[Bruno, meanwhile, moves to take a pinch of the salt, hucking it over his shoulder, before righting the shaker again, mumbling something under his breath- unintelligible but worried. He busies himself with putting the salt back in the shaker- grabbing a pinch if any spills on the floor in the process- repeating the shoulder action.
[ Alberto watches Bruno for a second, before glancing at Luca uncertainly. Bruno does some weird stuff. But Alberto does some weird stuff — so he doesn't really ask about a lot of little things. Like maybe the guy just likes knocking on stuff. Alberto likes drumming on stuff; he gets it. But this? This is just a shade weirder than what he'd seen thus far. He keeps watching Bruno for a quiet, curious moment, then shoots Luca another awkward look and a tiny shrug, like his guess is as good as Alberto's.
So indeed, he just guesses — in such a way that might bring Luca back to Massimo's kitchen before they knew what forks were for... Alberto stares Bruno dead-on for a silent beat, his face somewhere between determined and blank. Then with rigid, decisive movements, he reaches out for the shaker Bruno'd just righted, pours a bit of salt into the palm of his hand, which he automatically slides over between him and Luca, and throws a pinch over his own shoulder. All in one stiff motion, eyes unblinking and focused on Bruno... He has no idea if this is the right reaction. But maybe it'd seem more suspicious if they don't copy him...? Bruno's human, Alberto'd asked him explicitly; so just copy the human... That's the golden rule, right? ]
[Luca stares as Bruno seems to alternate between trying to put the salt back in the shaker and throwing it over his shoulder, completely baffled and trying to figure out what he's doing and why. What is this? Is it a human thing? Then, seeing Alberto tentatively join in, Luca decides he might as well follow his lead. Whatever Bruno's doing, it's probably best to seem like they already recognize it and know what they're supposed to do, after all. Taking some of the salt himself, Luca tosses it over his own shoulder while still watching Bruno blankly, wondering if he'll say or do anything that might make it clear whether they're doing this right.]
[Bruno's...really not used to people mimicking his little superstitions. They were always seen as odd and quirky back home. Just a Weird Bruno Thing. As a result, he stills as the boys copy him- suspicious for a moment that they're actually mocking him.
But they seem to be...pretty intently staring at him as they do it and that seems...sincere? He kind of stares back for a minute, not really sure how to process this- tapping his fingers on the table.]
...Right. Yeah. So that was a thing. With the fish.
[ Slowly nods, just slowly nods... With another uncertain glance to Luca, he hucks what remains of the salt he'd poured in his hand over their shoulders carelessly. It's— a lot of salt all over their floor now, for no clear reason. A great intro to Living Alone With Alberto now that Luca's moved in, Day Two, hoo boy...
But Alberto's face betrays his puzzlement, although he tries to keep a pokerface. He wants to know about the salt... But he can't well ask "why did you do that" when he copied him like he already knew. So he carefully tiptoes around the issue, finally distracted from the fish at least... ]
...Soooo— you, uh— you do the salt thing in Colombia, too, eh? Why do you guys do it...?
[ Oh, god. Oh, no. Falling back on "cultural differences" is maybe a clever cover-up on the one hand, but on the other, absolutely cannot hold water. Poor Luca — they may be in another time and dimension and country, but clearly, not that much has changed since their time in Portorosso... The boy's just out here doing his best, man. ]
[Luca shoots Alberto a look, silently ask him what he is doing. The 'cultural differences' thing works well, of course, but now they've already done the salt thing, and now Alberto's bringing up why Bruno does it, which might very well lead to him wondering why they do it. He says nothing, hoping he might be able to come up with an adequate lie when they come to it. If they come to it. Luca turns back to Bruno, watching and waiting for his reaction.]
[Well. That might...explain the mimicry a little more. Bruno considers this a moment more and then decides that maybe the boys were trying to copy what they thought was a Columbian tradition. A little laugh escapes him as he shakes his head.]
