FROM: kino@cdc.org There can be safety and stability from staying in one place, but I personally can't enjoy it. Not when the unknown has so much to offer.
FROM: kino@cdc.org If you like this Twilight Town enough, you can always go back to visit when you want.
FROM: kino@cdc.org That's the beauty of travel, I find.
[The freedom, that is. Kino could wax poetic and borderline philosophical for hours.]
FROM: kino@cdc.org If I had the opportunity to travel to different worlds—without having to destroy them, that is—I believe I would do it as opposed to staying in one place.
FROM: kino@cdc.org That's the consequence of traveling, but I prefer the excitement of not knowing what tomorrow might bring.
FROM: kino@cdc.org Others do not feel the same way, but that's fine.
FROM: roxas@cdc.org You have to be pretty brave for that.
[ He knows, personally. He's thrown away everything he thought he knew twice now, all for a boy who saved worlds. Now here Roxas is, destroying them. It still doesn't sit comfortably in his thoughts. ]
FROM: kino@cdc.org Some might say so. Others feel the opposite.
[Like Kino was running from something. That wasn't true, to be honest. Not really. It was more the fact that Kino did not have a place they would consider "home" to go back to.]
FROM: kino@cdc.org It's what I wanted to do, though. I don't like the fact that I can't travel the way I used to here.
no subject
Maybe... go live in Twilight Town, for real.
FROM: roxas@cdc.org
I went there a couple of times, on missions. I really liked it.
FROM: roxas@cdc.org
I think my friends liked it there too.
FROM: roxas@cdc.org
But after so much has happened, I don't know how I'd just... live somewhere.
FROM: roxas@cdc.org
I'm used to traveling to different worlds, I wouldn't want to stop.
[ He will spare Kino the explanation of the virtual Twilight Town rn........ ]
no subject
Continue to travel, then.
FROM: kino@cdc.org
There can be safety and stability from staying in one place, but I personally can't enjoy it. Not when the unknown has so much to offer.
FROM: kino@cdc.org
If you like this Twilight Town enough, you can always go back to visit when you want.
FROM: kino@cdc.org
That's the beauty of travel, I find.
[The freedom, that is. Kino could wax poetic and borderline philosophical for hours.]
no subject
Are there places you go back to?
no subject
There are certainly places I wouldn't mind going back to see... but no.
FROM: kino@cdc.org
There is simply too much to see and experience. I worry that if I get caught up in going backwards, I'll miss out.
FROM: kino@cdc.org
Maybe one day, when I'm sure that I've seen all there is to see... maybe I will go back.
no subject
There are a lot of amazing worlds.
FROM: roxas@cdc.org
But it'd be nice to feel at home, sometimes.
no subject
If I had the opportunity to travel to different worlds—without having to destroy them, that is—I believe I would do it as opposed to staying in one place.
FROM: kino@cdc.org
That's the consequence of traveling, but I prefer the excitement of not knowing what tomorrow might bring.
FROM: kino@cdc.org
Others do not feel the same way, but that's fine.
no subject
You have to be pretty brave for that.
[ He knows, personally. He's thrown away everything he thought he knew twice now, all for a boy who saved worlds. Now here Roxas is, destroying them. It still doesn't sit comfortably in his thoughts. ]
no subject
Some might say so. Others feel the opposite.
[Like Kino was running from something. That wasn't true, to be honest. Not really. It was more the fact that Kino did not have a place they would consider "home" to go back to.]
FROM: kino@cdc.org
It's what I wanted to do, though. I don't like the fact that I can't travel the way I used to here.
no subject
Your contract will be done eventually!
no subject
That's what they say.
FROM: kino@cdc.og
But does anyone have any idea how long it is until "eventually"?