http://pixietea.livejournal.com/ (
pixietea.livejournal.com) wrote in
towerofanimus2011-09-08 08:46 pm
Entry tags:
(no subject)
Characters: England and all you positively insufferable wonderful people!
Setting: Floor Three
Format: Starting with prose/paragraph/whatever you want to call it, but I'll match.
Summary: Apparently the Shakespeare collections he brought with him aren't enough -- actually finding the library in this godawful place was a small blessing.
Warnings: Language, most likely, gosh England that's so improper (also mild suggestive themes, courtesy of him and fem!France)
The kingdom breathed a minor sigh as he turned the page, away from the inquiries of comedians and further into the tale of one 'Cesario'. A stack of books flanked each side of the open copy of Twelfth Night on the table; one stack for the books he had finished (currently, about three), and a stack for the ones that had not yet been opened.
Getting down to this floor had been a nightmare. England didn't mind stairs -- he was no lazy American, after all -- but this was just ludicrous. The place was a scientific disaster and a magical marvel. He was less disturbed by the physical impossibility than he was by the chance of hostile supernatural figures lingering about. It didn't take a mage adept to realize that a place like this could easily have them, just by looking at the way the tower defied physics and logic.
But at least he'd suffered no loss of limb nor any encounters with anyone he'd rather not meet with on the way down here. And, thus far, he'd had no significant disturbances.
Now all he needed to do was just stop thinking about the damn building and relax enough to enjoy what he was reading.
Setting: Floor Three
Format: Starting with prose/paragraph/whatever you want to call it, but I'll match.
Summary: Apparently the Shakespeare collections he brought with him aren't enough -- actually finding the library in this godawful place was a small blessing.
Warnings: Language, most likely, gosh England that's so improper (also mild suggestive themes, courtesy of him and fem!France)
The kingdom breathed a minor sigh as he turned the page, away from the inquiries of comedians and further into the tale of one 'Cesario'. A stack of books flanked each side of the open copy of Twelfth Night on the table; one stack for the books he had finished (currently, about three), and a stack for the ones that had not yet been opened.
Getting down to this floor had been a nightmare. England didn't mind stairs -- he was no lazy American, after all -- but this was just ludicrous. The place was a scientific disaster and a magical marvel. He was less disturbed by the physical impossibility than he was by the chance of hostile supernatural figures lingering about. It didn't take a mage adept to realize that a place like this could easily have them, just by looking at the way the tower defied physics and logic.
But at least he'd suffered no loss of limb nor any encounters with anyone he'd rather not meet with on the way down here. And, thus far, he'd had no significant disturbances.
Now all he needed to do was just stop thinking about the damn building and relax enough to enjoy what he was reading.

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Until she had to bring up the book, anyways.
He flushed darkly and sputtered without success for a few moments before finally getting out anything coherent. "A-absolutely not! I don't like anything of America's, especially not his...his...works of that nature!"
Not that he actually read R-rated American romances, of course.
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She holds the book a bit closer to Arthur's face, a blatant challenge.
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"I've read American 'literature', and have rarely found quality in any of it," he retorted a bit too quickly. "It only makes sense to assume that the...romances would be just as awful."
And then, remembering something, he made a quick amendment: "You proved my theory well enough, reading that trash out loud."
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"Care to read the whole book? Who knows, perhaps the plot is worthwile?"
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He peered down at the book with a mildly indignant expression, lip curling slightly at the corner as if it disgusted him to be touched by it. "I would rather not, thank you. You're welcome to it, if you'd like."
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Not to mention they sometimes give her interesting ideas, but anyway.
"Does Francis give you this much trouble?"
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"More, as it were," was the answer to that, delivered with a roll of the eyes. "I don't doubt he might have tried getting handsy with me by this point. Or otherwise propositioned me in some fashion."
And then, a scoff. "Or perhaps he would have just insulted me a great bit more, hell if I bother myself to know his preferences."
By his accounts, other-France is already much more tolerable than her male counterpart.
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And the eyebrows were deterring her, just a bit.
She smiled at Arthur's comments, a sad look entering her eyes before she quickly masked it. "Sounds like how I interact with Anglettere. I usually stop once she's slapped me across the face though."
