ nests?â Rein asked teasingly, clearly poking the funny bone with his words. Talking about nonsense like this definitely worked as a way to stay away from the morpid topics that were shadowing Reinâs mind. But Rein did consider Iann liking these idiotic things he ended up saying, so that was a good thing as well.
Rein kept a close eye on whatever Iann was doing -- Rein had always been interesting to see how all this scientic stuff happened and it was fascinating to watch someone being so focused on something. He wasnât sure what Iann was seeing but it was interesting to watch him concentrate on this so much. Although when Iann looked at him and started to laugh Rein just grinned widely as a respond. âAll three? Now who in here is that kinky old bastard huh?â And then he laughed too, but then the laugh turned into a smile. âIâm happy for youâ, he put his hand on Iannâs shoulder and gave it a small squeeze. âItâs great you two have found each other.â
When Iann added that it might not be long termed Rein ended up frowning, but then a small smile returned. âWell you are a dumb adult now, so who knows how long thisâll last. And even if it wonât last long, Iâm sure itâll be worth it all.â Which brought back the thought of Reinâs own situation and how he was just by himself. He just shook his head a bit to get that out, but luckily Iann found something from the blood and got Reinâs attention.
He leaned closer to look at the dish, frowned and then looked a bit surprised when he learned what the purple color meant. He looked at Copper and then at the purple dot. Rein stepped in front of the microscope and leaned closer to take a look. It definitely was different colored than blood was. Rein straightened back up again and looked at Iann. âIf you take my blood, would it end up looking the same with that indicator?â
The Tomcat Doc || Rein&Iann
#iann#// gahahah that's totally fine#// I'm not a science person myself so we can totally just wing it and go with tv-series logic :DD
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ianncarderoâ:
âSometimes you have to go through bad things in order to learn the good,â Iann murmured, scraping at his bottom lip with his teeth. He said it more in an offhand way, as opposed to trying to enlighten Rein. It had always been Iannâs own personal experience, after all, that tragedy or horror often went hand-in-hand with growth and change. Nothing, heâd learned with great difficulty and just a small amount of bitterness, was ever entirely bad.
Except demons, of course.
He reached out and rubbed at Reinâs arm, just for a moment. Maybe even just more for himself, and the comfort of physical contact with his good friend. He smiled then, a bit shyly, as Rein started asking about blood magic. Reinâs concerns werenât really something to be smiling about, but Iann couldnât help himself as his feelings got in the way of practicality.
âMost people havenât,â he agreed with Rein.  âItâs like necromancy or carrion magic - anything that inherently involves death or injuryâŠit can get a little tricky to see it as good. Thereâs a stigma around that sort of thing, thatâs for sure.â Â
Iann knew that sort of pattern though, no different from humans. People born with a stigma often grew up haunted, defensive, distrustful because no one trusted them. It was a self-fulfilling prophecy - people expected the stigmatized child to grow up into a bad person and treated it thusly, ergo creating the bad person they expected.
âSheâs very skilled, far more adept at bloodwork than I am,â Iann said to Rein. He grinned more, when Rein picked up on his inability to stop smiling. He tapped the vial of blood against his hand, shaking it up.Â
âWell, ahhh. I mean, also I kind of dig her, and sheâs kinda into me too. So I know her well. Or - I know how she uses her magic, anyway. Kind of. For me.â
âThat is true. Surely not a nice thing, but it is trueâ, the nymph agreed. In Reinâs books Iann had always been a wise man and even though Rein didnât always sound it aloud, he was quite sure Iann knew he thought that. But just in case he didnât, Rein decided to say it aloud anyway. âYou are wise. Like an owl. Calm and have wisdom in your wordsâ, then a tiny grin crawled on his lips, âBut sometimes totally cuckoo. Iâm sure you can turn your head backwards and creep everyone out.â
The comforting rub on his arm was returned with a thankful smile. In a way it was a bit funny even how Rein hadnât really been one to be all touchy-feely, now he definitely liked all that. A simple touch could mean so much and he certainly had learned to appreciate that a lot. Especially hugs. And he had became quite great with giving hugs too.
âThat stigma has been going for decades, probably centuriesâ, he hummed and leaned his hands on the edge of the counter as he watched what Iann was doing with the blood. âBut I trust your judgement with her and wonât put her in the bad books before Iâve met her and gotten to know her.â The fact of him meeting her might never happen, but either way, heâd be sure not to judge her just because she did blood magic.
