Fall 78th, 512 A gentle roll of thunder filled the silence in the room, prompting Laszlo to take his eyes off the woman curled in his chair and glance out of the window. The rain continued, sliding down the glass panes in sheets, steady and solemn. Beneath a heavy gray sky, the skyglass city was deprived of open sunlight and became drearily devoid of color. Still, the rain seemed appropriate, considering the circumstances. It was heartening, in a way. Evening was approaching, and Laszlo's sitting room was growing quickly darker. A warm yellow fire crackled in the hearth, sending long shadows flickering against the far wall. The Ethaefal shivered, perturbed by a persistent chill in the room, the promise of an impending Kalean Winter. Growing ill with his own idleness, Laszlo crossed the room and picked up a thin birch log from his dwindling supply of firewood, and knelt as he carefully added it to the fireplace. As the papery bark lighted with embers and curled, Laszlo retreated and sank down onto the sofa. He leaned forward on his knees, aching for something to say to his guest, that poor ginger-haired girl wracked with grief, but the words wouldn't come. What could he say? No matter what consolation he offered, it wouldn't change the cold truth. He knew that better than most. Too much heartbreak had happened in this apartment. His own was difficult enough to bear, but someone else's? There was hardly room. Laszlo barely even knew the woman. Still, she was his guest. He would provide for her the best he could, within reason. He could stand to shelve his own self-pity, at least for one night. Eventually, as the silence pervaded, Laszlo found himself crossing eyes with an iron kettle resting on the far counter. He rose to his feet, emboldened by a new mission to fill the moment with substance. "I'm going to start some tea," he announced quietly, moving through the room again. His tall shadow accompanied him to the pantry, which was mostly empty but for the odd jar, a metal tin, and a few stray items left behind by Abalia. After retrieving the tin and fetching two cups from a cabinet, he picked up the kettle by its rattling handle. "You can stay as long you like." It was a strange way for the day to end. Laszlo wasn't even expecting company—he didn't rightly have any friends in Lhavit. Not anymore. This had all just sort of… happened. Story of his life. --- Earlier. That morning began innocently enough. Three days home from Kalinor—nice to have home to return to—and Laszlo still hadn't told Sakana he was back yet. He didn't have the energy, nor the heart, to simply pick up and resume his life where he left off. The flat he'd once shared with Duvalyon and Abalia, and briefly his daughter who possessed some very healthy lungs, had become so quiet. There was no one cooking or off in another room reading, and there no were mouths crying to be fed. No one else was expected to come home by sunset. It was just him now. Odd, the things one gets accustomed to without realizing. Abalia had been his shadow since last Winter, and later Duvalyon became a vigilant presence never too far out of reach. The other parts of his day were filled with strangers, usually Sakana, or mountain guides and mercenaries while traveling through Kalea, or the odd acquaintance met as he walked through Lhavit. For nearly a year, Laszlo had known so precious little privacy. Now it was stifling. The first two days back in Lhavit, Laszlo had found little reason to leave his bed. He'd been content to watch the light through the window slowly cross the room as he wallowed in conceited sorrow and self-loathing. This morning, Laszlo had decided he was tired of his bedroom and that he would see the sun today, get dressed, visit the temple, perhaps run a few errands. He needed to stop by the Cosmos Center and exchange sums of miza for more kina. And he needed a bath. By early afternoon, Laszlo found himself organizing his apartment. Many of Abalia's things were still lying around. Her clothing and belongings were all left behind, much of it still remembering her scent. Laszlo had no idea what he was going to do with all of it, but he folded her clothing and gathered all of her possessions into a little spot in his bedroom. Perhaps he'd donate it. He visited Duvalyon's former room as well. Although this was now his apartment, he still felt like an imposition in the second bedroom, as if the medic would be displeased that Laszlo had entered without permission. He had left very little behind, efficient creature he was, but he had left the furniture arranged oddly to suit his Symenestran comforts. Laszlo would have to disassemble it at some point. Did Duvalyon actually manage this on his own? He must have been stronger than he looked. Laszlo would deal with it later. The day was still new, so he invented a few more errands to run out in the sunlight. Purposeful procrastination. Once he rearranged Duvalyon's furniture again, there would be that much less evidence that he was ever there. It could wait. The sky was filling with fat, heavy clouds by the time Laszlo stepped into the smithy, a sheathed katana held unceremoniously in one hand. The weapon was little more than an antique, sharpened and ready, but never used. It would be a waste if Laszlo allowed the thing to rust away in a forgotten corner. It was an excuse to go somewhere new in Lhavit. He could at least ask for some advice on how to properly maintain it. Still standing in the light of the doorway, Laszlo spotted a head of red hair, turned away from behind the far counter. A woman blacksmith? Interesting. "Pardon me. Do you work here?" |