"Hell you're not, you pansy. You think you're better than
me?" Hwoarang's glare spit flames. Jin embodied everything he
hated. Japanese, a rich kid, a tree-hugging hippy, obviously a
mama's boy, and a fucking Mishima. The last thing alone was enough
to draw Hwoarang's revulsion, but this reluctance thing. This
reluctance thing, and his obsession with conquering Jin Kazama --
they were things Hwoarang couldn't understand.

He didn't want to try to. As soon as he kicked the Japanese's
ass the world could return to its previously scheduled program.

"No." Jin stared at him, wonderment gone. He probably
thought he was in control. It made Hwoarang want to give that
cowlick on his head a trim with extremely sharp spurs.

"You probably think this Ghandi act is cute, huh? Well, that
act means shit to me."



It had been a draw, for chrissakes! Yet, a year after the most
humiliating act in his life, Hwoarang sat across from Jin Kazama
drinking a beer. The force of the irony was lost in the Japanese's
disarmingly honest stare on the plate of greasy karei and rice in
front of him. Hwoarang'd suggested the dish. He was still upset
that Jin turned down his call to a rematch, but had gotten past
trying to convince the Japanese against his will. Hwoarang settled
for asking him if he had a light, and as Jin handed over a zippo he
probably never used, curiosity triumphed over the Korean.

"So ... if you're not about fighting, what are you about?" After
he took a drag off his Camel -- an imported, American brand, and a
pricey habit he picked up from old GIs -- Hwoarang reached for his
beer and set it to his mouth.

"What do you mean?" Jin asked, partially relieved at the lifting
of silence. He found a rhythm in the way Hwoarang talked that made
him eager to hear more of the redhead's voice. It was probably the
hint of Korean in it, an accent both strange and rough to Jin's
ears. It wasn't anything like the proper way of speaking they taught
at Mishima Tech, with its edge that secretly thrilled the Japanese.

Hwoarang took his time swallowing the last of the beer in his
mouth, and narrowed his eyes into smug focus. "You know, like
morals, like convictions. Like stuff that means something to you."

"I think there's a lot of patience people can learn from nature."

"So you're a hippie?" the Korean jeered, folding his arms over
his chair. He'd straddled it backwards, and so he could rest his
chin on the rim casually and study the gentle tree that fields and
fields of Mishima manure seemed to have spawned.

"Hippie .. ?" Jin echoed in slight confusion. It sounded like
something about Elvis Presley he'd heard. That American was supposed
to have been 'hip'. Suddenly, Jin felt self-conscious about his hair.

"Why won't you fight me?"
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