CG: Okay, no new reviews, but we'll continue anyway!
DM: We don't own Spirited Away.
CG: But we do own the idea for Lin's past.
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Sitting alone in my room made me think a little. Like about why I came to this ruddy bathhouse in the first place. I didn't come here by accident, like Sen. There was a reason I came here.
I was a maid for a rich merchant in Tokyo. That much I remember. Yet, I still reached higher. Being "second class" wasn't exactly a dream of mine. I wanted to make it big. Be a star. But it never happened. I was still considered a second-class maid.
Then I met someone who said they could help me. A man named Lato. He was headed towards an abandoned theme park. I remember him telling me, "People in the apartments near this theme park have been seeing strange occurrences at night." Lato promised that I'd be famous if we actually found out something about this theme park. Of course I agreed.
But fate wasn't on my side. Lato fell sick two days before we were supposed to leave. So, I went on without him.
That's when I made the same mistake Sen did. I stayed until night and couldn't get across the river. Kamaji, the boiler man, helped me from disappearing. He also arranged it so I could get a job.
Kamaji set a bowl of rice on my bed, snapping me out of my flashback. "Hungry?" he asked.
"Go stoke the fires," I responded rudely.
Kamaji pulled a roasted newt out of his pocket. "Will you tell me what's wrong if I give you this?" he persuaded.
"Oh, no! Not this time, old man!" I thrust the newt back into the boiler man's hands.
"Be that way."
I gave Kamaji an evil glare. "What are you doing in the girl's bedroom?!"
"Haku had a message for you," he boiler man said.
"Then have him come say it to my face." I started to shoo the man out when I saw Haku standing in the corner.
"Listen," he said, "I think there's a way so that all three of us can get out of here."
"I'm listening."
"If we can get train tickets and find out our real names, then we have a better chance of overwhelming Yubaba," Haku explained.
"Whatever," I smirked, "but you're getting the tickets!"
Haku looked mad. "What! Why would I do that?"
Kamaji pounded his wooden hammer on the ground. "Break it up!" he yelled. "Good thing I brought this with me."
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CG: Please leave a nice review!
DM: Or an idea for that matter.
Next chapter (hopefully): unknown
DM: We don't own Spirited Away.
CG: But we do own the idea for Lin's past.
*=*=*=*=*=*=*=*=*=*=*=*=*=*=*=*=*=*=*=*=*=*=*=*=*=*=*=*=*=*
Sitting alone in my room made me think a little. Like about why I came to this ruddy bathhouse in the first place. I didn't come here by accident, like Sen. There was a reason I came here.
I was a maid for a rich merchant in Tokyo. That much I remember. Yet, I still reached higher. Being "second class" wasn't exactly a dream of mine. I wanted to make it big. Be a star. But it never happened. I was still considered a second-class maid.
Then I met someone who said they could help me. A man named Lato. He was headed towards an abandoned theme park. I remember him telling me, "People in the apartments near this theme park have been seeing strange occurrences at night." Lato promised that I'd be famous if we actually found out something about this theme park. Of course I agreed.
But fate wasn't on my side. Lato fell sick two days before we were supposed to leave. So, I went on without him.
That's when I made the same mistake Sen did. I stayed until night and couldn't get across the river. Kamaji, the boiler man, helped me from disappearing. He also arranged it so I could get a job.
Kamaji set a bowl of rice on my bed, snapping me out of my flashback. "Hungry?" he asked.
"Go stoke the fires," I responded rudely.
Kamaji pulled a roasted newt out of his pocket. "Will you tell me what's wrong if I give you this?" he persuaded.
"Oh, no! Not this time, old man!" I thrust the newt back into the boiler man's hands.
"Be that way."
I gave Kamaji an evil glare. "What are you doing in the girl's bedroom?!"
"Haku had a message for you," he boiler man said.
"Then have him come say it to my face." I started to shoo the man out when I saw Haku standing in the corner.
"Listen," he said, "I think there's a way so that all three of us can get out of here."
"I'm listening."
"If we can get train tickets and find out our real names, then we have a better chance of overwhelming Yubaba," Haku explained.
"Whatever," I smirked, "but you're getting the tickets!"
Haku looked mad. "What! Why would I do that?"
Kamaji pounded his wooden hammer on the ground. "Break it up!" he yelled. "Good thing I brought this with me."
*=*=*=*=*=*=*=*=*=*=*=*=*=*=*=*=*=*=*=*=*=*=*=*=*=*=*=*=*=*=*=*=*=*
CG: Please leave a nice review!
DM: Or an idea for that matter.
Next chapter (hopefully): unknown