The brown eyes moved to stare at Iannâs face when the smile seemed to only grow. Which caused Reinâs smile grow as well. âYou kinda dig her, like dig her or just dig her?â It definitely was extremely bawdy sentence, but Rein had a feeling he already knew the answer to that even without asking it. But he had to tease Iann about it nevertheless. âAnd what kind of magic she does for you? Helps you out with all this stuff or something completely different?â
The Tomcat Doc || Rein&Iann
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xxtuaharjunaxxâ:
âHmm, definitely donât do that then,â Tuah agreed. People could be very curious if they found out that Rein was the first nymph to have a familiar. Nymphs were rare as it were, so to have Reinâs privacy being invaded simply because people were curious about him and Copperâs relationship would definitely be bad. He kept quiet about Rein being a guinea pig, seeing that he sort of was for Iann, though he supposed that it was different if the request came from a friend. Besides, Tuah believed that Iann wouldnât hurt Rein, not intentionally anyway.
The thought of Tin becoming fast friends with Nila delighted him. âSheâll be the first cat friend that Nila has if thatâs the case,â Tuah mused, smiling at the image of his dog and Reinâs cat becoming friends. He jostled Rein a little, feeling his face flushed a little when Rein translated the impromptu nickname he was given. âIâm honoured,â he said teasingly, placing his hand on his chest and bowed his head slightly.
âOh? Have you gone grocery shopping recently?â Tuah would hope so, because he wasnât creative enough to combine unconventional ingredients together to create a new recipe. Besides, he wanted to cook a proper dinner for his friend, knowing Reinâs habit he probably hadnât been eating regularly. âI wonder if I know how to cook something with oranges,â he thought aloud, brows furrowing slightly to remember recipes at the top of his head. âI usually cook Malay dishes, and there isnât one where they use orange as one of their ingredients. At least, not that I know of.â He glanced to Rein, arching his brow prompting for the nymph to throw in some idea.
Tuah cooed when Brass and Tin greeted him, carrying both kittens in his arms and letting them climb onto him as he walked toward the kitchen. He greeted Copper with a scratch on his head before following Rein to the kitchen. He put the kittens down and washed his hands, before starting to raid Reinâs kitchen. âWhat do you feel like eating?â
Rein just hummed as a reply to Tuahâs words. Tuah knew Rein liked his peace and keeping things close to himself. Friends were always welcomed to his house and his space, but if it was someone else the welcoming might not be the warmest one. So if someone would be coming to poke him around he wasnât going to be happy about that. Especially when you considered the case when his train got destroyed and he himself got locked into a cellar to be poked and tormented. It definitely hadnât been nice time in any possible way.
Tuahâs bowing made Rein chuckle and he patted the manâs shoulder as a reply to that. âYou better be, I donât go giving nickanmes for people just like that.â Only the special people got a nickname from the nymph and Tuah definitely was one of those special ones.
âWell, not really. But thereâs always something to cook fromâ, he replied but then frowned a bit when Tuah thought about cooking with oranges. âI like eating oranges as they are, but thereâre definitely recipes that include oranges. I can dig up few cookbooks if you want to check the recipes on those?â Then he looked at Tuah and gave him a small grin. âI love the Malay dishes you make, so whatever you come up with, Iâm more than happy to eat them.â
As Rein was looking in the fridge he did spot some chicken and lamb, different kind of veggies, cream, yogurt.. There definitely was stuff to cook from. âWellâ, Rein reached out to Tuah and pulled him next to the fridge so he could see the insides himself. âThereâs a bunch of stuff, so you just choose what you want to work with. And if you need a hand, I got two.â
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ianncarderoâ:
âEverything unbelievable is good,â Iann proclaimed brazenly. It was an overstatement of course but it was all in good humour. He leaned his hip against the workbench, folding his arms as he listened to Rein. Â
âYeah. That sort of feeling can come and go, itâsâŠwell truth is, that sort of feeling is part of being human. Or humanish, I should say. And in that respect, you still got the advantage on us poor mortals, hm? Our lifespans are short so once our mindset changes, thereâs limited time to change it back. Who knows - maybe after another century, you might shift into some other way of seeing the world, or go back to your old way, or whatever. You - well, you got the time, buddy.â
He unfolded his arms and flicked at the vial of Copperâs blood, then turned to gather the tools needed to run some experiments on it. There wasnât a lot of blood - only a vialâs worth - so Iann needed to make sure he put all the blood to good use.
âAgreed. We did the right thing, casting Jacob away,â Iann reiterated, even if there was still a niggling part of him that said they couldâve handled it different, or better. But Iann told himself that was just his own sense of incompleteness and dissatisfaction. What mattered was that Rein had no regrets.
âIâll put some aside for my - for a friend of mine, her name is Ciara. Sheâs a blood witch. Sheâs really good at her magic too, so if anyone could give you insight on Copper with a finality, itâd be her.â Iann smiled, then tried not to smile, which only made him smile more. He ducked his head, setting up the rest of his own less-magical, more mechanical contraption, including preparing a slide for his microscope.
