Loki Odinson (
thelostprince) wrote in
all_inclusive2014-04-29 08:42 pm
(no subject)
Still a woman, and Loki was doing his best not to worry about it. It certainly did offer an interesting spin on things, though, especially when it came to him going out and about in the hotel. When it came to attractiveness Loki had very little opinion, one way or another, regarding his own face. But as a woman he could easily see that he was attractive, at least to a certain type of person, that person being himself. It brought a strange sort of confidence to someone who was already confident, but not in the ways he was aware of.
So in that regard, he had decided, for a moment, to flaunt it. The dress he wore was a weave of green and black, off one shoulder and cut just above the knee, revealing more pale, creamy skin than he ever had as a man. A good section of calves was revealed, as well, topped in heeled, laced ankle boots. Style from different worlds was never something he had much difficulty in grasping, though certainly he had a tendency to stop once he had found something suitable and wearable. This had a distinct brush of Ruby's influence, though mostly he had simply followed the direction she had pointed him in.
While some of his peers from Asgard were more interested in keeping their body tuned, Loki preferred to keep his mind sharp first of all. He was sitting on a bench in one of the hotel's gardens, which he understood had an 'oriental' theme according to Midgard, and beside him there was a stack of books. The topics were all in relation to one another - they were extensive histories of different continents on a certain planet, covering everything from its societies to geological movements from fresh Stone Age to dirty, polluted end. One, however, described the pattern of movement of that planet within a certain solar system. Whoever could have written these documents, he did not know, for it was information that could be compiled only by a strange, vast mind. Yet Loki had read it all, and now he was translating it.
The original text was a very dead language, and he was carefully and calmly inscribing it using pen and notebook into the alphabet of Midgard. He didn't know of anyone who would like to read it, but it was something to do, kept his mind active. Translations were always interesting - though Loki read, wrote and spoke many languages, there were always words that fell into and out of use, or had no counterpart. In that he was entertained.
So in that regard, he had decided, for a moment, to flaunt it. The dress he wore was a weave of green and black, off one shoulder and cut just above the knee, revealing more pale, creamy skin than he ever had as a man. A good section of calves was revealed, as well, topped in heeled, laced ankle boots. Style from different worlds was never something he had much difficulty in grasping, though certainly he had a tendency to stop once he had found something suitable and wearable. This had a distinct brush of Ruby's influence, though mostly he had simply followed the direction she had pointed him in.
While some of his peers from Asgard were more interested in keeping their body tuned, Loki preferred to keep his mind sharp first of all. He was sitting on a bench in one of the hotel's gardens, which he understood had an 'oriental' theme according to Midgard, and beside him there was a stack of books. The topics were all in relation to one another - they were extensive histories of different continents on a certain planet, covering everything from its societies to geological movements from fresh Stone Age to dirty, polluted end. One, however, described the pattern of movement of that planet within a certain solar system. Whoever could have written these documents, he did not know, for it was information that could be compiled only by a strange, vast mind. Yet Loki had read it all, and now he was translating it.
The original text was a very dead language, and he was carefully and calmly inscribing it using pen and notebook into the alphabet of Midgard. He didn't know of anyone who would like to read it, but it was something to do, kept his mind active. Translations were always interesting - though Loki read, wrote and spoke many languages, there were always words that fell into and out of use, or had no counterpart. In that he was entertained.

no subject
"As to its permanence, well. I think that would depend on walking through that same door again, at the right time, where such chinks in universal doorways align. I suppose that's not very comforting," he added, "but when you consider how this place seems to be a collection of random coincidences, so highly improbable, well. I'm hoping we'll be changing back shortly. So that being said, it's nice to meet you, Steve. You look well."
no subject
The fact that he was able to look at Loki then and quite literally not see the man he had met on that street in Germany allowed Steve space enough to take the Asgardian as a question rather than a sure threat.
With that thought he laid his book across his lap and held his arms out before him, their shape as unfamiliar as all else to do with the situation, and looked not for the first time for some sign that that body was still (somehow) his own. "I'm afraid I'm fresh out of identifying marks." Finding some humor in the situation might have taken him a few days, but there he did allow himself to give the other man in woman's form a small smile. "I've been better," he admitted, but not without tipping his head or keeping that smile, "Been worse."
no subject
"Where are you from?" he asked. "Are you used to this sort of interdimensional overlap, or is this all a shock?"
no subject
"Brooklyn," he answered automatically. Where he doubted the Asgardian would care to hear of the borough and the city as he had known it - of the troubled headlines in the newspapers he had delivered, of hearing of Nazis on their doorstep right alongside the announcement for the StarkExpo, of egg creams and Hoovervilles in the city parks - he was sure to expand something on it. "I'm from New York, where Thor called Midgard. I'm only passingly familiar with the idea of portals and 'paths between worlds,'" he admitted, using a term he had read bandied about in the transcripts of his fellow Avengers. "This is...beyond me, really."
no subject
But speaking of his brother... "Thor?" he asked, looking up from his work, pen stilling against the page, so light it left a tiny, blurred dot on the paper, and nothing more. "You know my brother?" Then Steve must know Loki, as Natasha had - 'in passing', she had claimed, but he was almost certain now that that was a lie. Was this Steve as good a liar as she was? He hadn't made any outward sign of recognition when Loki had introduced himself, but a lack of response was an easy thing to drum up when the disguise wasn't being prodded.