1 A Day in the Playgrounds [Open | No Kill] Tue Feb 02, 2016 12:23 pm
Lyralei Wind
D-rank
Sunagakure was such a… It was such a… Well, there was really no one adjective to describe such a place, Lyralei thought.
The orange-haired girl paused in her step in front of a small playground. It was only five metres by five metres wide, demarcated by red bricks that contrasted the golden sand, and filled with all sorts of playground equipment. She spotted a slide, a set of swings, and a merry-go-round, though the space was lacking given the small size of the playground. She took a few dainty steps towards one of the swings and tugged lightly on the chains. They held. Satisfied the swings weren’t going to (at least, probably not) fall beneath her weight, she dusted off some sand from the plastic seat and sat down, before swinging gently and lightly back and forth.
It had been so long since she had begun her travels, and she had really only seen the Land of Fire, the Land of Wind, and Sunagakure. She didn’t much count the many small villages she frequented in the Land of Tea or the Land of Noodles, since there really wasn’t much to see there apart from the typical tourist attraction that wasn’t really that attractive.
She would have stopped by Konoha, but unfortunately, some old merchant had hired her to take his caravan to the borders of the Land of Fire, close to the southwestern portion, and that had left her closer to the Land of Wind than Konoha itself. Curiosity getting the better of her senses, Lyralei had travelled to the Land of Wind before promptly realising that the rumours, the map, and word of mouth had been utterly and ridiculously pinpoint accurate.
The Land of Wind was nothing but sand and sand and sand dunes for miles. The only places that she could find oases had always been populated by people. Well, of course, they wanted water to drink and place to live, and who wouldn’t settle in a place that catered to both those needs? Some of the small oases she had passed by on her way to Suna had left a very poor impression of the country on her though - sexist or perverted, you name it - but now that she had arrived in Suna, it wasn’t as bad as she thought.
Sunagakure was every bit the advanced metropolitan village that she had hoped it would be, and that she had read about in magazines and documentaries. The people here were far more civilized as well. Ignoring the red light district, you never (well, almost never) had that one perverted old geezer who tried to cop a feel while in public.
She pushed a little harder on the swing, and felt herself rock back and forth. It almost reminded her of her childhood where her mother and father would accompany her into the nearby town whenever they decided to get groceries, and her mother would always stay with her on the playgrounds pushing her on the swings or catching her at the bottom of the slides. Her mother would even support her as she hung upside down on the monkey bars, before pretending to let go and catching her and the last second before she fell onto the ground. Fond, fond memories, which almost made her want to go back to her parents.
Almost was the keyword in both those scenarios.
While she didn’t hate them, she didn’t feel any familial connection to them any more, not since she learned that she had been adopted.
She pushed a little harder on the swing, ignoring the looks that a few passers-by gave her, wondering what an adult like herself was doing on the swings, as she decided to plan her next travel destination.
WC: 635
The orange-haired girl paused in her step in front of a small playground. It was only five metres by five metres wide, demarcated by red bricks that contrasted the golden sand, and filled with all sorts of playground equipment. She spotted a slide, a set of swings, and a merry-go-round, though the space was lacking given the small size of the playground. She took a few dainty steps towards one of the swings and tugged lightly on the chains. They held. Satisfied the swings weren’t going to (at least, probably not) fall beneath her weight, she dusted off some sand from the plastic seat and sat down, before swinging gently and lightly back and forth.
It had been so long since she had begun her travels, and she had really only seen the Land of Fire, the Land of Wind, and Sunagakure. She didn’t much count the many small villages she frequented in the Land of Tea or the Land of Noodles, since there really wasn’t much to see there apart from the typical tourist attraction that wasn’t really that attractive.
She would have stopped by Konoha, but unfortunately, some old merchant had hired her to take his caravan to the borders of the Land of Fire, close to the southwestern portion, and that had left her closer to the Land of Wind than Konoha itself. Curiosity getting the better of her senses, Lyralei had travelled to the Land of Wind before promptly realising that the rumours, the map, and word of mouth had been utterly and ridiculously pinpoint accurate.
The Land of Wind was nothing but sand and sand and sand dunes for miles. The only places that she could find oases had always been populated by people. Well, of course, they wanted water to drink and place to live, and who wouldn’t settle in a place that catered to both those needs? Some of the small oases she had passed by on her way to Suna had left a very poor impression of the country on her though - sexist or perverted, you name it - but now that she had arrived in Suna, it wasn’t as bad as she thought.
Sunagakure was every bit the advanced metropolitan village that she had hoped it would be, and that she had read about in magazines and documentaries. The people here were far more civilized as well. Ignoring the red light district, you never (well, almost never) had that one perverted old geezer who tried to cop a feel while in public.
She pushed a little harder on the swing, and felt herself rock back and forth. It almost reminded her of her childhood where her mother and father would accompany her into the nearby town whenever they decided to get groceries, and her mother would always stay with her on the playgrounds pushing her on the swings or catching her at the bottom of the slides. Her mother would even support her as she hung upside down on the monkey bars, before pretending to let go and catching her and the last second before she fell onto the ground. Fond, fond memories, which almost made her want to go back to her parents.
Almost was the keyword in both those scenarios.
While she didn’t hate them, she didn’t feel any familial connection to them any more, not since she learned that she had been adopted.
She pushed a little harder on the swing, ignoring the looks that a few passers-by gave her, wondering what an adult like herself was doing on the swings, as she decided to plan her next travel destination.
WC: 635