Ohhh, no. No. That's not a Columbian thing, that's a me thing. It's uh- it's to keep away bad luck. You spill salt, you toss some over your shoulder.
[At least he bought the cultural difference angle! You win boys!]
[ Alberto knows they're not quite out of the woods yet, should Bruno ask why they do it in Italy, because as Luca can probably guess, he doesn't have an answer locked and loaded... And he might normally come up with one in this moment, were Bruno's answer to his question not so suddenly fascinating. It distracts and disarms him from his questionably smooth cover-up. ]
Wait— For real? You can keep away bad luck? Do you have to spill the salt for it to make the bad luck go away, or can you just—
[ He takes the salt shaker up again and shakes it directly over his shoulder. Because if it's that easy, he's astonished. This new fact is relevant to his interests — he can use all the help he can get staving off bad luck. Unfortunately, most all his bad luck is merely the consequences of his own actions falling like dominoes, but hey, can't hurt to ward off bad luck in general anyway, right? ]
I- I mean, I don't...the amount of salt doesn't really affect the luck?
[Oh god he regrets everything. People never asked him any deep-dive questions about his little tics before. They've just accepted it as a Weird Bruno Thing and left him alone.]
It's just a supersition y'know? I mean...I think it helps? Some people don't. It's not like a Gift or anything. It's just a thing people do to try and make things...less unlucky for them.
[ Alberto listens to Bruno with full focus still, then glances to Luca deliberatively for a beat, as if to say "yeah, checks out," without so many words. Alberto hadn't really believed in ghosts before he came here, until a ghost (awkwardly) tried to drown him just a few days ago... so he's already especially inclined to question his supernatural skepticism right now. Also considering he's been spirited away to another dimension across time and space, magically learned another language without effort, and objects from Portorosso mysteriously showed up in his home, not to mention he was kidnapped by fairies, is talking to a man who can see the future, and is himself a sea monster? Alberto's in no position to play the skeptic on this. Luca knows plenty about sea monster superstitions, too, so he figures he'll trust his judgment on this?
He gives Luca the slightest twitch of a shrug and a long face to defer the call onto him and end that silent blip of a conversation, like all that goes without saying between the boys. While Alberto's become particularly close with Bruno over the past month, far more than with anyone else here, he of course still is not completely open and transparent yet — and frankly, he really isn't with anyone but... Luca... So seeing this rapport between the two of them shows another side of Alberto, already obviously happier and more at ease beside his legendary best friend. He seems to act on autopilot with him now, even slightly more humble than usual perhaps, the two communicating so much this whole time with so many little looks. They just feed into each other's inquisitive energy, to boot, which is probably a sweet dynamic to see in person at last but — yeahhhh, overwhelming, very. Luca lives up to the hype Alberto's built, and now the hype is... here. With Alberto, who is now extra hyped. Tagteaming Bruno in this impromptu interview from the start. Pobrecito... ]
[Now the gears in his brain are working. He wonders if there's any way to test how much less unlucky it makes things? Maybe, maybe not. He's not sure. Still, it certainly couldn't hurt to throw some salt over his shoulder. Although he might not want to throw as much as they'd been throwing, since that might just make a mess.]
That makes sense. And it can't hurt to try it and see if it makes things luckier!
There you, go, exactly! Better than not doing anything at all and feeling super cursed, right?
[One might say that this deep-seated superstition comes from Bruno being able to see the future and has felt helpless in controlling it for the vast majority of his existence. But that is a deep-dive that Bruno never wants to do thank you! ]
[ Something about the way Bruno phrases that strikes a weird nerve with Alberto, too, but he's not tuning into that either, thanks. He's just hot on the idea that he can keep away bad luck potentially. And if Luca's on board with it, he's even more inclined to take it as fact. Especially coming from Bruno. He'll definitely be looking into this on his own now, too, finding more anti-bad luck methods... No doubt about that. ]
Y'know— back home in Portorosso, lots of people were superstitious. Pretty much everyone. But some superstitions are true! Right, Luca?
