lake spirits and lost spirits (emy)

Der Lampman

Well-Known Member
Inactive
May 14, 2015
727
@"Emy"

The body had been there for nearly an hour.

A young girl, no older than twenty-three at most, with long brown hair soaked in fresh water, though still smooth, lay on the surface of the lake. She had been floating there for a while, arms splayed out. Her clothes lay on the shore, and there she was drifting, clad in nothing but a simple, plain white two-piece swimsuit. Her eyes were shut, and her skin was glistening in the soft sunlight.

Max was technically supposed to be elsewhere - a secluded corner of the Manta Carlos coastline was her original plan - but she found herself here instead because she got so lost in her thoughts that she ended up physically lost. Finding her way back proved impossible with so much going on in her head that she gave up and simply stripped down and cast herself adrift in the lake.

Outside, the world was peaceful. But inside she was a mess. It was another one of those days where even if there wasn't anything too heavy in her thoughts, there were so many individual thoughts that making sense of them all would be for all intents and purposes impossible. Her recourse was to just... put herself to sleep. That part wasn't quite working out though.

A gentle breeze made her eyes flutter open weakly, and she lazily raised a hand to cover herself from the sunlight streaming onto her face.

Maybe there would be someone or something that could take her mind off things that would come by soon.
 

Emy

Well-Known Member
Inactive
Supporter
Mar 29, 2014
5,389
Virginia, United States
Pronouns
She / Her / Hers
Posting Status
Irregularly
Na Lan Tai Hu

Technology was a bit awful when Na Lan really thought about it. Beyond the obviously terrible aspects -pollution, pollution, pollution, and people getting better at killing each other- there was the slightly troubling over reliance on smaller electronics. Computers, for example, were either a boon to scholars or a well planned assassination of their health. Eyesight, to be specific. The artificial light from the computer screen never failed to give him a headache and there was something just a bit wrong with the idea of a water spirit messing around with something so out its domain.

This was why after ten years at the Academy, Na Lan still turned in his assignments written on scrolls. It had taken a while but after three years or so, he had finally gotten into the habit of writing horizontally. After five, he had finally become confident enough to actually write in English. Four years after officially graduating from the college level, however, he was still stuck writing his Master's thesis because firstly, electronic resources hurt, secondly, he was tired too often these days and thirdly, he wanted to write everything remotely related to his topic. Also apparently it was not in good form to use personal experiences in an academic paper.

Time on the lake was what Na Lan really wanted. Summer was too warm of a season for him to think otherwise but at least it was cooler here than back in China. And, somewhat childishly, he thought that he had done quite enough work on his assignment. He could afford the break.

So that day, Na Lan was contentedly melded with the water. Normally, when he was in a rush, he would retain his more solid form but work was adequately paid attention to for the day and the classes that he continued to sit in on had finished hours ago. He barely noticed the one person floating at the surface, so engrossed in the the temporary freedom of all cares. But on the other hand, he had been in the lake so often that the single displaced element stirred some curiosity.

He waited and waited but that person at the surface seemed content to remain there. After enough time had passed, he collected himself and somewhat hazily drifted upwards, half forming himself a distance away.

"It is not very good for humans to be in the water so long, is it?" Na Lan said. From the waist up, he had manifested his solid form but beneath that, he was still very much part of the water.
 

Der Lampman

Well-Known Member
Inactive
May 14, 2015
727
@"Emy"

Normally, Max would have straightened up a tiny bit out of reflex when someone suddenly rose up from somewhere unexpected, but she felt too listless at the moment. Gently she turned her head, making sure the shift wouldn't suddenly drop her into the water.

It was a curious sight - while blue hair was surprisingly common in Manta Carlos, antlers weren't. As was the fact that he - was it a he? - only seemed to have half a body. Her mind suddenly cleared up, her thoughts replaced by this new entity in the lake. "Maybe I would stop being human if I stayed here long enough..." she said.

Lazily, she twisted herself around and swam to the half torso, moving in closer. She turned herself upright, submerged from the shoulders down, arms floating by her side. Her piercing eyes stared right into his own, then into the rest of the features on his head. She wasn't looking at a normal human, obviously, not even needing any of her other special sights to recognize that.

"Hello. You look beautiful. What are you?"
 

Emy

Well-Known Member
Inactive
Supporter
Mar 29, 2014
5,389
Virginia, United States
Pronouns
She / Her / Hers
Posting Status
Irregularly
Na Lan Tai Hu

He blinked at the girl there almost sleepily and sank a few inches back into the lake. The sun was shining brightly but compared with the rest of the week, it was not bad at all. Still, it was more pleasant to be as far away from it as possible.

"Are you going to turn into one of the mermaids, then?" Na Lan asked innocently. "This lake I freshwater and I think that most would rather prefer salt." He was almost completely certain that dialogue was intended as a joke but the idea of having to share the lake with yet another being made him feel just a bit uneasy. It was already crowded enough as it was and while he was not nearly presumptuous enough to claim it as his own -seeing as it did have its own lake spirit- he still was fairly territorial in that regard.

"Thank you, I think." He said after a thought, with a slight tilt of his head. Compliments were always strange to deal with. "I am a lake spirit, although not of this one. My appearance is considered quite plain among my people, however. You would not think that way if you were to see them."
 

