A Piece of Cake [poppu]

Zell

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Dec 28, 2014
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Wei didn't like it when Hari wrapped gauze around his injured arm. Though, looking at the smiley sticker on his gauze, it did cheer him up a little bit about the whole thing.

Well, not really, but he guessed getting a nice sticker out of the whole thing was better than getting nothing at all, so he wouldn't even try to complain.

Hearing Hari clear his throat got his attention and he listened as Hari spoke in his language, not quite getting the intonation right and flat out supplanting the English word 'baking' into the sentence twice. He wasn't so sure how he felt about being called a big monkey butt but all the same--

"Shao," he said effortlessly. "Shao is the word you'd use for baking food."

Still, he wasn't so certain... after all, just because he was invited didn't mean he wasn't ruining everything and getting in the way. He pushed those thoughts out of his mind for the moment, sliding a small smile on his face to at least get Hari's concerns off of him for the time being.

"How long does it bake for?" He asked.
 

Poppy

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Hari laughed. "My Chinese is so rusty! It's been three years since I took that language elective. Mostly I just remember the section about directions and adjectives. Like..." He cleared his throat, reviewing his Chinese again. "Which way to the airport? or I have brown hair and green eyes. See, perfect?"

It wasn't perfect, actually. Hari had a bit of a Japanese accent when speaking Chinese, so the intonation of certain words completely boggled him, but grammatically, he was fine. He noticed Wei was still a bit down in the dumps, so he pulled out a sticker of a flower from his pocket and put it on Wei's face.

He checked his wrist watch. "Hmm. Forty-five more minutes. I'll make us a snack while we wait." He opened the refrigerator door and pulled out two giant dark chocolate chip cookies he made the other day. He put some whipped cream on top of both, with some of the leftover mushed bananas and corn flakes. He gave Wei one. "Here you go."
 

Zell

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"Yes," Wei said softly, his smile not reaching his eyes. "Yes, it's perfect."

Another sticker was put on his face, but he wasn't totally sure what it was. The monkey boy tilted and squrimed and arched, screwing up his eyes to get a look at what exactly he'd just had poked onto his face and for what reason. Well, he guessed he understood the /reason/--he wanted to make him feel better. And what better way to get someone out of the dumps than to poke their faces with stickers?

Wei took the cookie from Hari and bit into it, feeling the whipped cream enter his nose but not particularly worrying about it.

Forty-five minutes until the bread would be done. What could he do for 45 minutes?

"Since you can't eat a lotta stuff," he started, his English stabilizing and his enunciation improving since switching languages. "What is okay for you to eat?"
 

Poppy

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"A lot of things. I can eat most meats, fruits and vegetables. I get a weird reaction from soy, and I'm not allergic to spicy things or pineapples but they make me really sick. I also kind of like beef? I'm like the worst Hindi ever." He laughed, taking a bite of his cookie.

Noticing almost none of his admittedly bad cheer up techniques were working, he sighed and placed a hand on Wei's shoulder. "All right, Wei. What's wrong? This is like the complete opposite of how we should go. I'm the sad one, remember?"
 

Zell

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The little monkey listened closely as Hari talked about what he could eat and what made him sick, nodding occasionally to show he was listening. This was weird, he realized in the middle of Hari's sentences. It was usually him who carried their conversations, talking about home and his big brother and his mom and what his hometown was like, letting him remember them in a sweet way through rose-tinted glasses of better times.

But it was weird, he realized, that Hari was carrying their conversation now. He was used to Hari asking a question and Wei answering his question immediately, even if it cut in the middle of another sentence he was saying.

And apparently Hari noticed this as well.

How would he explain to Hari how lonely he was most of time, how much he missed the orange cliffs and dry heat of home? How could he explain that he wasn't smart enough to come to this school, and that he was having good day if he came back to his room with only one F jostling in his backpack? How could he explain that even though he only spoke two languages, the two languages jostled in his head and stepped on each other's toes, and that reading a book in English was such a struggle that he hadn't picked one up in weeks.

Not even his text books?

"I'm fine." He said, biting into the big cookie again to occupy his mouth. "I've just been on edge. School's hard."
 

Poppy

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"School is hard," he assured, his reply barely above a whisper. "I'm a lot more talented in Academic stuff, I'll admit, but do you know what really kicks my ass most of the time? For the longest time, it was adjusting to English. After that, group work. Presentations. P.E. I used to be running for Valedictorian in High School, but there was this big, glaring F for P.E. in all of my report cards, so I didn't even make the top three cut. I used to cry about it all the time. It wasn't my fault my body was dying out on me.