âIâm pretty sure thereâre some unbelievable things that arenât goodâ, he chuckled, but he still felt some kind of happiness by the fact he got called being unbelievable. It was a word with a pretty nice ring on it.
Rein concentrated on listening Iann, nodding few times here and there, but the mention of Rein living long and how he could go back to his old self, the nymph ended up shaking his head. âI think Iâd rather use the upcoming years for learning more instead of going back. Learn more in good and in bad. But hopefully the future has more of the good things than bad ones.â
He hummed and nodded his head again. It was good Jacob was gone. In a way Rein hoped he wouldâve suffered even more than he seemed to, but Rein really wasnât a creature with ill will. It seemed like only Jacob was worth of his anger and bad thoughts. Rein was quite sure Iann knew that too, knowing how Iann had seen Rein going through emotions during the years. He really wasnât an evil guy, he liked peace way too much to be a horrible person.
As the blood nymph was mentioned, Rein turned to look at Iann. âI think youâve mentioned a blood nymph before. And I think I even then said that a blood nymph sounds a bit worrying. But a blood witch too? Iâve never really heard good things about blood magic..â Especially when controlling blood only made Rein think back to the day when he used his own powers to cause pain to another living being because of the iron in their blood. He shook his head a bit to get that thought out of his head, he definitely didnât like to think back to that day.
Rein gave Copper few more scratches on his head and then walked next to Iann to see what he was going to do. As he stepped there he noticed the smile on Iannâs lips. He squinted his eyes and leaned closer to Iannâs face. âWhatâs that smile for, hmm? It looks shady..â
The Tomcat Doc || Rein&Iann
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scarlettxrubyâ:
Ruby closed her eyes, hoping that maybe she could hear something that would give them some clue about what was happening here. An electrical hum, a vibration, the turning of fans⊠anything. But there was nothing. Just the sounds of the neighborhood and Rein across the way.Â
When the nymph stopped, so did Ruby. She watched her friend as he knelt down, pressing his hand to the ground. When he told her what he felt, Ruby frowned. âA cable?â She looked in the same direction as Rein. Behind the neighborhood was a flat area of open field that bordered the woods in the distance. Between the far end of the field and the forest was a large drainage ditch that carried rainwater away from town. Squatting down next to him, Ruby dug her fingers into the thick layer of turf and grass where Rein said the cable started. She eventually hit concrete, but even after digging up a small area around the site, there was no outward evidence of any sort of port or outlet. âShit.âÂ
When Rein gave his thoughts on how the cable had been hidden, Ruby nodded, chewing her lip in thought. âYou may be right,â she said of whoever had done this hiding their tracks. âIâll get a team out here to see if they can find anything thatâs been covered with magic.â Ruby took a moment to radio in the request. When she was done, she turned back to Rein.
âBut that could definitely explain why the power surge came from here, even though it looks like this.â She gestured at the abandoned lot. âCan you follow it? The cable?â she asked him. âIf we can find where it goes, maybe weâll get some answers.â Hopefully, it wasnât something sinister like⊠a bunker full of alien babies in test tubes. Or anything in test tubes.Â
Rein gave a nod to Ruby when she told sheâd get some people to check out the area. It was good there were people who could do that, it made things a lot easier for sure. In a way Rein was curious to see what kind of people those were and how theyâd be figuring out things, but at the same time he wanted to go furter on solving this mystery. And unfortunately he couldnât be in two places at the same time, so heâd have to choose which he wanted to do.
As Ruby called back to the station Rein tried to figure out where the cable was possibly going. He walked forward, corrected his step if the cable disappeared and eventually it really started to look like that whatever the thing was it was underground and the spot where to get in there was nowhere in this field. So it had to be somewhere else. But where?
When Ruby spoke again, Rein turned on his spot to look at her. âThatâs what Iâm doingâ, he commented when she asked him to follow it, although he did chuckle a bit at it. âIâm quite sure wherever itâs going itâs not on this spot. To get down there you need to go somewhere.. there.â He gestured with his hand somewhere to the direction where he had been going a moment ago. âBut if we keep following Iâm sure itâll come to an end eventually. And hopefully end up to a building or something that makes sense as an entrance.â
âAlien test tubes?â he repeated with a raised brow. âThat sounds.. really movie-like thing. But then again, I donât think anything in this town can surprise me anymore..â He glanced back to the direction where he had been walking to. âShould we continue this way, or check where to cable goes that way?â On âthat wayâ he pointed forwards, past Ruby, while âthis wayâ meant the way he had been walking to already.
wattage you say? || ruby & rein
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faye-savinâ:
Eowyn laughed as Rein ruffled her hair, pleased that she was being helpful. Faye hugged her friend, giving a small laugh of her own. âI love a good greenhouse,â she said, gathering what she could carry when Rein moved off.