[ He flashes Luca a grin, keeping it lighthearted, not all that suspicious, moves right along past that innocent little aside; but privately, Luca knows Alberto's actually just going Hahaaaa... ]
So just in case the anti-bad luck stuff does work, s'worth a try. Heh, I mean, I need all the help I can get, ha~!
[ The humblest thing Alberto's ever said of himself...? Too bad the bad luck that follows him just so happens to resemble the consequences of his own actions; six of one, half a dozen of the other... ]
Right! Like if you try to fish somewhere that fish have died, you won't catch any fish!
[Also known as a 'fish graveyard'. Of course, there are a million exceptions. It doesn't count if they've died there because someone caught it for food or if a predator ate it. And sometimes fish die and you can still catch fish there. Still, there's sometimes in some places where fish die and you won't find many living fish in the area. Also, these areas are haunted and if you stay in these zones for too long the fish ghosts will make it hard to breathe. It's the superstition he figures would be the least suspicious, since humans fish, too, and it's not something that would have to be happening exclusively underwater.]
Wow, really? I've never heard of that one before. What makes that happen?
[He isn't humouring them, he is genuinely interested. He wants to learn about this new superstition. Does he plan on fishing anytime soon? No. But it doesn't hurt to know. ]
But yeah, that's why I do it too. Things are baaaad enough without tempting fate. Fate can be pretty fickle. We don't wanna upset her more than we do already, right?
Ehh— ghosts...? The fish think it's haunted, I mean. They're, uh— they're all superstitious, too...?
[ grijksndf. Alberto, no. That line seemed to go over well with Massimo, as far as he could tell, but in fact it was just that Massimo seldom reacts or responds to much of anything... It was a weird thing to say then, and it's still weird now. Serves him right for trying to make a cheeky sly inside joke about sea monsters being "true superstitions" — Alberto can't go even an hour without doing or saying something suspicious...! Bruno's just weird enough to have taken it all in stride so far, though, so here's hoping their odd comments have all been innocuous enough tonight; even if they're drifting into some questionable waters here, they're all in the same ocean of weird, at least...
Bruno's comment on not tempting fate rings true, though, so Alberto's more than happy to steer the conversation away from fish — again. Who knew there'd be so much fish-talk tonight... But overall, still an endearing and encouraging evening, despite the panicked start. Alberto's loving every moment of this long-awaited introduction — which has gone just swimmingly, he thinks! ]
Text me more anti-bad luck tricks later, okay? So I won't forget any. I don't need any good luck tricks, though — that'd be greedy. I'm already super lucky. Y'know— without all the bad luck, I mean... O-Once that's gone, eheh. Then I'll be super lucky!
[ Sound logic. He was lucky enough to meet Luca — what're the chances the first person he'd ever gotten to know would end up being his best friend ever, right? That's great luck! And lucky enough to meet Bruno on his first day here, then get randomly assigned a room together, plus all their uncanny little coincidences et al — seems like great luck there, too. Proof of his good luck sitting right here with him! Now if he can just get rid of all "the bad luck" that he feels follows him, then he'll be golden...! ]
[Okay, no, Luca thinks it's haunted. He doesn't really think that it's the fish thinking anything, just that it really is haunted and that's driving the fish away. He's guessing the idea of actual fish ghosts probably sounds too weird to Alberto, though, so he decides, just like last time, to not push it. When Alberto mentions not needing more good luck because that would be greedy, it makes Luca wonder something.]
Wait, can good luck run out? Like if someone takes too much, will there not be enough for someone else?
[But they are incredibly lucky. Luca's lucky he met Alberto and got the push he needed to see the world. They're lucky that no one managed to harpoon either of them. They're lucky that the townsfolk decided to listen to Massimo and that Massimo recognized them and turned his back on a lifetime of sea monster hunting. Between the two of them, they're the luckiest sea monsters in the world.]