Was that a wistful tone? Of course not.
"Have you seen Francis since you arrived?"
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As England listened to her speak, he caught an undertone of...something, in her voice. He didn't know her very well, so he couldn't quite pinpoint it, but that nameless thing filled him with quiet sympathy nonetheless.
Between his reflexive repulsion at her perversions and the weird sympathy he was feeling, England saw it wisest not to remark on her attentions to her "Angleterre". Instead, he latched on to the question, the answer to which was much easier to articulate than any show of kindness.
"Fortunately, I have not." He didn't bother to conceal the disgust in his words regarding his France. "I've spent most of my time here reading."
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At the mention of reading one of her eyebrows arched up. "Just reading? I mean, reading is a soothing hobby, but..." She'd get too restless from just reading.
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"I can't say I return the sentiment, if that does happen to be the case," England claimed. "Though I'll consider it, if only to see to him squirming." He definitely didn't miss the froggy bastard, but it was almost eerie to be without him. Which wasn't something England would vocalize. But it was true.
He looked away from the other nation's hand to her face. "Mostly reading," confirmed the kingdom. "As well as sorting out both my belongings and my bearings."
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She crossed her arms with a sigh and added, "As such, best to keep your weapons on hand. Far too easy to run into nasty creatures here..."
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But he made no comment about weapons, as the mention of the building's architecture finally seemed to sink in. His eyebrows furrowed. "It's been growing?" queried the Englishman with intrigue.
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Arms crossing again, she looked to the side, suddenly appearing interested in the book spines lining the shelf. "... There's something else too. Residents come and... Go. Espagna was gone for a while, but when she returned, she said she'd apparently been in our destroyed world. Then one of my roommates disappeared, and when she reappeared, she didn't remember anything of the tower, her memories just gone."
Her hand tightened around the book and her voice lowered. "... Amelia, our America, has now gone missing..."
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Francisca had his rapt attention when she began to talk again. His throat went dry at the word 'America'.
America is missing. Not his America (and god, would he react this way if it had been?), but--
His heart pulled a little as he murmured out a quiet, "I'm sorry," voice tight where he tried to keep from sounding too emotional. He had to convince himself that just because one America was missing didn't mean they all were before he was able to continue. "When was the last time you saw her?"
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Some protector she was.
She glanced up and gave England a wan smile. "Ah, but Alfred is still around... He protected Madeline and Amelia during the blackout."
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So he used them. "...come now," he began, his voice some semblance of gentle. "If your America is anything like mine, then that child can lift a car with one hand and has the stamina of youth on her side." ...and then he gave a resigned sigh. "And -- I never said this, by the way -- America is intelligent when he wants to be. I'd imagine your...Amelia is similar."
He fidgeted with his hands for a moment before lacing them together to hold behind his back, clearing his throat. "...so, you needn't fret so terribly. I'm sure she shall be fine."
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She acted as if she hadn't done anything, laughing quietly as she smoothed the cover of the book in her hands. "No doubt she'll whinge about there not being a McDonald's if- when she get's back."
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"I-- well," he finally got out, averting his eyes with a small "ahem". "You're-- you're welcome, I suppose." He was too softhearted sometimes, honestly.
England couldn't help but make a face at that (even if McDonald's wasn't really that bad, it was just the quantity that America consumed which was disgusting). "Well, it'll do both Americas some good to not be able to eat that rubbish for a little while," he remarked flippantly, attempting to keep in good humor (as good as his got, anyways) for France's sake.
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"Well, at least they manage to stay fit despite all that... 'food'. Though, I always attributed Amelia's slim physiques to taking my advice on weight-loss~" That is, the kind that involved exercising in bed. Vigorously. The comment was accompanied with one of her rather suggestive smirks, lest England should take the 'advice' in any other way.
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Of course, her smirk shot all his hard work down the drain, and his face flared up again at the implications. "I--" A few atrociously ungraceful syllables based on no coherent sentence left him, because that was America she was talking about, and his brain couldn't even process that in any situation with any bit of reason, much less give him something intelligent to say about it.
"--I-I can't say I've ever thought about it," was what he eventually managed to spit out, shifting awkwardly on his feet and trying futilely to hide his crimson face.
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