Jac hopped out when Rein opened the door, doing a cursory sniff of the new person before sticking his nose to the ground and making a circle of the front yard. Though he never strayed far from Eowyn. He didnât bark or run, just wagged his tail and sniffed everything curiously.Â
The little group headed towards the greenhouse, Wyn chatting to Jac about this and that as the dog trotted at her side. Faye made a sound of approval as the building came into view. âColor me surprised,â she grinned. âYou did this all by yourself?â The greenhouse mightâve been put together using old windows and other things, but it was beautiful. âItâs lovely.âÂ
They moved inside once Rein led the way, and Faye sat the plants down in a safe spot, directing Eowyn to do the same. Jac sniffed around curiously, sneezing a bit as he sucked dirt up his nose. Faye smiled at the dogs antics, and Eowynâs too as she told him not to sniff dirt up his nose and he wouldnât sneeze. But another thought tugged at the back of her mind. âRein⊠Iâve got an odd sorta question. Youâre from Panama, right?â She gave him a moment to answer as he would.Â
âDid you ever meet any⊠other nymphs? Flower nymphs maybe? Orchids specifically. Or⊠nymphs that were created from⊠meteorites? Fallen stars? That sorta thing?â It was an odd question without any other context, but Faye would elaborate if needed.Â
A smile lit on Reinâs lips when Faye said her opinion about the greenhouse. Rein wasnât really someone who cared much about otherâs opinions, but he was proud of the way the greenhouse turned out to be and he was happy to hear he wasnât the only one who liked it. âTuah helped me out with the frames and getting the windows. But I technically did take this whole thing apart few times because I wasnât liking the way it looked, so this end result is all me.â
Once they were inside the greenhouse Rein put the plants from his lap to a table he had built in there. He would probably make more tables and shelves a bit everwhere around the greenhouse as the plants would start growing more. But right now the plant boxes he had made were these rather nice looking metal boxes in multiple different sizes.
He turned to look at Faye with a questioning hum when she said she had a question to ask. Although when she did ask what she wanted to know Rein ended up frowning. âYeah, Iâm from Panamaâ, he confirmed and his frown only got deeper as the questions followed. âIâve met a bunch of nymphs during the years, but a lot more of every other species than nymphs. Weâre weird ones with keeping our own space and itâs like a rare thing if you bump into another nymph.â
Rein went silent for a moment as he tried to dig out facts from his memory. âIâve met few flower nymphs for sure, but I canât say about orchids. And I donât think Iâve heard of a meteorite one. Stones yes, but not meteorite.â Rein titled his head to the side a bit as he looked at Faye. âWhy are you asking?â
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ianncarderoâ:
âWhuââ Iann started to say when Rein nabbed the electric razor from him. He hand was outstretched, but Iann slowly lowered it as he watched the nymph slowly but steadily buzz off his beard, as if on some sort of whim. It was like watching a salt-and-pepper sheep being shorn, and Iann gave a light laugh when he realized Rein seemed content to leave the moustache in tact.
âAhh here - â Iann looked around, then found a hand mirror in one of the toolbox drawers. He held it up, allowing Rein to make sure his work was at least symmetrical, even if it wasnât precise. Only as close as the razor blade allowed. Iann reached out and pet Reinâs coarse, shorn cheek. Â
âNow weâre like twins, at least for a few hours. Because this is all gonna grow back by 5 oâclock,â he joked, feeling oddly fond.  He had no idea why Rein chose to do it, other than perhaps for Iannâs entertainment. Heâd learned that about Rein - the nymph had a performative streak in him. Not just to play songs in front of a crowd, but to do tricks with his metal as well for his friends; and now, apparently, to do harmless but shocking moves.  âYouâre unbelievable, you know that?â
But Iann sobered up as Rein revealed that his feeling of loneliness mightâve increased, since settling down. Iann looked down at Copper, who was staring up at Rein and eventually stood up to rub and preen against the nymphâs arm. Â
âSometimes that happens. Sometimes having no friends seems like a good barrier, because then you donât know how good it feels, or how bad it feels when theyâre not there.â Iann thought about his own life - shorter than Reinâs of course, but there were periods where heâd purposely isolated himself. Then again, Iann considered himself lucky that he rarely felt lonely, even when he was alone. For Rein, it was much different; and to Iann, it seemed infinitely more difficult.
He frowned when Rein brought up the obvious.  âThe only way to bring up that old bastard now is through a seance. And as much as Copper is a cool cat, I donât think itâs worth dragging that fucker up from the afterlife. I doubt heâd even want to talk about Copper anyway, heâd just try to torment you.â
This whole âshave part of your beardâ thing was definitely just something Rein ended up doing in a whim. But he knew beard was just a beard and itâd grow back in a bit. After all, he did buzz cut his hair time to time and sometimes shaved his beard all off and sometimes he let both just grow all wild. In a way it was Reinâs typical looks that it could be anything because he had no reason to keep one look over another. It was like his clothes stayed the same but his facial hair and hair in general could be whatever.
