[Some of them were already giving him odd looks while he kept his attention on her. Their thoughts probably ran along the lines of 'was he nuts? It's not worth it!' or 'It'll never work out', even 'You can't make something out of nothing'. Not that he really cared to notice -- especially when she said herself she wanted to learn.
They'll make it work, no matter how long they have to, or how much effort they have to put in.
Souji holds the script out to her. What was written seemed to be the draft of a book he'd come across once before he first left town. He normally wouldn't have an interest in these, but something about it caught his eye; that it was an old legend. Rather, one rewritten for the modern eye, with its actual content intact. One in which a great warrior led an entire army against impossible odds and saved the world from destruction. Perhaps it was idealistic, and it'd take more hands than they actually had -- but it seemed like a good idea for when he came back later on, especially if he took only the relevant parts. It would shrink the number of people they needed considerably.
He hated having to actually condense it, though. There were so many pages to go through for the scenes he wanted to re-enact...] We can't really start if you don't know the script.
[There was quite a bit in the annotations themselves, too. The emotions he had to draw out, the actions they had to perform, among other things...]
no subject
They'll make it work, no matter how long they have to, or how much effort they have to put in.
Souji holds the script out to her. What was written seemed to be the draft of a book he'd come across once before he first left town. He normally wouldn't have an interest in these, but something about it caught his eye; that it was an old legend. Rather, one rewritten for the modern eye, with its actual content intact. One in which a great warrior led an entire army against impossible odds and saved the world from destruction. Perhaps it was idealistic, and it'd take more hands than they actually had -- but it seemed like a good idea for when he came back later on, especially if he took only the relevant parts. It would shrink the number of people they needed considerably.
He hated having to actually condense it, though. There were so many pages to go through for the scenes he wanted to re-enact...] We can't really start if you don't know the script.
[There was quite a bit in the annotations themselves, too. The emotions he had to draw out, the actions they had to perform, among other things...]