London Header [https://i.imgur.com/jzF4Hgo.png]
Episode 7
----------------------------------------
The day following Pierre's emotional breakdown proved altogether more mundane. While Maka again began having her meals alongside him, and though they went for their regular walk around town - They talked little.
It would be nice to say that simply breaking down into Maka's arms after presuming the light from a kitchen fridge was a portal to another world - Would be the sort of fairy-tale occurrence to bring the two unbreakably closer to one another, enough for them to get over all their individual emotional hang-ups. Real life however, is seldom that simple.
And so instead, they had spent the day blushing sheepishly at one another and only speaking around in circles on topics like the weather.
The second morning after they made up, almost thirty-six hours on exactly: was proving quite similar. They had a relaxed breakfast, and now the duo found themselves in Pierre's living room.
The space was the sort one might look at and think of a 1990s TV set. Faded wallpaper in soft reds and yellows, pieces of ornate furniture and an old box television. The parlour was situated opposite the dining room on the house's ground floor and had the same corridor-style layout, with a disused fireplace to one end and metre-tall windows against the exterior wall: letting in a glorious amount of early morning sunlight.
Pierre sat in an old and worn armchair reading the daily paper as delivered to his doorstep. Though in truth, he made more awkward glances in Maka's direction than actual reading. For her part, Maka floated around admiring various objects in the room.
She had taken something of a liking to the antiquated television, but today both she and it were silent - As the slightly 'off' atmosphere between the two continued to hang like an axe.
‘Sixty seconds, one-hundred seconds, one-hundred & fifty seconds, tick, tock, tick tock--'
"Pierre, what is this structure?" Maka's voice said, cutting through Pierre's thoughts like a most welcome scalpel. As nonchalantly as possible, Pierre laid down the newspaper to look at what she had indicated towards. It was a model of some Tenochtitlan Pyramid: the souvenir lay proudly at the centre of the mantlepiece. Crafted from actual rock in the area, it was a fine scale model of the ancient ‘New World’ monument, with its square layers creeping into a point.
"Hmmmm? Ah yes, an Aztec pyramid. Fascinating people, you know, built these amazing cities and worshipped some interesting ideals," Pierre said.
"And these two?" Maka beckoned towards other sculptures.
"The one on the left is of the Eiffel-Tower, in France. And to the right is an Egyptian pyramid," Pierre recited much like a tour guide might.
Maka nodded appreciatively.
"They are all... ummm triangles. Is that important?"
In an instant, Pierre felt the air change and the tension fade. He smiled and then laughed loudly, springing up from his chair.
Maka blushed, "What? Did I ask a silly question?"
"No, no, it's a good question," Pierre said between laughter.
He strode over to a picture hanging on the wall and pointed for Maka to look at it;
"This here is a photo I took of Stonehenge. When I first arrived, it was one of the places I had an interest in. Of course, with time I have come to discount it as just a burial ground or religious site: but when I first arrived on Earth, I had no way of knowing that."
"I'm not sure I follow?" Maka replied earnestly.
Pierre nodded, "All of these are places and structures I investigated when I landed here on Earth--" he took Maka lightly by the shoulder into the hallway and began pointing to places on a map affixed to the staircase's exterior surface.
Pierre had seen her looking at it before, the type where the world is laid out flat with all the country names written on it. Considering her almost photographic memory, she had probably already learnt the names of every place on Earth - But he pointed to specific places on it nonetheless.
Stock Image of The World Map [https://i.imgur.com/vfhVHNr.png]
"This here is the Bermuda triangle. Back in the nineties, it was still talked about from time to time. Planes and boats seemingly went in and then never returned. It couldn't be penetrated by radio signals! And this here is predicted to be where Area 51--"
"Pierre, my friend?"
"Yes Maka?"
"You haven't answered my question. If anything, I have even more now."
"Ah right, good point. Well, put lightly when I first arrived here..." Pierre hesitated for a few moments, considered even changing the topic, but then pressed on;
"...Put bluntly, things were tough. I didn't speak a word of the language and didn't have a penny to my name. I spent a longer time than I would have liked sleeping in shop doorways and down cold street alleyways - But thankfully, it turned out I wasn't the only one who couldn't speak the language. Even to this day, many foreigners come here for work. They pick fruits, work in packaging, hospitals and food factories, drive lorries - A bit of everything really and like me, some of them didn't exactly speak much English.
So I got myself little jobs, moving around the country and slowly learning odd words of English here and there, along with a few pounds to call my own."
"And after that, you became a storyteller!" Maka added enthusiastically.
"Ha! If only it were that easy. No, I'm afraid Maka, it takes a bit more than that to become an author in this world," Pierre said, and then began to trace a line through the continent of Europe on the map, "I went backpacking, crossing from country to country. My aim was simple: if I got transported here, perhaps something could send me back," he gestured his hand to more souvenirs and framed photos of famous landmarks around the corridor.
