"Close enough. Technically, they are alive, just... not quite in the same way we are."
As for the first question, he gave a slight shrug as he picked up his box and hooked the straps back over his shoulders. "Encounters with mushi are rare enough in some places that some people don't even know they exist, so there's that. Those who do usually have enough contact with mushi masters that they can usually find a solution if something happens. It's just a part of life."
"Back up, back up," He lifted his hands. "A mushi master? So you are part of a business...how's that happen? You notice there's a whole lot of weird spirit germs in the area and decide to get rid of them?"
"Not exactly; it's just a general term for people who do this kind of work. We mostly work independently."
Another shrug. "Only if they're causing trouble. Some places get by just fine with high populations of mushi; we only intervene if they become a problem."
"I see..." He wished there was a word for what he was so he could at least put it on a business card. James missed the eighties in their entirety so Ghostbusters went unknown. "Does it pay well?"
Ginko snorted. "Depends. It isn't exactly the most stable business; sometimes I'll get lucky, sometimes not. Some collectors are willing to pay a good bit for artifacts affected by or connected to mushi, so that can help."
"Hmm...you know." He rubbed his chin as he leaned away from the well. "I think there's a market for that back home. Friend a' mine says there's this market called Ebay and people are always sellin' haunted shit on there."
"Really? Around here it's usually just a matter of getting lucky and happening to know someone who's interested. Occasionally other mushi masters will be interested, but... usually, we see enough of that to begin with."
"It's not experts buyin' 'em though. See, hardly anyone knows ghosts are real but a whole lotta folks will do anything if they think they can get a glimpse of one. Idiots, most of 'em, doing rituals and shit they don't know nothin' about. They make movies about it all the time."
He shifted a little to stand more comfortably, remembering after a moment not to lean against the well. Sometimes he didn't bother asking about all the references JW made on a regular basis; if he asked for clarification on every single one, they probably wouldn't talk about much else. But this sounded kind of important.
Uh oh. Now he has to explain movies. But it's only one thing right now. The world-walker ran his fingers through his hair. He could do this. "Well, it's like a slide show...but there are so many slides that it looks like things are moving in real time. Folks use 'em to tell stories and hundreds and hundreds of people go to see them every day."
"Oh! No, they make them about people who do see ghosts and get attacked. They're called horror films. Ghosts, monsters, murderers. They love being scared when they know it's not real. Just a story."
JW was slightly envious of Ginko. He'd never been subjected to The Matrix. If James could erase one movie from existence, it would be that one.
"...Yeah, I can believe that." People who never ran into mushi always wanted to hear about them, after all. "Must be strange, seeing those and actually working with ghosts."
Ginko snorted quietly, shoving his hands into his pockets. "...You know what I mentioned about getting lucky, and knowing people interested in buying mushi-related objects? There's one guy I've been selling to for years - he can't actually see mushi, himself. But he's got quite a fixation on them."
"Seriously? Now that's gold. So how's that work anyhow?" He shifted hsi backpack a little, almost forgetting he was wearing it. "Somethin' your born with or do you have to have some rotting taxidermy nightmare slash you in the eyes?"
In Deuteronomy's defense, she was not activly rotting.
"Any number of things. Suiko just look like water, for example. Others may look like plants, or somewhat like insects or bacteria. There's..." He pauses, glancing at a swirling shape in the air next to him. He lifts up a hand to usher the mushi over in front of himself, even though he knows JW can't see it.
"...this one looks a little like a shrimp, but with more legs."
"Bacteria..." he parroted. So they knew about that. That was good. While James prided himself in being 'old timey' sometimes, he was still largely ignorant of what things were invented or discovered when and where.
He squinted into the space where Ginko seemed to be looking. He squinted hard and concentrated, but couldn't see so much as a ripple in the air. It was so weird being the one who couldn't see the Other. It was inconvenient and made him feel put-out and a little stupid...but it was also exciting. He had to go on Ginko's word because so far nothing had actually harmed JW. It could all be fake, a controlling lie, or a hallucination on Ginko's part. But he was so strange-looking and everyone in town knew him. Just like him.
And JW was determined to do better than the people of Hawksaw.
"A shrimp, huh...so what's the shrimp one? What's it's whole deal-e-o? Is it going to live in my teeth or make me turn inside out if I whistle the wrong note at it?"
