Fall 26th, 511AV Roughly Midnight Twist. Turn. Spin. Click-click-click. Twist. He'd rather be sleeping. The mountainscape of Kalea was still fresh in Laszlo's mind and he wished it would leave. For the whole of his trek to Alvadas, he'd put real effort into forgetting his time in Kalinor, and letting go of a past that ceased to matter to him. Now he wanted to forget having to forget about it. The crisp mountain air was still chill on his skin, and the smell of the Kalean wilderness (a mixture of pine and dust) still clung to his nostrils. Memories were bothersome, old and new ones alike. Even if he had gotten any sleep, he knew he would simply begin dreaming about the life of the Symenestra Vethis Orthilia, a man who by every right died decades ago. What was the point of remembering if you couldn't go back? Click-click. Turn. Now he was exhausted, weary from remembering and weary from travel. Laszlo had tried to get some sleep, but the Cubacious Inn wouldn't let him. His room was moving. He had been sure of it. At first, his bed had vibrated, and he heard rumbling. Not quite asleep to begin with, he decided to investigate. When he rose out of bed to ignite a nearby lantern, he swear he felt the floor shift beneath his feet and he lost his balance, stumbling into a shelf. An object had tumbled across the floor then, knocked loose from the force of impact. Now that the sun had set, Laszlo's night vision had become especially keen. It was a toy, a puzzle cube made of several smaller cubes that all rotated on an axis. It certainly didn't belong to him, but he didn't remember it being in his suite when he'd moved in. Deciding its origin didn't matter, he picked it up, very mildly fascinated. When he realized he wasn't going to get much rest any time soon, Laszlo left his inn room and returned to the main lobby, the puzzle cube in his hand. Most of the lanterns were out, so the majority of the light came from the moonlit windows. No one else seemed to be about, but Laszlo felt better being in the open than he did confined to his room. The isolation made him feel claustrophobic, and though the empty lobby wasn't much better, he feared he'd get lost in the city if he left the inn itself. Twist. Click. Spin. So here in the moonlight, the Ethaefal had found himself a chair to lounge in. His thin, spidery form was draped sideways over the seat cushion, with his head resting against one arm of the chair, and his legs dangling over the other. With Leth in prominence, he was Symenestra, and his silver hair glittered while his pink skin had become a dull grey. Held between his delicately sharpened black claws, he twisted and toyed with the puzzle cube in his lap. The repeating clicks that sounded as he turned the cube's faces were the only thing that broke the silence of the room, apart from his soft breathing. Bored and passing time, Laszlo had more or less conceded the fact that he'd be counting the hours until sunrise, when his fatigue would finally melt away as Syna renewed his celestial form and he'd be freed from his earthly wants. Then the front door opened. Click-click. Having already been in this spot for a bell or two, Laszlo was not as surprised as he thought he might be if someone walked in on him. In fact, he realized he'd been hoping for company. Without turning his head, he looked up from his puzzle. The light reflected in his sensitive pupils gave the appearance that his eyes were eerily glowing, much like a cat's, but it was really just the angle at which one looked at them. Yet they shimmered, curious, as they examined the stranger with cautious interest. "Hello," Laszlo greeted dully. He twisted the puzzle again. Click-click. "Who are you?" he added, somewhat awkwardly. He had meant to ask the question in a more demanding and hostile tone, but at the last second decided that there was no reason to scare the stranger off. He was starving for a little conversation. |