Author's NoteThis is an introductory thread, PM me if you'd like to play off this. Or if you want to make a new thread with me! I'm always looking for new RP opportunities.
If the moon smiled, she would resemble you. You leave the same impression Of something beautiful, but annihilating.
"How much?"
The gentleman who stood before her, travel-worn and weary, was allowing his eyes to wander over the canvas of her body a little too freely. With arms crossed tightly in front of her, Lillis eyed him back, appraisingly, and said, "Depends."
"On?" The traveler dropped his pack, and rubbed a hand over his face, grimy from weeks in the woods. He heaved a sigh as though to indicate that he was in no mood for extended negotiations, and she was all too willing to oblige him.
"On what kind of reading you desire. An aura reading is 5 gold, palm reading is 2."
"That's quite a price."
"I'm marked by Avalis," she said, not without a little edge of defensiveness to her voice. "So obviously..."
"Do you do cards?" he interrupted, satisfied with her credentials, as they were.
Pursing her lips and canting her head gently to the side, Lillis gave a sharp nod. "Yes, but you don't want a card reading." Certainly not cards, no, not since a thief had recently deprived her of her deck.
"Oh, don't I?" The grin on the traveler's face was roughish, almost charming, if not for the myriad of black caverns where some of his teeth once were.
"No. You want a palm reading." A corner of her full, cerise lips curled up in a smile and she peered at him from behind a forest of dark lashes. "I'm very good with hands."
Ducking into her tent, the traveler furrowed a brow and stayed near the exit. It shielded them from an icy autumn wind, but that was about all it did. Sparse and barren, she had few possession to speak of, and this space reflected as much. "So this is a gypsy tent?"
"Not exactly. Will you sit?"
"Where?"
Lillis took a seat on one end of a woolen blanket, spread out over the dirt floor of her tent, and gestured that he should do the same. He hesitated, but ultimately joined her, sitting cross-legged opposite. Tucking a flaxen curl behind her ear, she studied his face in the dim candlelight. "I --" she hesitated, her breath catching in her throat for just a moment, "I was robbed two days ago."
"I see."
"I'm trying to replenish my store. I had these... beautiful tapestries, pillows, silks, crystals. A proper setup for a fortune teller, but..." a slender shoulder arched in a shrug. "They're just things, ultimately, and anyway -- enough about me. Show me your hand."
He reached out, fingers splayed and she leaned forward, not touching him, and nodded slowly. "Mm. All right, that'll be 2 gold."
"I don't think so -- give me the reading, then you'll see your gold." He withdrew his hand, then, and sat back. But she simply pursed her lips and stood her ground.
"I know better than to give things away. Put the gold in the center of the blanket." He did not hesitate the way she expected. In fact, his purse revealed a great deal more money than she would have thought from someone in his condition. Storm-sky eyes grew narrow as she regarded him, but ultimately she tucked her feet underneath her and leaned forward. "Show me your hand." And she looked, but did not touch.
She studied his palm silently for a time, endeavoring to concoct something that would sound passable for two gold mizas, for in fact she had no talent for palm reading. To her, his hand looked dirty, and she was able to divine that he had not washed in some time. But that was it.
"Well?" He urged, brows raised. "What do you see?"
A little pink tongue darted out across her lips as she lifted her gaze to meet his. "You have an... exceptionally short marriage line," she lied. "You're... not married?"
"No," he confirmed, unimpressed.
"Right, well, it doesn't look like you ever will be." She returned her attention to his hand. "However, ah, it seems you have a remarkably long life line -- yes, see?" She gestured vaguely to one of the many creases of his palm. "So that means --"
"I know what that means. Anything else?" He was frowning at her in a most pronounced manner, but she did not falter under the weight of his gaze.
"Well, perhaps if I knew what you were looking for -- answers to a question, perhaps."
"No," he said evenly, "nothing like that."
"All right," she stammered through a few more things, generic and safe, with a few inspired details that she drew out of the air. And when she was quite finished, she reached out for the two coins in front of her. But before she could pluck them up, he grabbed her arm which fit easily in his thick fist.
As soon as they touched, the vision began. She squeezed her eyes shut, tried to control it, but it pulled her in like gravity. A flash of him and a well of blood seeping from his gut; a flash of him, tangled in something yellow; a flash of ivory.
"Now just a second," he said in low tones, "do I look like someone who can actually afford to waste money on a sub-par palm reading?"
"How you choose to waste your money is hardly my concern," she said on the wings of a sharp exhalation. The images were coming faster now, and she saw him die in the shadows of her mind. She watched him die in this future.
"So what other... services might you render then, hm?" he asked, but she was not hearing him. She was watching him die. She saw the ivory of her suvai, she saw the curve of her own hand as she plunged the blade into his gut. She heard the life seep out of him, she saw the blood.
And then she opened her eyes.
"Well, that's interesting," she muttered, and wrenched her arm free.
"I said, what other services --"
"I heard what you said." She rose to her feet then, backing toward the flap of the tent that served as an entrance and exit. "I think you'd better go."
"I'm not going anywhere. Services rendered --"
"Take your money, and go." She said evenly, crouching down toward her pack where she kept her blade. "I don't need the money badly enough to warrant that kind of hassle, so please... do us both a favor -- take your money, and go."
She turned her back to him, then, crouching over her pack to rifle quickly through it. He approached her slowly, with a lumbering gait, and reached out to brush his dirt-smeared fingers over a lock of pale yellow hair. "I'll give you all the gold in my purse," he said quietly.
"You haven't got enough for what you're asking," came her sharp reply, as she curled her hand around the grip of her suvai.
"Who says I'm asking?" He tugged her hair fiercely then, forcing her to rise to her full height, her suvai gripped tightly in front of her. The hand she'd been studying slid around to the front of her and pulled her close so that she could feel the shifting of his muscles all along the back of her. The hand she'd been studying groped and landed in place on her breast, kneading her flesh with an urgency that she did not recognize as sexual need. The hand she'd been studying began to travel slowly downward until it felt the cold ivory of her weapon. It paused, lingering there for a moment, before she heard him take in air to question her. But in that moment between breath and speech, she turned and plunged the blade into his gut.
The traveler dropped, then, amber-colored eyes raised to her face in shock. He did not die immediately, and she watched him go, comparing this death to the memory of the vision she'd had when he touched her. "I'm sorry," she said quietly, "I'd have preferred that you die more quickly. But we work with what we're given, I suppose."
She locked stoic gray eyes on him until he'd passed, giving him the respect of her full attention. But when he'd gone, she stooped and picked up the two coins that rested on the woolen blanket and dropped them into her own purse. She cast a glance over her shoulder at him, then: "For services rendered," she said, and stepped through the flap of the tent. |