unfortunately for kaneki, trucy has an innate talent, though it's been slightly dimmed by the power-nerfing she experienced on arrival. the ability to perceive and hone in on the smallest, involuntary human ticks is something many people have without the blessing of genetics. coupled with emotional intelligence, trucy is pretty good at telling when someone is lying, avoiding something, hiding something—even if she can't pinpoint what it is. drawing the truth out of them is even tougher.
her smile falls away naturally as she sizes up kaneki and the way he freezes up at her question. people do get mad at servers, but this is obviously not the whole truth. she stops them beside the door to the tourist center and contemplates the air above her for a second. ]
Maybe, but he's behind bars now. I don't think he'd go through the trouble of throwing a ton of strangers in a single, empty city. It sounds expensive.
[ she has no idea what a prosecutor's income looks like. if it's anything like a defense attorney's, he was probably living paycheck-to-paycheck, even if he dressed like a fancy blueberry-colored butler. she pouts at kaneki again, still holding the door open. ]
People treat customer service workers so badly! What'd they do to you? Something stupid, I bet.
no subject
unfortunately for kaneki, trucy has an innate talent, though it's been slightly dimmed by the power-nerfing she experienced on arrival. the ability to perceive and hone in on the smallest, involuntary human ticks is something many people have without the blessing of genetics. coupled with emotional intelligence, trucy is pretty good at telling when someone is lying, avoiding something, hiding something—even if she can't pinpoint what it is. drawing the truth out of them is even tougher.
her smile falls away naturally as she sizes up kaneki and the way he freezes up at her question. people do get mad at servers, but this is obviously not the whole truth. she stops them beside the door to the tourist center and contemplates the air above her for a second. ]
Maybe, but he's behind bars now. I don't think he'd go through the trouble of throwing a ton of strangers in a single, empty city. It sounds expensive.
[ she has no idea what a prosecutor's income looks like. if it's anything like a defense attorney's, he was probably living paycheck-to-paycheck, even if he dressed like a fancy blueberry-colored butler. she pouts at kaneki again, still holding the door open. ]
People treat customer service workers so badly! What'd they do to you? Something stupid, I bet.