Der Lampman

Well-Known Member
Inactive
May 14, 2015
727
@"Emy"


"No, I can't become a mermaid," Max declared after some silent contemplation. Her next statement was still related, though disjointed and seemingly cold. "People like mermaids."

She let herself float up to the surface again, and lazily paddled herself to the shoreline, and back. Moving around felt great, as if the water confirmed her being alive. Something within it today made it feel different from her normal visits to this particular lake though.

Max then heard Na Lan's answer, and it clicked. Why the lake felt different today... well, today it wasn't just a lake. She was, possibly literally, basking and swimming in this beautiful and ethereal person's presence. "I can see many things, but I can't see them. Your people, I mean."

Her head ducked under the water and her eyes closed, shifting her sight. When they reopened under the water, the vista that greeted her was overwhelming.

Vivid yet somewhat dirtied and darkened blue in every direction, as far as her eyes could see. For a moment she forgot that she was underwater, looking at his spirit as she was. She surfaced, hair glistening as she parted it away from her face. "You... your spirit looks so fascinating. It's so bright and brilliant, so beautiful. But it has a bit of darkness. Like the sky after the rain clears up and there are some clouds left behind, wondering what to do."
 

Emy

Well-Known Member
Inactive
Supporter
Mar 29, 2014
5,389
Virginia, United States
Pronouns
She / Her / Hers
Posting Status
Irregularly
Na Lan Tai Hu

"Mermaids can be a bit strange at times," he said, a seeming non-sequitur to the girl's comment. It was in fact, a very polite way of saying that Na Lan often found them to be silly and sometimes vain. But then again, he supposed that he might feel that way, too if he did not have an empathetic bond with any particular body of water. The freedom must have been nice. "That is not too much of a surprise, unfortunately. Some water spirits are very secretive."

There was silence for a few moments as that girl ducked under the water. Na Lan wondered if she had gone to take a look at the lake natives herself. They were mostly invisible to the naked human eye but if she had some version of the true sight then she might be able to manage it. His thoughts were confirmed when she surfaced again.

"Ah, you can see that?" A very good version of the true sight, then. "That would be the result of pollution in my lake. It can be difficult to deal with The easiest solution to that would be to simply walk away as I have done."
 

Der Lampman

Well-Known Member
Inactive
May 14, 2015
727
@"Emy"

Max broke off from her train of thought to stare at the water spirit without the lenses of her special sight. The antlers greatly attracted her attention, and she tried reaching out to touch them, to no avail. Unlike him, she could only bring her body furom the shoulders up above the water.

"I don't understand," she muttered, still trying to reach his antlers. "You look like you've been poisoned deep inside but you're still here, still intact. How did you..? To be so radiant even after all that..."

Max raised her arms, pausing momentarily from attempting to touch he antlers. "I look at my own hands and see nothing... I look at my face and see nothing either. Sometimes I think I'm empty because of history, but you... you have been through more than my eyes will see, and you're still so full of life."
 

Emy

Well-Known Member
Inactive
Supporter
Mar 29, 2014
5,389
Virginia, United States
Pronouns
She / Her / Hers
Posting Status
Irregularly
Na Lan Tai Hu

For a little while, Na Lan had no idea what this girl was trying to accomplish. From time to time, his horns did catch people's attention but usually observers were more restrained about touching them. It was not that he particularly minded, as long as one was not seeking to break them, but the comfort that was tradition made him slow to the fact that Oh, yes. This is rather unusual for normal humans, is it not? With a bit of a sheepish hesitance, he sank more into the lake, just enough to close the distance from her fingers.

"As long as you do not bend them," he told her after a moment of slow thought. "The growths take quite some time to return, far longer than your lifespan, maybe longer than that of your great grandchild." He paused for a beat before continuing, "You understand, we are not the same, you and I. It would be unfair to draw comparisons. But where you see fullness in age, I, at times, see deterioration. Both are present, of course, but be mindful of the errors in those generalizations."

The spirit gestured a little to the lake around them. "You see this lake and perceive it as a great body of water. But I assure you that the lake itself sees not a thing at all. People are much in the same way."
 

Der Lampman

Well-Known Member
Inactive
May 14, 2015
727
@"Emy"

Max gently wrapped her fingers around the antlers that she could now reach, thoroughly entranced and thoroughly ignoring what little hesitation she had. The sensation was strange, almost abstract. It was as if she was touching history itself made manifest.

Careful not to accidentally break the antlers, Max cautiously withdrew her fingers and stared at them again. They were still the same, and a cursory look-through with her other ways of seeing the world still showed nothing. "Still empty..." she mused.

"You understand that we are not the same, you and I."

"What makes us so different?" she asked. It was a question that had for the longest time burned in the back of her mind. Difference had long left her separate from the people she knew, and difference's definition had long eluded her. "Is it because you have antlers and can become one with the water? Is it because your soul is radiant unlike mine, which refuses to be seen? If I also had antlers and a radiant soul and the ability to merge with this water, would we be the same then?"

Max moved backward a bit, letting her head drop back into the water and casting herself adrift once more. She thought of his words and stared into her hands again. Maybe she was just too close to things to see them, like the case was with her own nose that was always there but hidden from the eyes. "...and what does this lake call itself?"
 

Emy

Well-Known Member
Inactive
Supporter