"No. These are pretty harmless; they just eat shed hair and dead skin." He let the mushi tap its way across his hand, its segmented mouth tickling at his skin.
"I suppose so." He watched it for a moment, then held it out, cupping his free hand behind it so it didn't drift off. "You might be able to feel it if you hold it."
Normally, he wasn't in the practice of just handing mushi to people, but, like he had said, this one was harmless.
James made a small surprised noise in the back of his throat. It wasn't an offer he expected, but he really did want some kind of proof that these mushi existed. And contact with them would no doubt teach him something about them.
"Why not?"
It was hard not to fill silly cupping his hands and waiting for some unseen thing to crawl into it. Suddenly, every hair on his arms, wrapped or not, stood on end. Was he going to feel it biting the dead skin on his fingers? Never had he in his life had any kind of aversion to creepy crawlies, even the ungodly number of spiders in his grandfather's attic, but he suddenly found himself Very Worried.
Noting the concern on JW's face, Ginko added, "Don't worry, it's not going to hurt you."
Ginko nudged the creature gently into JW's hands; it went without protest, content to wander from one source of skin to another. JW wouldn't feel much more than a slight tickling as the mushi meandered across his hands, picking at bits of dead skin as it went.
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As for the first question, he gave a slight shrug as he picked up his box and hooked the straps back over his shoulders. "Encounters with mushi are rare enough in some places that some people don't even know they exist, so there's that. Those who do usually have enough contact with mushi masters that they can usually find a solution if something happens. It's just a part of life."
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Another shrug. "Only if they're causing trouble. Some places get by just fine with high populations of mushi; we only intervene if they become a problem."
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He shifted a little to stand more comfortably, remembering after a moment not to lean against the well. Sometimes he didn't bother asking about all the references JW made on a regular basis; if he asked for clarification on every single one, they probably wouldn't talk about much else. But this sounded kind of important.
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Uh oh. Now he has to explain movies. But it's only one thing right now. The world-walker ran his fingers through his hair. He could do this. "Well, it's like a slide show...but there are so many slides that it looks like things are moving in real time. Folks use 'em to tell stories and hundreds and hundreds of people go to see them every day."
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JW was slightly envious of Ginko. He'd never been subjected to The Matrix. If James could erase one movie from existence, it would be that one.
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In Deuteronomy's defense, she was not activly rotting.
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Ah.
"Usually, it's something people are born with - though it can take a few years for them to actually start seeing mushi, in some cases."
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"That's a shame. I'd like to see 'em...what do they look like?"
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"...this one looks a little like a shrimp, but with more legs."
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He squinted into the space where Ginko seemed to be looking. He squinted hard and concentrated, but couldn't see so much as a ripple in the air. It was so weird being the one who couldn't see the Other. It was inconvenient and made him feel put-out and a little stupid...but it was also exciting. He had to go on Ginko's word because so far nothing had actually harmed JW. It could all be fake, a controlling lie, or a hallucination on Ginko's part. But he was so strange-looking and everyone in town knew him. Just like him.
And JW was determined to do better than the people of Hawksaw.
"A shrimp, huh...so what's the shrimp one? What's it's whole deal-e-o? Is it going to live in my teeth or make me turn inside out if I whistle the wrong note at it?"
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"No. These are pretty harmless; they just eat shed hair and dead skin." He let the mushi tap its way across his hand, its segmented mouth tickling at his skin.
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He'd only been here perhaps an hour and he'd already gotten Ginko to laugh. Either he was getting better at this or it really was a dumb assumption.
"Sounds like carpet beetles..."
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Normally, he wasn't in the practice of just handing mushi to people, but, like he had said, this one was harmless.
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"Why not?"
It was hard not to fill silly cupping his hands and waiting for some unseen thing to crawl into it. Suddenly, every hair on his arms, wrapped or not, stood on end. Was he going to feel it biting the dead skin on his fingers? Never had he in his life had any kind of aversion to creepy crawlies, even the ungodly number of spiders in his grandfather's attic, but he suddenly found himself Very Worried.
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Ginko nudged the creature gently into JW's hands; it went without protest, content to wander from one source of skin to another. JW wouldn't feel much more than a slight tickling as the mushi meandered across his hands, picking at bits of dead skin as it went.
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