30th Day of Spring, 512 AV Location: The Sunken Conundrum A city fraught with peculiarity, and yet Indyrio was still struggling to find a decent book of all things. The woeful torpor in each step he took, much as it appeared he was suffering from stiff joints, was due to a child like naiveté of the city he‘d once relished in calling his future home. Now marked by a slowly souring ambivalence, the tormented violets of his eyes wandered from storefront to storefront, reading signs that in no way advertised the service they were providing. Perhaps in some perverse way their owners thought that was clever. To make matters worse, the sky hung heavy above with slate gray clouds, the cackle of thunder a low groan pounding against the horizon and hollow to his ears. Indyrio found himself dismally hoping it would be rain to fall, and not one of Ionu’s distorted contrivances. Water he could handle, falling hunks of salted pork he could not. But good fortune was a dish served queer with a side of crazy in this town, and Indyrio found his pace hastening towards a shelter that would accommodate him. While never sure where he truly fit in the puzzle, much to Ionu’s amusement no doubt, for the moment Indyrio felt more misplaced than seemed customary. Having picked up his pace from a hurried step to the beginnings of a run, his footsteps echoed desolately against the huddled walls of buildings he‘d lost all interest in, a slender shadow escaping down an emptying street as doors closed to his left and right. Heading down a gradual decline around a sharp bend, Indyrio compensated for his speed by making a jagged wide arc around the corner, and was met with an unfamiliar oddity. A single gravel path was beset on each side by the skeleton fingers of a hedge leading up to a towering face of fluted columns and strangely lit windows. The double doors were two solid pieces of Osage adorned by gilded handles, their carvings styled with open books and loose scrolls fluttering haphazardly about. If it hadn’t been for a pressing sense of fear, Indyrio may have smiled, his pace slowing to a crawl as his feet crunched against the chalky gravel, breath heavy between his moisture deprived lips. Taking three marbled stairs he hadn’t cared to notice before, the soft pastels of his eyes weighed the door heavily before reaching out to pry the right side open. Normally such a sight would have surprised him, but his mind had slowly begun to expect the unexpected in this labyrinthine city of riddles, and was at least gladdened when he did not immediately become doused with water. Reaching his slender fingers out tentatively at first, he pressed them to the flat liquid surface and was impressed by its lack of resistance, small ripples emanating from the point of contact. The water was no colder than the temperature of his skin, and when he pulled it back out he wasn’t entirely sure any of the moisture had left with him. An uncommitted grunt seemed to be his only response to that, and with but the slightest of shrugs he plunged the rest of his body in, polite enough to close the door behind him. Thinking it was no more than a portal of water through which he’d step out the other side, a mild panic rose in his chest before sight caught hold of the sign placed so conveniently for fools like him. Trust became but the most minor of opposing forces, his nostrils flaring as he took a single breath, and then another. A strange discomfort gathered around his ribcage at first, his hands prying apart the ties of his jerkin followed by the strings of his tunic. Peeling the fabric apart from his flesh revealed a mysterious set of gills that had formed between bone dense ridges. “I’ll be damned,” he muttered to himself, momentarily stricken by the fact that he could be heard though the sound seemed not to carry far, small pockets of air scurrying between fabric and flesh. Taking a moment to redress his exposed chest, he floated in weightlessness with a perceptible delight, a smile spreading from ear to ear. The first strokes he took to align himself were awkward at first, eyes searching across the great expanse of open water to another patron swimming between shelves. Taking note of her movements, Indyrio attempted to mimic them as they were perceived, a kick of his legs accompanied by a more awkward spreading of his arms. By no means the expert, he at least found movement capable, and decided it better that he push away from objects to gain momentum rather than suffer the wounds from a tarnished pride. |