The problem with the fire spell on tub four was relatively easy to fix. That wasn't really the reason Yoka was called out though.
She always had ulterior motives. There was very little that Yoka did or said that hadn't been considered, at least a little. When you've been alive for five hundred years, you had a lot of time to play out scenarios.
Yoka hoped to live out five hundred more. She wanted her immortality.
The problem was that she was already finding it creeping into her life: boredom. She never knew where it was going to come from. She kept doing new things, kept staying busy, working, doing everything she could to remind herself that she wanted to be immortal.
Yoka liked the boys that were here with her. Murphy worked for her and Steven saved her life--that put them both in an area where Yoka had a feeling that she owed them a debt. The problem is that, even though she liked them, even though she valued them....she didn't want to get close.
They were mortal. So was she, technically, but she would probably outlive them.
And if they did live as long as she did, they would probably go to hate each other. She couldn't stand some of her old lovers. Hating her old lovers might have added some meaning to her life, but she was bored of even hating them.
Yoka was out of listening distance. She realized there might have been a problem with her carefully rused plan to use Murphy and Steven, with his fire and ice powers, in the same onsen to see how a magical disaster might affect her safety spells.
There were no cameras.
So she really had no idea to know when, or how, things would go wrong.
Yoka stood in one of the wooden hallways, frozen.
She didn't want to get close to them because they were probably going to die one day. But that didn't mean she wanted to be responsible for their deaths.
@Steven @Omino
She always had ulterior motives. There was very little that Yoka did or said that hadn't been considered, at least a little. When you've been alive for five hundred years, you had a lot of time to play out scenarios.
Yoka hoped to live out five hundred more. She wanted her immortality.
The problem was that she was already finding it creeping into her life: boredom. She never knew where it was going to come from. She kept doing new things, kept staying busy, working, doing everything she could to remind herself that she wanted to be immortal.
Yoka liked the boys that were here with her. Murphy worked for her and Steven saved her life--that put them both in an area where Yoka had a feeling that she owed them a debt. The problem is that, even though she liked them, even though she valued them....she didn't want to get close.
They were mortal. So was she, technically, but she would probably outlive them.
And if they did live as long as she did, they would probably go to hate each other. She couldn't stand some of her old lovers. Hating her old lovers might have added some meaning to her life, but she was bored of even hating them.
Yoka was out of listening distance. She realized there might have been a problem with her carefully rused plan to use Murphy and Steven, with his fire and ice powers, in the same onsen to see how a magical disaster might affect her safety spells.
There were no cameras.
So she really had no idea to know when, or how, things would go wrong.
Yoka stood in one of the wooden hallways, frozen.
She didn't want to get close to them because they were probably going to die one day. But that didn't mean she wanted to be responsible for their deaths.
@Steven @Omino