[ Alberto gives a nervous smile and a quick nod; they do know their fish stuff... But Bruno doesn't seem suspicious, so Alberto's actually interpreting this as a total success, proof of progress in their humaning skills. They're able to tiptoe around fish stuff without seeming suspicious now, seemingly; that's his takeaway. Bad takeaway.
He likes Bruno's take on individual luck, though. He turns to Luca with a much more genuine smile, nudging him a little with his elbow playfully. ]
Yeah. So if two really lucky people are together, that just doubles the good luck, right?
[ He glances to Bruno for confirmation on this, but he feels pretty certain about this takeaway. Funny as it may be that the boys are drilling Bruno to quantify "luck" and dissect his superstitions, Alberto's conclusion is at least a sweet, encouraging way to look at it — they may not share their luck overall, but they'll still share in each other's good luck. Good takeaway. ]
[Luca's nervous for a moment when Bruno repeats the 'fish have superstitions' thing, worried that it sounds too suspicious, but then he follows it up with a statement that clearly doesn't sound the least bit suspicious, so Luca realizes they're in the clear. That's a relief. Maybe better to just stop bringing up fish, though.]
Right. So if we did do something that brings good luck, it's fine because no one else is losing luck just because we got even more.
[Good to know. That way they don't have to feel guilty if they happen to do something that brings more good luck even though they already have a lot. He smiles back at Alberto when his friend nudges.]
It probably does, because our luck's been amazing.
[He realises this is not going to work. He's already trying to apply logic to the illogical, and now these kids are adding EXTRA non-logic to the mess. He knows when to give up and let them win. ]
...You know what? Sure. That works, Kids. Go for it.
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Lightly, as if it's not happening:]
Hah, yeah. That fish got out at the right time.
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So indeed, he just guesses — in such a way that might bring Luca back to Massimo's kitchen before they knew what forks were for... Alberto stares Bruno dead-on for a silent beat, his face somewhere between determined and blank. Then with rigid, decisive movements, he reaches out for the shaker Bruno'd just righted, pours a bit of salt into the palm of his hand, which he automatically slides over between him and Luca, and throws a pinch over his own shoulder. All in one stiff motion, eyes unblinking and focused on Bruno... He has no idea if this is the right reaction. But maybe it'd seem more suspicious if they don't copy him...? Bruno's human, Alberto'd asked him explicitly; so just copy the human... That's the golden rule, right? ]
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But they seem to be...pretty intently staring at him as they do it and that seems...sincere? He kind of stares back for a minute, not really sure how to process this- tapping his fingers on the table.]
...Right. Yeah. So that was a thing. With the fish.
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[ Slowly nods, just slowly nods... With another uncertain glance to Luca, he hucks what remains of the salt he'd poured in his hand over their shoulders carelessly. It's— a lot of salt all over their floor now, for no clear reason. A great intro to Living Alone With Alberto now that Luca's moved in, Day Two, hoo boy...
But Alberto's face betrays his puzzlement, although he tries to keep a pokerface. He wants to know about the salt... But he can't well ask "why did you do that" when he copied him like he already knew. So he carefully tiptoes around the issue, finally distracted from the fish at least... ]
...Soooo— you, uh— you do the salt thing in Colombia, too, eh? Why do you guys do it...?
[ Oh, god. Oh, no. Falling back on "cultural differences" is maybe a clever cover-up on the one hand, but on the other, absolutely cannot hold water. Poor Luca — they may be in another time and dimension and country, but clearly, not that much has changed since their time in Portorosso... The boy's just out here doing his best, man. ]
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[Well. That might...explain the mimicry a little more. Bruno considers this a moment more and then decides that maybe the boys were trying to copy what they thought was a Columbian tradition. A little laugh escapes him as he shakes his head.]
Ohhh, no. No. That's not a Columbian thing, that's a me thing. It's uh- it's to keep away bad luck. You spill salt, you toss some over your shoulder.