The shaving got a bit easier when Iann gave a mirror -- not that Rein wouldâve minded his beard being all wonky for a bit -- but it definitely was easier to make it look a bt more neat when you had a mirror to stare at. When Iann touched his cheek, Rein looked at him with slightly raised brow, but then chuckled at his words. âJust imagine if itâd grow to the same length exactly at five. Just puff and itâs back.â The amused look softened into a small smile. âI take that youâre calling be unbelievable in a good way.â
Rein looked back at Copper when he pushed his head against his arm and the nymph gave the cat a soft smile and ran his hand along the animalâs back. âIt probably sounds horrible that I was all fine for a bit over hundred years just watching and observing and learning stuff. And when I stopped still and started to learn more I sort of miss those first hundred when I just didnât care and just wondered instead of finding out. But at the same time.. Staying here has made me learn so much about things that are probably all normal to any human or humankind creature. And learn so much more about myself. Iâm thankful for all that, but really, sometimes itâd be just easier to be the old-Rein who cared just about staying invisible to others.â
He kept petting Copper, and clearly petting the cat was making him more relaxed with this whole topic. âHeâd just try to fuck up everything and he doesnât deserve to have a word said ever again. He had a chance to talk and he fucked that shit up.â The brown eyes turned to look at Iann. âSo I think we just have to solve this situation out ourselves.â
The Tomcat Doc || Rein&Iann
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ianncarderoâ:
âThe three caballeros - like that old cartoon,â Iann chuckled as Rein summarized their misadventures in hair and fur (or lack thereof). Reinâs sense of humour was always amusing to Iann, easy for him to go along with most of the time. But then Iann tended to see the humour in a lot of things, albeit sometimes in a different way that Rein did. But their differences were what Iann liked, just as much as their similarities.
âOh no, no. Youâd look swell clean-shaven. Me and Copper on the other hand, weâd look - well weâd both look like shaved cats.â Iann grinned at Copper.  âAm I right or am I right, Cops?â
Reinâs assessment of nymphâs life-giving abilities made Iann want to shake his head and be contrary, offer a different viewpoint to Rein that it didnât have to be creepy. For a nymph to grant life - like a bird nymph, or a flower nymph - made sense to Iann. But then he thought about himself and Miguel, the entity that was their father. Iannâs idea that the thing that called itself Xolotl was no god, but merely an ancient fae. Like a nymph.  Iann closed his mouth and looked grim. Â
He nodded. âYeah, I guess it is a little freakyâŠdepending on how powerful the nymph can get with an ability like that. What they canâŠdo with it.â
It felt better to concentrate and focus on Rein. The metal nymph wasnât the type to be seduced by power, and sometimes Iann believed Rein didnât have the ability to be bad. Metal was neutral, inert until it was exposed to other elements: heat, or cold, or electricity.  Rein had a temper, Iann had witnessed that. But he only became angry, vengeful when he was pressed. His normal state was unreactive, for the most part.
âIf you did create Copper, perhaps you didnât even realize you were doing it,â Iann surmised. He looked at Rein.  âYouâreâŠyou come off as stoic and unfeeling, but I know sometimes you get lonely. Or sad. You feel things, yâknow? Youâve only really consciously realized this yourself. But just because you didnât realize before, doesnât mean you werenât feeling things before. Things likeâŠwant and need. Perhaps a need for companionship.â
Iann exhaled.  âIâm trying to remember if I can remember Copper being around, all those years ago. In the trains, when weâd first met. Do you know anyone else who mightâve known you years ago? Maybe theyâd have a better memory.â
âIâll be the parrot, Copper is the rooster and youâre Donald Duck.â Truthfully, it was most likely that Rein was Donald than Iann, but Rein rather was a parrot than a duck, which was why he even came up with this logic.
Rein raised his brow at Iann comparing himself as a shaved cat without that fuzz on his upper lip. âNahâ, the nymph mused, âYouâd look like a shaved rat.â A thought came in Reinâs head, he grabbed the razor and just for the fun of it started to shave his own beard. He started from his chin and the sides of his mouth, leaving a horrible and long mutton chops and moustache. Shaving his whole face leaving only the moustache left would take time and Rein didnât want to spend that time now. Just getting rid of his beard on his chin was the quickest method. But once he was done with this thing of his he looked at Iann, just to see his reaction to this new creation of his.
