video | un: degurechaff
[ A young girl sits at a table in an otherwise nondescript room, her hands folded in front of her in a picture of perfect professionalism. Her white button-down shirt is similarly perfect, not a wrinkle in sight, and tailored to her thin frame. Her gaze into her omni is expressionless — some might call it cold — and her high, childish voice is tempered with the assured enunciation of an adult. ]
Good evening. My name is Tanya von Degurechaff. I'm new here, so I have a couple questions for anyone willing to answer.
First, what kind of job do you currently have? If you don't have one, then I'm also interested in hearing what you did before you arrived here.
Second, are there any jobs or businesses you'd like to see here? I recognize that this is a broad question, but since we come from a broad range of backgrounds, any feedback is welcome.
[ A pause, a stray thought seeming to flicker through her head before she continues. ]
As for myself, I have experience with personnel management, various air-based operations, tactical field research, and administrative work. More broadly, I'm an aerial mage. The business I'd like to see is a coffee shop.
Good evening. My name is Tanya von Degurechaff. I'm new here, so I have a couple questions for anyone willing to answer.
First, what kind of job do you currently have? If you don't have one, then I'm also interested in hearing what you did before you arrived here.
Second, are there any jobs or businesses you'd like to see here? I recognize that this is a broad question, but since we come from a broad range of backgrounds, any feedback is welcome.
[ A pause, a stray thought seeming to flicker through her head before she continues. ]
As for myself, I have experience with personnel management, various air-based operations, tactical field research, and administrative work. More broadly, I'm an aerial mage. The business I'd like to see is a coffee shop.

no subject
[It’s a lot of why he hasn’t appeared too off put by Tanya’s childlike visage. Frankly, he hasn’t aged himself in 15 years. Who is he to make assumptions?]
Hah! You might be right about that, but thank you. Just because an ideal sounds impossible, doesn’t mean it isn’t worth pursuing.
[After all, how else would change happen for the better?]
Mm, that certainly comes with it’s own problems. Don’t worry too much about me, though. I have a way with weaseling in and out of danger.
no subject
Falling victim to danger is bad luck, but surviving is a talent. In times of war, it's worth celebrating the opportunity to carry your unique skills and experiences into the next day, every day.
[ With how small the population is here, they certainly need everything they can get. Everyone should weasel into the future with all their might. ]
In any case, thank you for answering my question so thoroughly. In the bartering spirit, I'd like to give you back something of equal value, but...
[ She is just a girl still scrounging for resources. Oh, how she misses hard currency. ]
no subject
[After all, it’s much easier to “weasel” out of danger when you can survive having a building dropped on you.]
Hahaha, very well said.
[And he truly believes that, too. On the subject of payment, though, Hayato blinks before waving a hand.]
I’d say not to worry about it, but you strike me as someone who wouldn’t accept that. How about an exchange of information, then? I have a small set of questions I’ve been asking people I encounter here, would that be a fitting trade?
no subject
[ He really is an inquisitive one. But she does love civilized exchanges, so it scratches an itch for her as well. She straightens at her desk in anticipation, probably looking more like she's interviewing for a job than answering random questions. ]
Alright, go ahead.
no subject
[The shift for him is pretty clear too, any remaining somberness from their discussion before has been replaced with an upbeat curiosity. Inquisitive is a pretty good descriptor for him, but probably this makes it obvious he’s worked in journalism, too.]
Excellent. The first question: Would you rate the level of technology here lower or higher than that of your homeworld?
no subject
The non-magical technology and architecture, on the other hand, feels old-fashioned. I come from the year 1927, and I would have guessed that Trench is in the 1700s.
[ It's like Trench put all of its points into magic and the obligatory one into infrastructure. ]
no subject
[He’s also noting the year. Of the people he’s interviewed, that one’s pretty unique.]
Judging by those dates, it sounds like your homeworld might be on a similar calendar as mine. Do you recognize countries like Japan, Switzerland, Mexico, or the United States?
no subject
[ She manages to answer with a completely straight face. She knows it sounds ridiculous, but it's the truth, so she hopes he'll at least refrain from laughing in her face. ]
My own home is the Imperial Vaterland... though everyone else just calls us the Empire.
[ She's really just speaking German though, so she hopes he gets the hint. ]
no subject
[Her answer is interesting enough that he actually stops writing for a moment to pay her full attention. A very curious and surprised look on his face. He does not laugh! You underestimate how absurd Hayato’s life is, and how far his suspension of disbelief will carry him.]
Interesting. So, it seems like it’s similar but in an uncanny, shift-slightly-to-left kind of way.
[He taps his pen on the table a few times. He wants to ask more details, but they agreed to his survey so he opts to stay on topic. Two more questions.]
To the best of your knowledge, can you recall if you were alive or dead in your homeworld, before washing up on the shores?
no subject
I can only assume I was alive. Barring poison or some revolutionary new weapon, I should have been in a secure location.
no subject
Alright, last question.
[He pauses, giving his notebook a lop-sided smile.]
I have a strong suspicion I already know the answer, given what we’ve already discussed, but who knows, maybe I’ll be surprised. [That was the whole nature of asking all these questions, after all. There were so many ways a world could be different.]
Have you ever heard of Kamen Rider?
no subject
Ah... Kamen? I do recall seeing a town of that name west of the Rhine.
[ She prefers not to lie -- honesty is essential to good business -- but in the legal world, gray is essentially the same as white. There is indeed a town named Kamen west of the Rhine river, and that's a fact. It was her job to study maps like her life depended on it, which it did. ]
no subject
It’s a bit of an urban myth where I’m from. Someone who fights evil from the shadows.
[He puts his notebook away for now.]
I’ve been using these questions to gather general information and to try and get to know what kind of people wash up here. I was using it to see if I can find or eliminate any patterns, but I haven’t really had a lot of luck.
no subject
Oh, I see. It would be interesting if there were a correlation...
[ She rubs her chin thoughtfully. ]
It may be worth noting that the details we find commonplace may be clues in themselves. For instance, I haven't been here for very long, but the Sleepers I've witnessed washing in are predominantly humans like ourselves and teens to young adults. If even a tiny number of Sleepers are non-human, it begs the question: why aren't there more of them? Is there some quality of humans in their prime that makes them more likely to come to these shores? Or is there merely some limiting factor that tends to cull non-humans and humans of especially low or high age before they reach the shore?