1 Set Fire to the Rain [Invite Only | No Kill] Mon Feb 15, 2016 9:31 am
Harue
D-rank
Cold was the night, and Harue spent it in her apartment like she did most days, following a day of D-ranks.
Harue’s apartment was small. Of course, this was simply judged by Konoha’s standards. To her, her apartment was absolutely enormous, considering she had come from a small, nameless village that could barely even compare with Konoha in size and technology, among others.
Her apartment was roughly thirteen metres long by eight metres wide, with the ceiling extending up to slightly beyond four metres. If one were to look at her apartment from a bird’s eye view, it would be easiest to imagine it as a rectangle - not a perfect one, but a rectangle nonetheless - with the vertical length spanning thirteen metres, while the horizontal length spanning eight metres.
At the bottom right of the apartment would be her bedroom. It would be five metres long by three metres wide. Squashed to the left wall would be her bed, the blue blanket dotted with starry patterns strewn about, unmade since a few days ago. The blanket itself blended in well with her bedsheets, her pillow case, and her bolster, since they were all just different shades of blue. Her pillow was the only thing at its place at the head of the bed, with the bolster for some reason on the floor beside her bed. She suspected Nikko had something to do with that. Right beside her bed was her light brown bedside table, made of polished wood with two cupboards and then standing on four curved legs, with an alarm clock perched on it, angled so it was slightly facing the bed. On the wall opposite that where her bed lay flush against was her wardrobe, coloured tawny to light brown, the same shade as her bedside table. After the house cleaning she had gone through a few days ago, it looked splendid, with the four drawers, two by two, at the bottom of it closed with no clothing sticking out, and the slider above it also shut.
Occupying the bottom right of her house, from the bird’s eye view as mentioned before, would be her living room. It was eight metres long by five metres wide, and it was conventionally what she referred to as ‘the bottom left part of her apartment where she spent most of her free time lounging around doing absolute jack’. The the left, against the wall, rested her flat screen television, placed above a wooden table that housed the receiver on a small shelf below the TV, while it housed two speakers on either side of the television. Her television was a sleek black in colour - she knew it was one of the latest models on the market, in both design and functionality - while her shelf was a shade of light brown, also of polished wood and also one of the most expensive money could buy. Two vases flanked the shelf on either side, both having the same design - sapphire blue against a pale blue, almost white, background depicting a dragon fighting off against a traditional spearman. Both vases also housed bright white and orange Jofuku flowers that she had bought from the local Yamanaka Flowers store. Unlike wild ones, these were processed, promising not to intoxicate victim who inhaled its pollen, released when uprooted. In front of her television was a tortilla-coloured nylon sofa, facing the television, while the floor was of a tawny brown, polished but not slippery, and mostly hidden underneath a dark blue carpet that covered most of the living room.
Beyond her living room, at the top left of her house, was her kitchen-slash-dining room. It was five-by-five, and its space was evidently separate by that of her living room with a narrow wooden counter topped with a marble platform. Above it was a small transparent glass bowl that contained some miso soup, from the ramen she had cooked for dinner, with the chopsticks she had used resting atop the bowl itself, placed together. The counter itself extended from right angles to the wall, and was attached at one end - the end nearer to the wall - to a set of kitchen cabinets, all the same shade and material as the wood in her bedroom, save the top, which like her counter was a brilliant and familiar white shade of marble. Above the cabinets were the sink, stove, and oven, all pressed against the wall located at the right of her kitchen, while at the top of her kitchen and consequently the top of her apartment was the slate gray fridge, while the floor in the kitchen consisted of a marble-tiled floor of varying patterns of white and black.
Harue plopped down on the couch after having enjoyed her ramen dinner, before turning on the television. Nikko curled up beside her, one eye fixated on the television screen, while the other remained closed, and she couldn’t tell if he was sleeping or watching the television, even if should have been obvious with Nikko.
She heard the soft pitter patter of rain against the outside of her apartment, and felt laziness creep up on her as she leaned deeper into her couch. Resting like this was always a good way to end the day, even if the apartment didn’t belong to her, but rather a woman who went by the name of Kochiyo Yamasaki. However, the latter had disappeared into the field for several years, and was not slated to return for several more, so the landlord of this particular set of apartments, Yoshiaga Gakusha, had decided to rent it out to her. Despite the very likely possibility of her needing to leave this apartment, though, Harue had taken the liberty of making this feel as much as home as possible, buying some extra furniture to complement the feel of the place, though definitely not as expensive as any of Kochiyo’s.