"It seems to me that school sets people to impossible standards. You have to be smart! You have to be good at memorizing, but good at analysis as well! Not TOO good, because anti-establishment answers are strongly discouraged! You have to be both creative and logical, strong and smart, respectful and charismatic. My God. The Multiple Intelligences study has been legitimized and out for years, but Education Systems all around the world are so behind the times that they're still subjecting poor, hormonal teenagers to that kind of torture. Wei..."

He ruffled his thick, fluffy hair. "I'm sorry I went on a rant there. But you're smart. You're brilliant, actually. You have a strong, empathetic personality for someone your age and you're very athletic. You're creative and you're not afraid to look at things in a different angle. You're adjusting to human society fairly easily! But this school is measuring you with the wrong stick, making you feel bad about yourself when you shouldn't. You shouldn't! You're great. If you ever need some extra help or if you're ever feeling sad or lonely, you know where to find me, all right?"
 

Zell

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In truth, school was only about half the problem. He was starting to get this recurring nightmare every so often that was really impeding his ability to have a good night's sleep, coupled with his homesickness and sickening displays of romance and overt sexual-ness of the campus around him, it put him in an awkward and rather uncomfortable place. It had affected him so much that he'd had to go to the infirmary for it, where the nurse misdiagnosed it as simply an upset stomach and gave him some medicine before letting him fall asleep on the bed in the office.

She ignored his insistence that it wasn't his stomach, but rather an allergy.

When he mentioned adjusting to human society, Wei gave a little shrug. "There's not much to adapt to," he said quietly, folding his toes and finishing his cookie. "Turpan City had a lot of people people. The only difference is if people people saw me in Turpan they would call animal control."

Then Hari said the few words that Wei both really wanted to hear but also really didn't want to hear. Wei liked Hari. He helped him bake and gave him food and didn't make him feel bad and worried about him like a weird mix of Houlin and Mama. He was comforting and supportive, but still Wei couldn't fight a sense of unwieldy and looming unease.

The monkey trusted him completely yet...

Yet...

Wei smiled, his showing his canines and giving an emphatic nod, his whole outlook seeming to change instantly. "I'll climb the wall if I ever need you!"

The familiar smell of banana bread entered his nose and he hopped over to the oven, sniffing at it haughtily, not unlike how a dog or a cat would inspect a vacuum cleaner or a broom they'd just been swatted with. "Is it done? Is it done?"
 

Poppy

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Hari scratched off the almost instantaneous burst to his little friend's cheerful personality. He couldn't bounce back like that, but he believed that Wei could.

"I'm moving to a different room in a week at my doctor's insistence. He said it would be smarter for me to get a roommate considering..." He sighed. "Last time's incident. I don't know, it's not a fun thing, but I'll give you the room number when I get it. Whatever way you want to come in, please knock first, I don't want to scare him to death with my monkey friend."

Hari checked the clock. "Ten minutes more. It's still rising. It'll be smaller than the usual, but it looks like it's coming along great!"
 

Zell

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He frowned at when he said that it wouldn't be done for another ten minutes, but he supposed that he'd waited this long, he could wait a little while longer. Wei trotted back to his seat and plopped into it, drawing his feet up to the lip of the chair, his dexterous toes curling around the edge to give him a bit more grip.

"You're getting a roommate?" He asked, intrigued. He wondered what kind of person Hari would be able to live with if contact was a problem. Maybe someone who needed to live in a plastic bubble, like the kind he saw on TV. Either way, he wanted to meet Hari's new roommate. Maybe if he made friends with the guy they could have sleepovers.

"I don't have a roommate," he said, giving his head a small tilt. "They tried to give me one, but no one wanted to room with me. Apparently I scream too much."
 

Poppy

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"Yes." Hari shrugged. "I don't want a roommate, but I'm getting one. Other than his name, I don't really know who he is. But he will be receiving a memo on my power situation, and I can't imagine we'll be doing much touching to begin with."

He fully intended to ignore his roommate and let him go on with his life without interacting with him much. Just because he would be tasked with checking up on him once in a while didn't mean he should get swept up in his life. Whoever this 'Sebastian' was didn't deserve that.

Hari checked the clock. Five minutes. "Why... do you scream a lot in your room? Is it a monkey thing or a nightmare thing?"
 
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