As Iann went on about the possibility of Rein being the cause Copper is here, the nymph went silent and you probably could feel how the air around him started to turn colder as Reinâs mood was getting grim. He didnât really want to admit that he indeed was lonely and had been that multiple times. But he knew Iann knew that even without Rein saying anything about it. That was also why he didnât mind showing his actual thoughts to this human either. He knew he could trust Iann and that Iann wouldnât be shittalking about him just because Rein was what he was.
A sigh. âYeah, well.. I donât know is it this place or the fact Iâve stayed still for so long, so Iâve gotten more time to think shit, but I guess that feeling has only gotten worse. Or maybe it has been just me realising it more now than before since Iâm not always on the move keeping myself busy with everything.â He shrugged a bit, just to get that feeling to roll off of his shoulders. Of course he knew just a shrug wouldnât do it, but it helped psychologically. Or something.
He tried to think had Copper been around when he met Iann the first time, but honestly he couldnât remember. âI have no idea. He couldâve and he couldâve not.â He looked up to Iann. âYou know the one name that would know, but that name ainât going to help us.â
The Tomcat Doc || Rein&Iann
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ianncarderoâ:
âI suppose I could shave part of the stache off in solidarity, eh Copper?â Iann said, then reached over to Rein, and pat at the nymphâs chest.  âAnd weâll shave off some of ol Reinyâs thick manly chest rug as well. You think a smiley-face would look good? Me too.â Iann grinned as if he was sharing a laugh with the cat. It was more funny because of how impassive Copper was. Â
âI know, I know. I wish I had a chest rug myself. All I got are scraggly little clumps.â
Reinâs question was certainly interesting, and Iann listened as Rein continued to talk, trying to pinpoint Copperâs origin. Some dark theory coalesced in the back of Iannâs mind; something jeering and mocking and somewhat cruel, but Iann blinked rapidly and it disappeared as if heâd flashed a light into a dark closet. Â
Instead, he spoke strictly about the lighter aspect of theory, as he glanced at Rein.  âYou know how nymphs are embodied - through the reverence and life-energy of people, thatâs poured into any certain element. What ifâŠâ Iann finished drawing blood, hoping it was enough to use as he carefully pulled the needle out and extracted the tube. Â
âWhat if nymphs then had the power to create? You create metal from your own energy, of course.â Rein had demonstrated and experimented with this several times.  âBut a forest nymph, say, could create plants. Plants are life. What if other nymphs can create life through their elements as well? CopperâŠa cat of metal, with life breathed into him by you. Maybe you were subconsciously wanting a companion, and then one day there he wasâŠâ
Iann looked at the blood, then at the fur that Rein had collected into a soft orange pile. His brow furrowed.  âMaybe we didnât even need to take blood, maybe you can see if that fur there isâŠahâŠisnât keratin at all. MaybeâŠmaybe itâs actually very fine, very soft metal.â
Rein looked between Iann and Copper as the two had this conversation and even though the nymph tried his best not to laugh it was impossible. So he just burst into a laughter. âYou with just side moustache, me with a face on my chest and Copper with a patch on his paw. What a great trio.â He shook his head because just the thought of all this sounded ridiculous. But it also did bring an idea to his head. âOr..â he looked at Iann again, raising his brow a bit. âMaybe in solidarity we both shave our beard-moustache -situation and be clean shaven.â The end result of that would most likely be just as funny as random smiley faces on your chest.
He listened Iannâs thought process, looked at Copper and ended up frowning. And then the frowned look turned to Iann, the frown only getting deeper. Soon his face would look like a prune if heâd keep frowning more. âA nymph creating life sounds pretty terrifying, honestly.â Rein was thinking of a nymph creating a living beeing the same way he created small things from metal. Just like creating a form and then it grows organs and gets a face and starts to talk. It actually sounded horrifying.
But as Iann continued the run of his thought and came to the fact of Copper being created from metal, Rein looked at the cat, the pile of fur and the cat again. âThat.. sounds weird. But.. in some way possible..?â Now the frown turned into more of a questioning one. âCould I have power to do such? Create a companion?â The question was sort of for himself, but at the same time he sort of hoped Iann would have some kind of answer to that.
Rein put his hand on Copper, sliding his hand down from his head to his back. âIâve never thought that could be the case. Iâve never even thought does he feel like metal or notâ, Rein turned his gaze to Iann. âCopper has always had the tendency to disappear out of sight when itâs needed, you know, like when I might just disappear in metals when I need to hide for a reason or another. If I accidentally have created Copper, could he be able to do the same?â In a way all this sounded so far fetched, but at the same time Rein sort of hoped it would be true. Because it would be pretty amazing if itâd be the truth of things.
