Seeing the new arrival inquire with Jiltse about the mention of "Nuit", Kuvarakh took the opportunity to look skyward for errant orbs as he allowed the imbued wind to loft his "Sail-net" overhead. It was not difficult to handle on a still day, since the sail always blew directly forward. Holding the "reins" on the top edge and giving slack along the bottom would bring the bottom swinging up, pivoting on the held top line. The same with side-to-side motion. Holding the top and bottom lines along one side and giving slack to the other sides' two lines would bring the sail swinging to the side, pivoting like a door, the held line being the equivalent of the hinges. All very easy to grasp and master when there was no natural wind in the area. Such was not the case today, unfortunately for Kuvarakh. Even though he had enjoyed some small success gathering the little airborne gems, more than once he had watched in frustration as an updraft had turned the axis of the sail's direction against him, and his gathered orbs had spilled free. In a state of annoyance, he had allowed his imagination to embellish his loss with the sound of mocking laughter. Now he "reeled in" his net after every catch. He might have had a dozen or more had he employed this strategy from the start. As it was, he had five. He tracked one now, floating in at single-story roof level. He released the sail to the general altitude and gave himself some leeway to make last second adjustments to its height with arm movements alone. He did not, however, account for the shifting horizon as he took several steps forward to equalize his forward motion with his target. The disorienting effect of the gravity rotation caused his sail to get off track with the orb's path of flight. There were two discoveries to be made from this. The first being that the orbs did not seem to be affected by this shift. They did not follow a track coinciding with the shifting tracks of geography as it turned on its head. The orb did not stay in line with the rooftops as the buildings slid up to the side on their way to vertical inversion. The second being that, if you jumped, while you were airborne, your perpendicular orientation with the ground did not adjust with the rotation of the geography until you came down again. What this meant to Kuvarakh was that, while leaping forward, his initial launch was at a ninety-degree relative vertical position. However, he landed at about an eighty-degree angle. With so much ice on the walkway, his footing betrayed him and he was left to provide his fellow orb-hunters a visual display of clumsiness and windmilling arms and legs that was equal parts comedy and dance. What's more, his ultimate impact bounced his pockets and flaps with sufficient force to allow two of his captured five orbs to slip free. Though a Nuit lacks the ability to blush, his facial expression conveyed his embarrassment with no fear of misinterpretation. He stood, rubbing his backside, "Still a few bugs to work out, it seems." |