1 Hitting Rock Bottom** (Shigeki/Invite Only/NK) Wed Nov 15, 2017 9:47 pm
Sayuri
D-rank
**credit to Joan the Lewd for the thread title
Having only just arrived in Iwagakure, and it being very late Sayuri did the only thing she could think of; find somewhere with food. It was not terribly difficult to locate the only place still accepting patrons this late at night, she wandered a bit until she heard the carousing of bar patrons. In the stillness of the dark the building was a glowing beacon of potential warmth and comfort, though she was not very excited at the prospect of being in a small space filled with strangers, it seemed better than being alone for yet another night. She had grown accustomed to the presence of Tsuyo and Mitsuo while she had been in Konoha and the trip here to Iwa had been surprisingly lonely. So setting aside her fear of cramped spaces for the moment, she walked up to the door and after taking a deep breath, pushed her way inside.
The young looking woman blinked a few times before walking towards the bar counter, it was much brighter in here than it had been outside and the sudden change in light stung her odd coloured eyes as she tried to get her bearings. The large room was filled with tables, chairs and stools, with what looked like doorways off to other areas. Readjusting her pack on her shoulder she walked up to the bar proper and took a seat on one of the stools, trying her best not to look too nervous as she walked past what seemed like a sea of people. As she plopped herself down on the stool her hands reflexively went to where her weapons were stored on her person. Her grandfather’s tanto belted to her left hip and her pouch belted to her right thigh that held her shuriken and kunai. Satisfied that everything was in place she took her pack off of her shoulder and dropped in on the floor in front of her between the bar and the stool she sat on.
“What can I get for you young lady?” Sayuri jumped a bit at the baritone voice that as she looked up was coming from a large friendly looking man. Sweeping her long white hair behind her ear she timidly answered his question. “Uhh, food I guess? And maybe something to drink. I’ve been travelling for a while and could use something warm.” The barkeeper chuckled at her words, turning around and filling a glass with a translucent amber coloured liquid. Sayuri was curious as to what he was handing her, but seeing as she was hungry and thirsty she took it gratefully and drank its contents in a single go. The drink unfortunately did not start to burn until after she had swallowed it, at which point she began coughing fitfully, gasping a bit at the stinging sensation in her mouth and throat. As her eyes watered and she finally caught her breath, she looked up at the bartender, betrayal clearly impressed on her features. He merely chuckled again, taking her glass and refilling it. “You know, people don’t usually drink quite that fast. But who am I to judge? Maybe take this one a bit more slowly there miss. How about I put an order in for some food, you like ramen?”
After the initial burning subsided, Sayuri was delighted to realize that the drink had made her feel toasty warm, and had left a pleasant aftertaste of fruit in her mouth. She had drank wine before, though she didn’t much care for it, and some sugary concoction while she had been out with Shin, but she had only sipped at alcohol before. The warmth spreading throughout her body was quite lovely and she nodded happily to the bartender as he asked her about ramen. “I love ramen, quite a bit. In Konoha there was a ramen stand that I used to go to. . .” her words were cut off as she began thinking about the first time she had visited that stand. It had been a bloody mess, and she could have died. Shaking her head in an effort to clear her mind of those memories, she self consciously began adjusting her clothing. The skirt she wore was rather short and the seat she was in was causing it to ride further up her legs than she liked. The bartender had gone when she looked up and so she sat sipping her drink of burning warmness until he returned, all the while attempting to push her mind away from sad memories. It only briefly crossed her mind that this line of thinking was unusual, she had managed to travel all the way here from Konohagakure without dwelling too long on these thoughts.
As the large man returned with a steaming bowl of delicious smelling soup, Sayuri was just finishing off the last of the liquid in her glass. She giggled as she pushed the empty cup towards the man and pulled the bowl closer to her, breathing in the spicy aroma. “Do you know, that I don’t know anyone here? I’m supposed to be going to the university, but in order to do that I had to leave behind everyone I knew.” She took turns sipping the soup and her new drink as she spoke, her voice a bit too loud for speaking indoors. “I had made some friends where I was, and I liked it there. But now I’m here, no friends, and what’s worse, no family.” Her eyes welled up a bit with tears as she continued speaking to the bartender, who was of course stereotypically attentive to problems he had not asked to hear about, nor affected him in any way. “I don’t even know if I have family anymore, I keep hoping I’ll find some, but I never do.”
