http://willofjustice.livejournal.com/ (
willofjustice.livejournal.com) wrote in
capeandcowllogs2009-03-13 11:42 pm
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WHO: Amelia (
willofjustice) and Alphonse (
alphonse)
WHERE: Ed, Al, and Ling's apartment.
WHEN: Tonight.
WARNINGS: Possible explosions.
SUMMARY: Two people without great knowledge of modern technology or cooking attempt to make food. You know it all goes downhill from there.
FORMAT: Paragraph?
It wasn't that Amelia did not take the situation with the Porter seriously. Indeed, even as she dug through the pots and pans in the alchemists' kitchen, her communicator was with her, on and sticking out of a pocket. At a moment's notice, she would leave, no matter what was going on, but for the moment life went on, and long ago she and Alphonse had promised one another an attempt to figure out the complexities of cooking. With Amelia staying at the alchemists' apartment for a couple of days while Lina was away, it seemed like a prime opportunity.
Rattling and clanging emerged from the cupboard as she attempted to find a pot large enough for their needs, poking it up onto the counter for Alphonse's approval. "Ne, that one? I think it's the biggest."
On the menu was doughnuts.
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WHERE: Ed, Al, and Ling's apartment.
WHEN: Tonight.
WARNINGS: Possible explosions.
SUMMARY: Two people without great knowledge of modern technology or cooking attempt to make food. You know it all goes downhill from there.
FORMAT: Paragraph?
It wasn't that Amelia did not take the situation with the Porter seriously. Indeed, even as she dug through the pots and pans in the alchemists' kitchen, her communicator was with her, on and sticking out of a pocket. At a moment's notice, she would leave, no matter what was going on, but for the moment life went on, and long ago she and Alphonse had promised one another an attempt to figure out the complexities of cooking. With Amelia staying at the alchemists' apartment for a couple of days while Lina was away, it seemed like a prime opportunity.
Rattling and clanging emerged from the cupboard as she attempted to find a pot large enough for their needs, poking it up onto the counter for Alphonse's approval. "Ne, that one? I think it's the biggest."
On the menu was doughnuts.
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Also, the lure of the doughnut cutter was strong. Trying not to disrupt the work he'd already done, she placed the cutter into the dough, pressing as she'd seen him do. To her delight it came out much in the same way that his had -- though it stuck to the inside surface of the cutter. She shook it a little, gently. "How does it get out?"
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"Ah, sorry," he said, leaning in to help her pry the dough free. "I should have used some more flour to keep it from sticking."
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"I never really did anything fancy at home, and you don't need it when you're out camping. Other people always made the food at home or if we were at an inn, and if we were all on the road, then it was just simple -- a campfire, maybe, and we cooked fish on sticks."
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But maybe the similarities were part of why he'd befriended her and Lina so easily. That story Amelia had told Ed about her friend's journey to become human again had hit a little too close to home. He hoped he'd be able to ask her more about it sometime without sounding suspicious, but such things were touchy subjects.
"Brother and I usually ate at inns too since we were always on the road." Al's smile turned wistful. "And we cooked a lot of fish that way back when we were training."
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A sweatdrop. "Plus even if I do try to stay home, we usually seem to cross paths anyway -- at which point Lina-san blows something up and we all have to flee from angry people."
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"It sounds like you come from an amazing place," he said once she'd finished speaking. It seemed unfair to press for information on Zelgadis now, even though the opportunity was there. Al didn't want this conversation to make Amelia sad. "Saillune is your hometown?"
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Which, in all honesty, was a mildly troubling thought. It had never been a good sign to hear that kind of adoration directed towards a ruler in the past, the situation in Reole being the prime example. Saillune couldn't really be like that, could it? Al hoped this was just a case of Amelia's idealism overshadowing a more mundane truth.
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What she'd said the other day about the trust between rulers and the people suddenly made a lot more sense, but the news still caught Al off guard. Amelia might have been more regal-seeming than Ling and Mei, but really, a crime-fighting princess who travels around in search of injustice? The very concept struck him as surreal.
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A sudden blink. "Do you smell something?"
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Before he could say anything else, Amelia's question brought his attention back to more important matters. Al followed the faint scent of smoke to the stove, eyes widening as he caught sight of what allowing himself to get so distracted had resulted in. Between overheating and the oil that had been spilled directly over the cooktop, the pot had erupted with the beginnings of a grease fire.
"Damn it," he hissed, hurriedly checking their surroundings for something he could use to put the fire out with. While bad, this wasn't yet cause for panic.
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"Aqua Create!" A stream of water shot from her hands to meet the fire, aiming to put it out in an instant.
. . . Unfortunately Amelia did not know grease fires didn't work that way.
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Wait, aqua?!
"Amelia!" Al grabbed her--a bit rougher than he'd have liked, considering his haste--and did his best to shove her back behind him. Chances were he could handle being burned a lot better than she could.
Predictably, the fire exploded over the stove and the surrounding area the instant the water hit. For a moment, nearly half the kitchen seemed to be engulfed in deadly flames. The worst of the flare-up was short-lived, but nonetheless dangerous and destructive--smaller fires had taken hold in several places, and would obviously continue to spread if Al and Amelia weren't able to act fast.
"Are you okay?" Al asked, slowly lowering the arm he'd been using to shield his face.
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Had she . . . Was he . . . ?
No time for that. Barely registering his question, Amelia took in the fire around her, managing a shaky nod. The fire at the moment was her first priority, her hands spinning the spell.
No water. "Mos Varium!"
A ball of light blossomed, spinning like a top, sucking fire into its bowels like a small, hungry sun, leaving the kitchen smoking in its wake.
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"Thanks." Al breathed a sigh of relief and stepped back to survey the damage, both to the apartment and to Amelia. His own clothes were a little singed, and he dusted at them absently. "Are you sure you're not hurt?"
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"I'm a pretty hard person to hurt." Al smiled reassuringly and scratched at the back of his head, though his expression still held traces of tension. "Sorry about all that. Water doesn't mix very well with a grease fire."
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"...I'm fine," he said finally, his voice much softer than before. "I promise."