The Tomcat Doc || Rein&Iann
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scarlettxrubyâ:
âItâs a legit thing,â Ruby smiled as they drove. She wouldnât give him a made up title, especially when he was helping her so much, and was so close to the investigation, as it were. Once theyâd arrived, Ruby let Rein look around as he pleased once theyâd gotten permission. When he pointed out the spike itself, Rubyâs eyebrows raised. âWow. Thatâs some difference.â There was no way anything Rein was doing had caused the energy surge. That fact was doubly-secured once he showed her the addition of the greenhouse. Which was barely a blip on scale.Â
Unlike the huge jump that had been reported. Ruby shook her head. âI have no idea. But I guess thatâs our next stop.â Paying a visit to the location of the spike was the next best option. They wrapped up things at the power company - Ruby securing printouts of the surges and their relevant information - and the made the drive out to the address listed, which was in the suburbs of The Holt.Â
âWell, this isnât what I expected.â Ruby glanced curiously at Rein as they got out of the car. There was no house. Only a vacant lot where one used to be. But that didnât mean there was nothing there. Ruby radioed the station asking for more information on the address, and she and Rein made their way towards the empty lot. âCan you sense anything?â she asked the nymph. âAnything under the ground⊠anythingâŠâ She huffed a laugh as she cautiously explored the edges of the small property. â⊠unusual?âÂ
Rein kept comparing the numbers and figures between his own location and this womanâs location and no matter how he tried to see it, there really was no way this woman was using electricity for anything normal. It had to be something big, probably insane in a way. This town had so many weird people living in it and honestly Rein wasnât sure would he be able to get surprised by anything anymore.
As they were leaving the power company, Rein made sure no one would really figure out what exactly he had been looking at -- he didnât want someone coming to his door demanding to know more details about how he gets power to his house. So he made sure to hide his own tracks and pretend he had been looking multiple things instead of that exact one.
The whole drive to the suburbs went by as Rein was trying to think possibilities of where the electricity was even going, but he really couldnât come up with one logical answer. But he damn well hoped theyâd find some kind of explanation. Although there didnât seem to be any logical explanation at the location when they arrived there and Rein just ended up frowning. A lot.
Rein hopped out of the car and just started to walk around the lot, staring at the ground with tha deep frown on his face. Time to time he glanced up in hopes to see something that made sense, but nope, there was basically just trees. The frown only got deeper and he looked at Ruby. âNot really, no-..â but then he stopped in his steps and stared at the spot right under his left shoe. âWait..â He squatted down, put his hand over the grass and then looked up again, clearly seeing something that wasnât really there. âA cable goes from here. To somewhere.â The frown softened a bit as he looked up to Ruby. âThe cable is full of metal wires and this one is rather big bunch. But it has been dug under and considering how the ground looks untouched it has been under for a while. Unless..â he looked at the ground again. âUnless someone has helped her out and hid her tracks with magic or well, help of a nature nymph.â
wattage you say? || ruby & rein
#ruby#// underground bunker filled with ALIENS#// a mad doctor's lab full of glass tubes filled with aliens#// yes
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faye-savinâ:
txt: go for itÂ
txt: I know the feeling. Itâs been five for me. Almost six.Â
txt: see ya.Â
Faye smiled at Rein as he came outside to greet them, and gestured that Rein should grab what he liked from the back. Her arms were full already.Â
Eowyn came over as Rein addressed her directly. âMama said youâre makinâ a⊠a plant house. Soâs we brought babies!â she grinned, holding up her solitary tomato to show the nymph. Jac stuck his head out the window, tail wagging slowly as he watched the new person talk to Eowyn. He wanted out, but he was a Good Boy and wouldnât bark.Â
âHey, you,â Faye said, giving Rein a one-armed hug.  âI hope this isnât too many.â There were at least a dozen of each plant: tomatoes, peppers, and Faye had found a few assorted squash plants in the mix.Â
Rein glanced towards the car and gave Faye a nod. Heâd get the things in a bit, he wanted to change few words with Eowyn first. âYeah, I made a greenhouse and now it needs plants to inhabit it. So itâs good you came here with the baby plants to help me out.â He ruffled the girlâs hair softly and stood up to give Faye a hug. âI think the size of the greenhouse will surprise youâ, he chuckled a bit and then went to the car. Although before he went for the trunk, he stopped at the side door and opened it. âNo need to sit there all alone, Jacâ, Rein said and gestured for the dog to hop out.
The nymph left the side door open for the dog so he could come out if he wanted to, and then went to the trunk pick up as many things as he could carry. âAlright, lets goâ, he said and headed towards the newly built greenhouse. Which technically wasnât that new since Rein used old windows to fill the frames. You didnât really have to walk far from the car when you already saw the pretty huge greenhouse just waiting to be filled with plants.
