It was quiet in the art room today and Rori was somewhat regretful that there didn't seem to be anyone else around. But he had come here for a reason, so maybe it was for the best that he not be distracted for the moment. Learning to write was taking way too long in the mirror spirit's opinion, and even though he could theoretically mouth out everything, he knew reading lips was hard and required a bit of concentration. So he had to be creative, and right now that meant miming and drawing. It was so frustrating to have so many questions just trapped inside himself.
So Rori had come here to practice what looked like it was going to be his main form of communication for awhile. Perhaps he should work on learning to write better instead, but he already was spending so much time on that, and he had heard someone say that a picture was worth a thousand words anyways. The boy's hand-eye coordination was pretty decent considering that he'd only had hands and eyes for a month, and he had a great concept of shapes and space. He probably could be an artist if he worked at it, but for communication purposes, stick figures were quick and easy. He just needed to figure out how to position them. He also needed to figure out a way to express emotion, which was one thing drawing really didn't seem to help much with.
Before he actually started to practice, though, he wanted to put down some things for quick communication, so he would have something on hand to start with. He grabbed a notepad and a pencil and began writing down things he would need. The first page was 'RORI' written in his mirror-style writing. The second page was a backwards question mark. He hadn't gotten much farther than that when he thought he heard someone come in and looked at the door to see who it was.
So Rori had come here to practice what looked like it was going to be his main form of communication for awhile. Perhaps he should work on learning to write better instead, but he already was spending so much time on that, and he had heard someone say that a picture was worth a thousand words anyways. The boy's hand-eye coordination was pretty decent considering that he'd only had hands and eyes for a month, and he had a great concept of shapes and space. He probably could be an artist if he worked at it, but for communication purposes, stick figures were quick and easy. He just needed to figure out how to position them. He also needed to figure out a way to express emotion, which was one thing drawing really didn't seem to help much with.
Before he actually started to practice, though, he wanted to put down some things for quick communication, so he would have something on hand to start with. He grabbed a notepad and a pencil and began writing down things he would need. The first page was 'RORI' written in his mirror-style writing. The second page was a backwards question mark. He hadn't gotten much farther than that when he thought he heard someone come in and looked at the door to see who it was.