[At least he bought the cultural difference angle! You win boys!]
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Wait— For real? You can keep away bad luck? Do you have to spill the salt for it to make the bad luck go away, or can you just—
[ He takes the salt shaker up again and shakes it directly over his shoulder. Because if it's that easy, he's astonished. This new fact is relevant to his interests — he can use all the help he can get staving off bad luck. Unfortunately, most all his bad luck is merely the consequences of his own actions falling like dominoes, but hey, can't hurt to ward off bad luck in general anyway, right? ]
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And if you're having really bad luck do you just have to throw more salt? Can you reverse one of your visions if you throw enough salt?
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[Oh god he regrets everything. People never asked him any deep-dive questions about his little tics before. They've just accepted it as a Weird Bruno Thing and left him alone.]
It's just a supersition y'know? I mean...I think it helps? Some people don't. It's not like a Gift or anything. It's just a thing people do to try and make things...less unlucky for them.
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He gives Luca the slightest twitch of a shrug and a long face to defer the call onto him and end that silent blip of a conversation, like all that goes without saying between the boys. While Alberto's become particularly close with Bruno over the past month, far more than with anyone else here, he of course still is not completely open and transparent yet — and frankly, he really isn't with anyone but... Luca... So seeing this rapport between the two of them shows another side of Alberto, already obviously happier and more at ease beside his legendary best friend. He seems to act on autopilot with him now, even slightly more humble than usual perhaps, the two communicating so much this whole time with so many little looks. They just feed into each other's inquisitive energy, to boot, which is probably a sweet dynamic to see in person at last but — yeahhhh, overwhelming, very. Luca lives up to the hype Alberto's built, and now the hype is... here. With Alberto, who is now extra hyped. Tagteaming Bruno in this impromptu interview from the start. Pobrecito... ]
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[Now the gears in his brain are working. He wonders if there's any way to test how much less unlucky it makes things? Maybe, maybe not. He's not sure. Still, it certainly couldn't hurt to throw some salt over his shoulder. Although he might not want to throw as much as they'd been throwing, since that might just make a mess.]
That makes sense. And it can't hurt to try it and see if it makes things luckier!
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[One might say that this deep-seated superstition comes from Bruno being able to see the future and has felt helpless in controlling it for the vast majority of his existence. But that is a deep-dive that Bruno never wants to do thank you! ]
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[ Something about the way Bruno phrases that strikes a weird nerve with Alberto, too, but he's not tuning into that either, thanks. He's just hot on the idea that he can keep away bad luck potentially. And if Luca's on board with it, he's even more inclined to take it as fact. Especially coming from Bruno. He'll definitely be looking into this on his own now, too, finding more anti-bad luck methods... No doubt about that. ]
Y'know— back home in Portorosso, lots of people were superstitious. Pretty much everyone. But some superstitions are true! Right, Luca?
[ He flashes Luca a grin, keeping it lighthearted, not all that suspicious, moves right along past that innocent little aside; but privately, Luca knows Alberto's actually just going Hahaaaa... ]
So just in case the anti-bad luck stuff does work, s'worth a try. Heh, I mean, I need all the help I can get, ha~!
[ The humblest thing Alberto's ever said of himself...? Too bad the bad luck that follows him just so happens to resemble the consequences of his own actions; six of one, half a dozen of the other... ]
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[Also known as a 'fish graveyard'. Of course, there are a million exceptions. It doesn't count if they've died there because someone caught it for food or if a predator ate it. And sometimes fish die and you can still catch fish there. Still, there's sometimes in some places where fish die and you won't find many living fish in the area. Also, these areas are haunted and if you stay in these zones for too long the fish ghosts will make it hard to breathe. It's the superstition he figures would be the least suspicious, since humans fish, too, and it's not something that would have to be happening exclusively underwater.]