The author's content has been appropriated; report any instances of this story on Amazon.
"Oh, now I see. And so? What did you find?"
Pierre frowned, "Not a lot I'm afraid. Oh sure, this world is full of mysteries and unexplained locations, but none proved very helpful. The Aztecs were the closest I ever got. The structure of their pyramids is very similar to a style I remember from back on Bhaile, but nothing ever came of it - Magi don't seem to have ever existed here, well except for you and me I guess."
"Oh... Do you still travel?" Maka asked, a little deflated.
"Hmmm? Oh god no, I gave up looking years ago, decades now I suppose..."
Maka reeled at the awkward turn the conversation had taken, searching around herself for a change in topic; "Ah-umm... Did you say you made these 'foe-toe-graphs' by yourself? My good man, I presumed a specialist of some kind was needed to create these!"
Pierre broke from his dark musings to answer Maka’s random question, "What, oh yes, they're just polaroids. You know, that camera is probably still here... Somewhere."
"Well, then you must show it to me so we might take one of these pictures!"
Maka said, clapping excitedly with an almost childish glee.
****
So it was that Maka half-pushed Pierre up to the second floor where (just across from her own bedroom) Pierre introduced Maka to his storeroom. A part of her did wonder about the logic of having such a room on the middle floor of the house, but these thoughts were quickly replaced by ones retaining to the room itself.
Despite being on the aforementioned second floor, the storeroom very much so looked like an attic. It was packed to the brim with cardboard boxes and junk. So full, in fact, that only a sliver of light made it through the window, the rest covered by more piled high boxes.
Cobwebs lined everything, and a layer of dust coated the floor.
"Ah, excuse the mess. I tend to just throw things in here," Pierre said briskly, upon seeing Maka's expression towards the room.
"But surely you need to retrieve things from here, yes?"
"What? Oh no, not often."
"Never looking backwards..." Maka mumbled inaudibly under her breath with a deep sadness.
Pierre began to rifle through the room, shuffling past the stacked items, his grey hair giving him a sort of camouflage among the dust-laden place. Maka stuck near the entrance of the room, peering cautiously into some of the closer boxes.
"Found it-- What are you doing?!" Pierre said worriedly. An angered look had come over Maka's youthful face.
"Are you not ashamed, Pierre? What is the meaning of this!" She exclaimed while holding up a small box of books. Around her feet were dozens of similar boxes.
Pierre raised an eyebrow in confusion.
"These boxes are all full of your own books, man! You have been increasing your popularity by purchasing your product - Despicable," she proclaimed dramatically.
Pierre found himself laughing again, only to look up at a pouting Maka.
"Don't be silly, woman: that would never work unless you were a billionaire or something. Those are author copies: the publisher sends me five or six every time they release one of my books - To be given to friends and family, that sort of thing."
Maka flushed a bright scarlet of understanding, "Ah, well, how was I to know. It is your fault for suspiciously putting them all together here - Why have you not handed them out yet?"
The question hung silently in the air until the answer dawned itself on Maka. She did not press the question. Instead, she took out one of the novels from the box, "You said UnderCurrent was your most recent work, but what are these others?" She questioned as casually as she could to try and once more steer the light-hearted conversation back on track.
It was Pierre's turn to have his cheeks redden, "Wait, hold on, don't read that one!"
He pleaded, trying to push his way back to the front of the room, still surrounded by poorly packed boxes.
Too late, Maka had begun to read aloud; "Follow the adventures of the great hero and her four companions in this thrilling instalment - As they head to slay the mighty drago -- Pierre?"
"Yes?..."
"You said the rest of your books were fictional, made up. And yet, this sounds awfully like one of our adventures back in the old days."
Pierre turned his eyes away from her insinuating glare; "...They do say write what you know... and no one in this world is any the wiser..." he mumbled.
Maka grinned stupidly before grabbing up more of the books from the boxes around her and making a run for it.
"H-Hey, what are you doing? Bring those back: no one said you could read them! They are just fiction I tell you! Any similarities to real events, people and places are just coincidences! Fiction! Maka, come back here, girl!" Pierre yelled after the girl with the silver hair, his face growing ever more crimson as she laughed her way teasingly down the hallway.
And so it was on the ninth of February, just a mere five nights from a certain special day, and more than twenty years after his initial purchasing of the prominent London Townhouse, that Pierre framed his first photo containing people rather than objects.
A photo taken on an old, chunky, black Polaroid camera. An image of a man and a woman, one with silvered hair and the other grey.
A portrait of the two standing next to one another, with the girl leaning in against the man, a finger poking his cheek playfully as the man tries to keep his facial composure steady.
A photo of two sincere and happy smiles.
----------------------------------------