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xxtuaharjunaxxâ:
Tuah furrowed his brows slightly, lips pursed in thought. âI donât see any reason for you not to have your own familiar,â he commented, glancing towards Rein. âGranted, I donât know much about nymph to make a sound judgment, or about familiars in general, but I donât see the harm in exploring the possibility.â It would certainly be interesting to figure out if Copper could become Reinâs familiar at least, seeing that a nymphâs magic was vastly different from a fairyâs or witchâs. âPerhaps he could be a way for you to explore your own magic? Youâll be the first nymph I know that would have a familiar. Or make it official, anyway. Wouldnât that be something.â
He was mostly rambling, trying to make logical sense to Copper and Reinâs relationship simply for the sake of their current conversation. Whether or not Rein decided to explore them was another matter. He wasnât about to push Rein to do something that he didnât want, not that he could see that the nymph had always done what he wanted instead of following what others. It was one of the things that he liked about Rein. Coming and going at his own pace, never anyone elseâs. âStill, I have to ask,â Tuah moved his shoulders in a shrug, âBringing another pet to someoneâs home is different, I think. Copper might not like it.â
He laughed when Rein teased him again, laughter lines visible on his face as he covered his mouth with his hand. âMi guapo estrella, hm? I do like the stars.â Tuah jostled Rein a little as he slung his hand around the nymphâs shoulders. âIâm not very good with nicknames, but I can always call you lÄÄhaáč.â
Tuah released Rein and tried to act nonchalant when the nymph suddenly agreed with his earlier suggestion. He simply watched as Rein started to move the metal with ease, admiring his friend from the side. Perhaps there was a room for him to convince Rein to measure the glasses before installing them. âYou might want to move it a little bit there.â He pointed to a spot where it would be an almost perfect 90 degree from where he stood, waving his hand as he assisted Rein further. Once the frame seemed to be in place, he took a few steps back and hummed to himself, scratching his cheek. Admittedly, they took half the time it took for professional builders to build the greenhouse. What would take days perhaps a week even, Rein managed to finish it in a day. He glanced at his watch. âLetâs take a break, hm?â Tuah suggested, seeing that the sun had set. âWe can continue building it tomorrow. In the meantime, perhaps we can have dinner together. What do you feel like eating?â
âYeah, Iann said heâd help me out figuring what really is going on. Iâm not sure will he be able to find out the truth, but thereâs a chance anyway.â Rein put a pole on the ground next to Tuah and then looked at him. âBut if Iâd say aloud that Iâm a nymph with an actual familiar, thatâd bring people to my door asking questions and wanting to make tests and whatnot. Iâm not a guinea pig.â Once again it was a clear sign of how Rein liked to keep his personal space and stay on the side of people not really knowing him. âBut whatever the end result is, Iâll let you know because I know you wonât come over to poke me with sticks to find out more.â
As Tuah talked about Nila Rein ended up chuckling. âLike I said, Copper has seen a lot of different animals and creatures and things and heâs all fine. Plus a cat always knows how to get away from a dog if thatâs needed.â Rein glanced towards the house again. âPlus Copper has thought Brass and Tin well, so Iâm sure theyâre all fine too. Tin might even become Nilaâs best friend. Sometimes sheâs too curious for her own good and sheâs definitely the one who would make friends with dogs.â
The nymph turned to look at Tuah again and noticing the laugh a smile lit on Reinâs face. âMy handsome starâ, Rein translated and wrapped his arm around Tuahâs waist as the vampireâs arm went around his shoulders. âI never really come up with nicknames either, but clearly thererâe few exceptions. Or at least one.â He glanced at Tuah with a grin and then looked at the spot for the greenhouse again. âBut okay, lets start working.â
The whole frame building was more of Rein asking Tuah was something in right angle and then him making the other hold something up as heâd get something attached to somewhere else and whatnot. But either way, it was a lot quicker to do with two pair of hands and two pair of eyes than Rein doing all this alone. Once the frame was secured and Rein had made sure it wouldnât fall down he walked back to Tuah and looked at their creation. He was going to say something, but when food was mentioned his attention turned right away to the vampire. âIf youâre going to cook, Iâll eat anything.â It really was nothing new that Rein loved the food Tuah made and he would never say no to those wonderful goods. âLets go inside and check what there even is to cook from.â Rein knew there was always something because his fridge and kitchen cabinets were never empty, but sometimes you had to use your imagination on what youâd create from those things.
Once they were up in Reinâs apartment, all three cats noticed them, Brass rushing to Tuah right away, pushing his head and whole body against Tuahâs legs. Tin brushed her head to Reinâs leg, but then went to Tuah, clearly more excited to see him than Rein. The nymph just chuckled, walked past the windowsill where Copper was sitting, scartched his head softly and then walked to the kitchen to see what there is to cook from.
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