Bohao sat
beside Fish on one of the wall tops that overlooked the training grounds. He
always seemed to find the stranger there, watching the exercises with his
single glowing eye. The platter of food
he'd brought with him when he came rested on a small table and as they watched
the apprentices in the yard below, Fish took the occasional bite, mechanically
chewed and swallowed it. Bohao wondered if he ever even tasted it.
He'd healed
completely in the many months since they'd found him. Desheng had found him an
eye patch to replace the bandages, and he'd
begun to move around on his own. But he still never spoke, never seemed to do
much but feed himself and tend to his own other needs with a sort of calm
detachment. And watch the trainees. He was always watching, sometimes even when
it was his turn down in the yard Bohao thought he felt the stranger's eye on
him. What did he think? Bohao wondered, as he did every day. What was going on in his head?
Sighing he gazed off skyward as he picked up the thread of his own words again. He wasn't sure it did any good to talk to Fish, the man never so much as grunted in response, but it filled the awkward silence. Somehow Bohao could never bring himself to just leave the man alone as so many others did. "And Desheng ran off before..."
"What are they doing?" The voice that had interrupted him was low, rough, and sounded almost rusty with disuse. The accent was a strange somehow but each word was understandable. Bohao looked around him, puzzled, but there was no one there on the wall but Fish. Fish: who had stiffened where he sat and who, as Bohao watched, dropped his half-eaten dumpling on the plate and stood.
"Did you say something?" Bohao asked, feeling stupidly shocked by the sudden change in the skinny, furless stranger. He was standing now, and every line of his lean form bristled with tension. That tension dragged Bohao slowly to his own feet.
Sighing he gazed off skyward as he picked up the thread of his own words again. He wasn't sure it did any good to talk to Fish, the man never so much as grunted in response, but it filled the awkward silence. Somehow Bohao could never bring himself to just leave the man alone as so many others did. "And Desheng ran off before..."
"What are they doing?" The voice that had interrupted him was low, rough, and sounded almost rusty with disuse. The accent was a strange somehow but each word was understandable. Bohao looked around him, puzzled, but there was no one there on the wall but Fish. Fish: who had stiffened where he sat and who, as Bohao watched, dropped his half-eaten dumpling on the plate and stood.
"Did you say something?" Bohao asked, feeling stupidly shocked by the sudden change in the skinny, furless stranger. He was standing now, and every line of his lean form bristled with tension. That tension dragged Bohao slowly to his own feet.
Even more
surprisingly Fish's hand lifted to point down at the trainees in the yard
before them, and this time he was watching, saw the man's lips move with the
words. "What are they doing?"
Almost
reluctantly Bohao dragged his eyes from the somehow transformed stranger toward
the trainees. They were doing one of the more complex exercises; monks of each
of the three schools were taking part. One of Brewmaster Peng's best students
stood at the center of the ring, doing his best to dodge and deflect the blows
directed at him from five of Master Shuzhen's windwalker students. To the side
one of Master Huifeng's older apprentices stood, channeling energy into the
pandaren at the center of the group.
"They
are training." He explained. "Wulong practices avoidance and
deflection, the ones around him practice hitting someone who is trying not to
be hit, and Dewu practices channeling his chi to heal." He turned his eyes
back to Fish, but the man had fallen silent and merely stood, frozen and
intent. Again Bohao couldn't help but wonder what he was thinking as they stood
for long moments in that silence.
"Can I
learn?" Fish's voice almost startled him when it finally sounded again and
Bohao looked thoughtfully into the stranger's face.
"I don't see why not..." He said slowly. "I'll talk to my master."
"I don't see why not..." He said slowly. "I'll talk to my master."
I'd been wanting to do a Shado-Pan transmog for Tai for ages, but kept putting it off because I couldn't see how to do it when in order to keep his eyepatch he can't wear the helm. To make matters worse the faction tabard doesn't match the helm or any of the gear that does so that was out too. In the end this was what I came up with.
Head: Swashbuckler's Eyepatch
Shoulders: Cutthroat's Mantle
Chest: Iconic Vest
Hands: T'wansi's Handwraps
Legs: Booty Bay Pantaloons
Feet: Blighted Leather Footpads (second choice boots, still doing weekly lockouts for the first choice)
Weapon: Wicked Mithril Blade (This is one of those situations where I wish I could make the enchant less shiny)
Off hand: Fan of Fiery Winds
Disclaimer: No actual pandaren NPCs were harmed in the making of this story (or even included for that matter. All of the awesome furry people came out of my own head. As did the training nonsense. :D)
Notes: Tai was called Fish at first because he was a hairless, silent thing that came out of the ocean, and there's loads more to the story because I like stories.
Wow! Great mog and a great story!? Thank you!
ReplyDeleteThank you. :) I felt a little shy about posting it so I'm glad you enjoyed it.
DeleteWonderful, wonderful, the story and the outfit, both!
ReplyDeleteI love that description of an advanced training session using students from all three roles practicing against/on each other.
Thank you. I really should have mentioned that seeing your Shado-Pan mogs was one of the other things that made me really want to work around Tai's eye patch problem and make one of my own :D
DeleteI'm glad that description didn't seem weird :) It seemed like a logical training method to me but I wasn't sure how it would end up reading.
Great story AND outfit! I'm looking forward to hearing more about Fish/Tai.
ReplyDeleteThanks so much :) And at some point you most likely will since the story and mog post was kind of fun and Tai's one of my favorites to mog.
DeleteNow that is a cool story and outfit! I'm glad you posted it :) Nothing to be shy about in front of friends!
ReplyDeleteThanks so much. :) I'm glad you enjoyed it and glad I posted it too. Sharing things with friends is the point of a blog after all, right? :D
DeleteYou know I always enjoy reading anything you write. :D I'm glad you shared this, I quite liked it and the set is beautiful!
ReplyDelete