TS: 35th Night of Summer, 509 AV
Ravok was probably not the best place for an Akvatari to be at night. However, Chaelnomyl was also not exactly the most learned person in cases Ravok and how it truly was, and the scene at night was something that drew her attention. The way the stars and the low lights reflected off the still surface of the water made her curious enough to venture out into the city's night life and observe the canals once more. Syna's rays had long since departed the skies and the world was bathed in moonlight again, something Chaelnomyl could admire too, as it was plain to see in the dark of the sky. Not that she knew much about astronomy, the stars, the moon, the Goddess Syna or the God Leth, but Chaelnomyl knew one thing - their canvas there in the sky was one that she envied. How wonderful it would have been to be able to paint an infinite canvas with her mere thoughts... the winged creature couldn't help but be jealous on some deep, rarely shown level.
It was often found that things changed in most cities and scenes when the sun went down, and it appeared that Ravok was much the same. Despite Chaelnomyl's admiration of it in the daytime hours, when the light was bright and the waters reflected sometimes blinding streams of sunlight, she had found a fond renewal of interest in it at night. Something about the way the moon bounced off the more still waters and the way only a few Ravosalas could be found here and there... The way the first sound she heard was the lap of the water against the stilts the buildings sat on and not the hustle and bustle of the haphazard "port"-like town... It was almost peaceful. Had she not been warned about the people of that town and their less than admirable districts by its own guards, Chaelnomyl might have even found it peaceful, serene, and definitively... relaxing.
Dranquay had been concerned for her safety because of what Ravok was known for: Slavery, evil, and unsavory land-bound creatures. Chaelnomyl could see the need for concern if one had thought that the younger sister of the two children of the sea and sky had been completely oblivious to the tragedies of the world and was somehow blissfully unaware that not everyone's first love was that of the arts... But this was not the case. She knew that. Dranquay was simply remembering the thirteen year old girl she had been when he'd left. That had to have been the reason. Regardless, the Akvatari was quick to shrug it off and instead spend her evening after the sun had set by the edge of the docks, off in a nook of sorts, an area that should have been safe from prying eyes at least in a few directions... and took to observing the way the lights above and through the city splashed on the water in a spray below, as if someone had stretched them out in ovals and separated them by their varying hues.
When Chaelnomyl had grown comfortable with her chosen location, looking back across the waterway to the deeper parts of the city - for she was simply just outside and about in the Docks still, having not explored the inner city to any well extent - her hands searched her satchel for the bound layers of parchment and the ink as well. Looking at the cityscape before her, she slowly began to sketch the domes near the bottom of the opened page, but also took in the waterway, trying to study how the water acted in the low light and outline the shapes delicately in her would-be sketch book to later recreate more properly with paints. Whenever she got back around to actually getting paints. It was worth note that the Akvatari allowed her spotted lower half to dangle off the edge, the flippers brushing the water as best they could though staying well enough away from it that it couldn't be nipped at by a passing shark - she'd seen that fin, and didn't intend to meet its owner anytime soon...
"Leth really knows how to paint a beautiful picture, doesn't he..." Chaelnomyl mused softly aloud to no one in particular, marveling at the way the stars were placed with such precision and purpose in the canvas of dark blue, almost blackened sky.
A long, agonizing pause caused her to pick up her hand and stop, as she peered skyward and let her eyes become lost in that endless canvas as a cloud passed over what was visible of the moon that night. A thin smile partially split her face, though it was not overly expressive - merely there. One day she'd recreate that beauty. One day. Not tonight, though. Tonight was a study in canals and water... and probably some of the sky, if she could manage it well enough. Light blue wings waved back and forth slowly as she watched the lights above reflect off her skin. Truly the Akvatari were children of some sort of union of the sea and the sky - the water below her and the canvas above her were doing their best to prove that tonight.