Fall 29th 511 AV
Seven had neglected his appearance since the stone mouth of Alvadas had opened itself to him. This was a reality he found himself cursing as thin steel passed along his lower jaw, painfully scraping away a growth of measly fuzz a proper peach would be embarrassed for. It took the youth nearly ten chimes to smooth his face with minimal remnants of waterlogged pink trailing down his chin. Each drop fell with an audible smack into the basin below, rippling and distorting the moon-pale face that stared up at him. When he lifted a hand to brush back the mane of white, the figure in the basin did the same. Together, they began to remove handfuls of soft hair where it had grown too wild with the same razor that had righted their face. By the time he was finished, he was alone, having left his doppelganger beneath a thin layer of ivory tresses that mingled on the water’s surface.
The focus of the halfblood’s free time was piled generously on a nearby desk: a ratted notebook, buried by parchment of map after hasty map of an ever-changing, ever-infuriating city. The hope was that eventually, Alvadas would offer him insight on a pattern to its shifting streets; a vain notion that had expired with time and clean parchment. It seemed hopeless, this quest for some equation in the puzzling dance of avenues and alleyways.
“I’m going out,” he murmured to the deaf pile of maps and his suffocated double.
Alvadas’ Cubacious Inn left little to be desired to one that really cherished a good night’s sleep; the building itself was known for ponderous shifts of its own accord. Sometimes it felt like little more than the earth shaking, Ivak turning over in his prison; other times Seven had fallen out of bed entirely to be rudely awakened by the floor. One such shift ended as his feet made contact with the ground floor of the inn—rather gracefully for a halfblood who had the poise of water in his gestures but that of a mule in his feet. Seven had dressed himself appropriately for a night on the town, that is, monochrome layers of smallclothes, a tunic, coat, breeches, and scarves in the case that he could not find his way and was forced to spend the night wandering the streets.
A figure caught the vapid garnet stare of this cynic as he passed through the lobby. Its hazy outline sharpened with his attention, and a pair of horns caught what dim light the inn’s windows and dying sun afforded to draw him in immediately. Seven’s eyes narrowed inquisitively as the man approached him, and he worked on his own end to close the gap that would inexorably widen again as the pair passed each other. Instinctively, Seven’s mind wandered to the sharp retribution of a self-righteous Lethborn and the scars on the palms of his dearest companion. Where a soapstone face could mask an expression, the unnerving garnets set within were incapable of deceit, now matter how he tried. The curiosity in his crimson-wrapped pupils turned sour and where a polite smile may have greeted a fellow patron lay only the cold pressed bow of pale lips as the two men went their separate ways. He thought he heard a greeting, but his mind and body had already moved far away from the son of Syna.
The door of the Cubacious Inn swung open, and then it pulled shut, as Seven stepped out into the breezy fall evening to find a meal, some bitter ale, and a retreat from a maddening search for order in the City of Illusion.