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[He isn't humouring them, he is genuinely interested. He wants to learn about this new superstition. Does he plan on fishing anytime soon? No. But it doesn't hurt to know. ]
But yeah, that's why I do it too. Things are baaaad enough without tempting fate. Fate can be pretty fickle. We don't wanna upset her more than we do already, right?
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[ grijksndf. Alberto, no. That line seemed to go over well with Massimo, as far as he could tell, but in fact it was just that Massimo seldom reacts or responds to much of anything... It was a weird thing to say then, and it's still weird now. Serves him right for trying to make a cheeky sly inside joke about sea monsters being "true superstitions" — Alberto can't go even an hour without doing or saying something suspicious...! Bruno's just weird enough to have taken it all in stride so far, though, so here's hoping their odd comments have all been innocuous enough tonight; even if they're drifting into some questionable waters here, they're all in the same ocean of weird, at least...
Bruno's comment on not tempting fate rings true, though, so Alberto's more than happy to steer the conversation away from fish — again. Who knew there'd be so much fish-talk tonight... But overall, still an endearing and encouraging evening, despite the panicked start. Alberto's loving every moment of this long-awaited introduction — which has gone just swimmingly, he thinks! ]
Text me more anti-bad luck tricks later, okay? So I won't forget any. I don't need any good luck tricks, though — that'd be greedy. I'm already super lucky. Y'know— without all the bad luck, I mean... O-Once that's gone, eheh. Then I'll be super lucky!
[ Sound logic. He was lucky enough to meet Luca — what're the chances the first person he'd ever gotten to know would end up being his best friend ever, right? That's great luck! And lucky enough to meet Bruno on his first day here, then get randomly assigned a room together, plus all their uncanny little coincidences et al — seems like great luck there, too. Proof of his good luck sitting right here with him! Now if he can just get rid of all "the bad luck" that he feels follows him, then he'll be golden...! ]
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[Okay, no, Luca thinks it's haunted. He doesn't really think that it's the fish thinking anything, just that it really is haunted and that's driving the fish away. He's guessing the idea of actual fish ghosts probably sounds too weird to Alberto, though, so he decides, just like last time, to not push it. When Alberto mentions not needing more good luck because that would be greedy, it makes Luca wonder something.]
Wait, can good luck run out? Like if someone takes too much, will there not be enough for someone else?
[But they are incredibly lucky. Luca's lucky he met Alberto and got the push he needed to see the world. They're lucky that no one managed to harpoon either of them. They're lucky that the townsfolk decided to listen to Massimo and that Massimo recognized them and turned his back on a lifetime of sea monster hunting. Between the two of them, they're the luckiest sea monsters in the world.]
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[He's...not heard of this before, but he's never really thought about fish having the sort of mentality to HAVE superstitions before.]
You guys really know your stuff about fish, huh?
[His tone isn't at all suspicious, just a statement of fact.]
And I don't think luck is like...a finite resource. Or like...shared? Between people? I think it's more...we got our own luck, right?
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He likes Bruno's take on individual luck, though. He turns to Luca with a much more genuine smile, nudging him a little with his elbow playfully. ]
Yeah. So if two really lucky people are together, that just doubles the good luck, right?
[ He glances to Bruno for confirmation on this, but he feels pretty certain about this takeaway. Funny as it may be that the boys are drilling Bruno to quantify "luck" and dissect his superstitions, Alberto's conclusion is at least a sweet, encouraging way to look at it — they may not share their luck overall, but they'll still share in each other's good luck. Good takeaway. ]
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Right. So if we did do something that brings good luck, it's fine because no one else is losing luck just because we got even more.
[Good to know. That way they don't have to feel guilty if they happen to do something that brings more good luck even though they already have a lot. He smiles back at Alberto when his friend nudges.]
It probably does, because our luck's been amazing.
wrap
[He realises this is not going to work. He's already trying to apply logic to the illogical, and now these kids are adding EXTRA non-logic to the mess. He knows when to give up and let them win. ]
...You know what? Sure. That works, Kids. Go for it.