3rd Winter, 512AV
Johanne had awoken from the Dawn Rest to a field of white covering the world. Her bones aching from the chill, she padded from her bed with her blanket wrapped around her, and looked into the cold of the outside world. Soft snow covered the streets of Lhavit, and she could feel inevitability set in. Today was the day she would have to find Dariel once more.
"When the first snow falls," he had said, as she hurried from the Good Book, just barely holding her soul together. She had come back to her apartment that night, as Lhavit awoke from their Midnight Rest, only to take her stiletto in hand and hold it against her flesh. Just below her elbow, she had carved a deep wound, in the shape of spindly fleeting hands, their fingers long and limber. Dariel's touch had so shaken her that she had needed to make the moment a part of her flesh for her to truly understand it. She looked down from the window, from the glaring white spectacle outside, and to her elbow. The wound had scabbed over, an angry red, stinging to touch. The barest knock would break the scab and set the blood flowing again. Gritting her teeth, Johanne brought her fingers to the wound and picked the scab from her flesh. The blood flowed anew, running down her arm. She smiled. If she kept interfering with the wound's healing process, she would be left with a deep and long lasting scar, a scar of artworks.
With her arm stinging in pain, Johanne turned from the window and began to get dressed in her warm winter garb, relishing the sting every time she over extended her arm. Pulling on her long-sleeved forest green dress, her thick cloak and scarf, she watched the blood stain the elbow of her dress, a deep red mark, easily identifiable to any who saw it. Warm and clothed, she walked toward the door, and descended the stars out of the Solar Wind Apartments.
She knew that if she chose, she could hide from Dariel, and never see him again. The city of Lhavit was big, with many alleys to hide in if she saw him coming. Their last meeting had left her shaken, and she had fled, the cowardly woman she was: certain her words were not up to the task of saving Johanne from heartbreak. Dariel had thought she was beautiful. The words ever spun through her mind, repeating themselves. She had tried to understand what he had meant. She had tried to banish them from her mind. But he would not be silenced: his words reverberated through her head, whenever she had a moment of thought and silence.
And so Johanne released herself to the inevitable meeting of the two strange souls once again. She padded across the near-silent Surya Plaza, her feet leaving footprints in the soft snow, Lhavit still awakening from their slumber. She relished the peace, with only the snow to watch her thoughts. The chill froze along her skin, leaving no place of her untouched, save the ever-blossoming warm blood that seeped from her elbow. Surrounded by high skyglass buildings in the large meeting square, Johanne prepared her defences to meet Dariel once more.
If only he would apologise for calling her beautiful, say it was a mistake, a slip of the tongue, not what he meant.
Then she could release and destroy the warm bubbling within her chest: hope.
Johanne had awoken from the Dawn Rest to a field of white covering the world. Her bones aching from the chill, she padded from her bed with her blanket wrapped around her, and looked into the cold of the outside world. Soft snow covered the streets of Lhavit, and she could feel inevitability set in. Today was the day she would have to find Dariel once more.
"When the first snow falls," he had said, as she hurried from the Good Book, just barely holding her soul together. She had come back to her apartment that night, as Lhavit awoke from their Midnight Rest, only to take her stiletto in hand and hold it against her flesh. Just below her elbow, she had carved a deep wound, in the shape of spindly fleeting hands, their fingers long and limber. Dariel's touch had so shaken her that she had needed to make the moment a part of her flesh for her to truly understand it. She looked down from the window, from the glaring white spectacle outside, and to her elbow. The wound had scabbed over, an angry red, stinging to touch. The barest knock would break the scab and set the blood flowing again. Gritting her teeth, Johanne brought her fingers to the wound and picked the scab from her flesh. The blood flowed anew, running down her arm. She smiled. If she kept interfering with the wound's healing process, she would be left with a deep and long lasting scar, a scar of artworks.
With her arm stinging in pain, Johanne turned from the window and began to get dressed in her warm winter garb, relishing the sting every time she over extended her arm. Pulling on her long-sleeved forest green dress, her thick cloak and scarf, she watched the blood stain the elbow of her dress, a deep red mark, easily identifiable to any who saw it. Warm and clothed, she walked toward the door, and descended the stars out of the Solar Wind Apartments.
She knew that if she chose, she could hide from Dariel, and never see him again. The city of Lhavit was big, with many alleys to hide in if she saw him coming. Their last meeting had left her shaken, and she had fled, the cowardly woman she was: certain her words were not up to the task of saving Johanne from heartbreak. Dariel had thought she was beautiful. The words ever spun through her mind, repeating themselves. She had tried to understand what he had meant. She had tried to banish them from her mind. But he would not be silenced: his words reverberated through her head, whenever she had a moment of thought and silence.
And so Johanne released herself to the inevitable meeting of the two strange souls once again. She padded across the near-silent Surya Plaza, her feet leaving footprints in the soft snow, Lhavit still awakening from their slumber. She relished the peace, with only the snow to watch her thoughts. The chill froze along her skin, leaving no place of her untouched, save the ever-blossoming warm blood that seeped from her elbow. Surrounded by high skyglass buildings in the large meeting square, Johanne prepared her defences to meet Dariel once more.
If only he would apologise for calling her beautiful, say it was a mistake, a slip of the tongue, not what he meant.
Then she could release and destroy the warm bubbling within her chest: hope.