975
Having only just arrived in Iwagakure, and it being very late Sayuri did the only thing she could think of; find somewhere with food. It was not terribly difficult to locate the only place still accepting patrons this late at night, she wandered a bit until she heard the carousing of bar patrons. In the stillness of the dark the building was a glowing beacon of potential warmth and comfort, though she was not very excited at the prospect of being in a small space filled with strangers, it seemed better than being alone for yet another night. She had grown accustomed to the presence of Tsuyo and Mitsuo while she had been in Konoha and the trip here to Iwa had been surprisingly lonely. So setting aside her fear of cramped spaces for the moment, she walked up to the door and after taking a deep breath, pushed her way inside.
The young looking woman blinked a few times before walking towards the bar counter, it was much brighter in here than it had been outside and the sudden change in light stung her odd coloured eyes as she tried to get her bearings. The large room was filled with tables, chairs and stools, with what looked like doorways off to other areas. Readjusting her pack on her shoulder she walked up to the bar proper and took a seat on one of the stools, trying her best not to look too nervous as she walked past what seemed like a sea of people. As she plopped herself down on the stool her hands reflexively went to where her weapons were stored on her person. Her grandfather’s tanto belted to her left hip and her pouch belted to her right thigh that held her shuriken and kunai. Satisfied that everything was in place she took her pack off of her shoulder and dropped in on the floor in front of her between the bar and the stool she sat on.
“What can I get for you young lady?” Sayuri jumped a bit at the baritone voice that as she looked up was coming from a large friendly looking man. Sweeping her long white hair behind her ear she timidly answered his question. “Uhh, food I guess? And maybe something to drink. I’ve been travelling for a while and could use something warm.” The barkeeper chuckled at her words, turning around and filling a glass with a translucent amber coloured liquid. Sayuri was curious as to what he was handing her, but seeing as she was hungry and thirsty she took it gratefully and drank its contents in a single go. The drink unfortunately did not start to burn until after she had swallowed it, at which point she began coughing fitfully, gasping a bit at the stinging sensation in her mouth and throat. As her eyes watered and she finally caught her breath, she looked up at the bartender, betrayal clearly impressed on her features. He merely chuckled again, taking her glass and refilling it. “You know, people don’t usually drink quite that fast. But who am I to judge? Maybe take this one a bit more slowly there miss. How about I put an order in for some food, you like ramen?”
After the initial burning subsided, Sayuri was delighted to realize that the drink had made her feel toasty warm, and had left a pleasant aftertaste of fruit in her mouth. She had drank wine before, though she didn’t much care for it, and some sugary concoction while she had been out with Shin, but she had only sipped at alcohol before. The warmth spreading throughout her body was quite lovely and she nodded happily to the bartender as he asked her about ramen. “I love ramen, quite a bit. In Konoha there was a ramen stand that I used to go to. . .” her words were cut off as she began thinking about the first time she had visited that stand. It had been a bloody mess, and she could have died. Shaking her head in an effort to clear her mind of those memories, she self consciously began adjusting her clothing. The skirt she wore was rather short and the seat she was in was causing it to ride further up her legs than she liked. The bartender had gone when she looked up and so she sat sipping her drink of burning warmness until he returned, all the while attempting to push her mind away from sad memories. It only briefly crossed her mind that this line of thinking was unusual, she had managed to travel all the way here from Konohagakure without dwelling too long on these thoughts.
As the large man returned with a steaming bowl of delicious smelling soup, Sayuri was just finishing off the last of the liquid in her glass. She giggled as she pushed the empty cup towards the man and pulled the bowl closer to her, breathing in the spicy aroma. “Do you know, that I don’t know anyone here? I’m supposed to be going to the university, but in order to do that I had to leave behind everyone I knew.” She took turns sipping the soup and her new drink as she spoke, her voice a bit too loud for speaking indoors. “I had made some friends where I was, and I liked it there. But now I’m here, no friends, and what’s worse, no family.” Her eyes welled up a bit with tears as she continued speaking to the bartender, who was of course stereotypically attentive to problems he had not asked to hear about, nor affected him in any way. “I don’t even know if I have family anymore, I keep hoping I’ll find some, but I never do.”
975