The couch was just one example, Harue thought, as she glued her eyes to the television screen, watching some cheesy late night romance show and enjoying the sound of the rain outside, even as it got heavier and heavier.
WC: 1034
Harue’s apartment was small. Of course, this was simply judged by Konoha’s standards. To her, her apartment was absolutely enormous, considering she had come from a small, nameless village that could barely even compare with Konoha in size and technology, among others.
Her apartment was roughly thirteen metres long by eight metres wide, with the ceiling extending up to slightly beyond four metres. If one were to look at her apartment from a bird’s eye view, it would be easiest to imagine it as a rectangle - not a perfect one, but a rectangle nonetheless - with the vertical length spanning thirteen metres, while the horizontal length spanning eight metres.
At the bottom right of the apartment would be her bedroom. It would be five metres long by three metres wide. Squashed to the left wall would be her bed, the blue blanket dotted with starry patterns strewn about, unmade since a few days ago. The blanket itself blended in well with her bedsheets, her pillow case, and her bolster, since they were all just different shades of blue. Her pillow was the only thing at its place at the head of the bed, with the bolster for some reason on the floor beside her bed. She suspected Nikko had something to do with that. Right beside her bed was her light brown bedside table, made of polished wood with two cupboards and then standing on four curved legs, with an alarm clock perched on it, angled so it was slightly facing the bed. On the wall opposite that where her bed lay flush against was her wardrobe, coloured tawny to light brown, the same shade as her bedside table. After the house cleaning she had gone through a few days ago, it looked splendid, with the four drawers, two by two, at the bottom of it closed with no clothing sticking out, and the slider above it also shut.
Occupying the bottom right of her house, from the bird’s eye view as mentioned before, would be her living room. It was eight metres long by five metres wide, and it was conventionally what she referred to as ‘the bottom left part of her apartment where she spent most of her free time lounging around doing absolute jack’. The the left, against the wall, rested her flat screen television, placed above a wooden table that housed the receiver on a small shelf below the TV, while it housed two speakers on either side of the television. Her television was a sleek black in colour - she knew it was one of the latest models on the market, in both design and functionality - while her shelf was a shade of light brown, also of polished wood and also one of the most expensive money could buy. Two vases flanked the shelf on either side, both having the same design - sapphire blue against a pale blue, almost white, background depicting a dragon fighting off against a traditional spearman. Both vases also housed bright white and orange Jofuku flowers that she had bought from the local Yamanaka Flowers store. Unlike wild ones, these were processed, promising not to intoxicate victim who inhaled its pollen, released when uprooted. In front of her television was a tortilla-coloured nylon sofa, facing the television, while the floor was of a tawny brown, polished but not slippery, and mostly hidden underneath a dark blue carpet that covered most of the living room.
Beyond her living room, at the top left of her house, was her kitchen-slash-dining room. It was five-by-five, and its space was evidently separate by that of her living room with a narrow wooden counter topped with a marble platform. Above it was a small transparent glass bowl that contained some miso soup, from the ramen she had cooked for dinner, with the chopsticks she had used resting atop the bowl itself, placed together. The counter itself extended from right angles to the wall, and was attached at one end - the end nearer to the wall - to a set of kitchen cabinets, all the same shade and material as the wood in her bedroom, save the top, which like her counter was a brilliant and familiar white shade of marble. Above the cabinets were the sink, stove, and oven, all pressed against the wall located at the right of her kitchen, while at the top of her kitchen and consequently the top of her apartment was the slate gray fridge, while the floor in the kitchen consisted of a marble-tiled floor of varying patterns of white and black.
Harue plopped down on the couch after having enjoyed her ramen dinner, before turning on the television. Nikko curled up beside her, one eye fixated on the television screen, while the other remained closed, and she couldn’t tell if he was sleeping or watching the television, even if should have been obvious with Nikko.
She heard the soft pitter patter of rain against the outside of her apartment, and felt laziness creep up on her as she leaned deeper into her couch. Resting like this was always a good way to end the day, even if the apartment didn’t belong to her, but rather a woman who went by the name of Kochiyo Yamasaki. However, the latter had disappeared into the field for several years, and was not slated to return for several more, so the landlord of this particular set of apartments, Yoshiaga Gakusha, had decided to rent it out to her. Despite the very likely possibility of her needing to leave this apartment, though, Harue had taken the liberty of making this feel as much as home as possible, buying some extra furniture to complement the feel of the place, though definitely not as expensive as any of Kochiyo’s.
The couch was just one example, Harue thought, as she glued her eyes to the television screen, watching some cheesy late night romance show and enjoying the sound of the rain outside, even as it got heavier and heavier.
WC: 1034