91st Winter 512AV Sunset The docs Had he not ventured past his door way that night, perhaps no ill would touch him. No deathly clad figure would reach it's ghastly fingers in his direction. For the diminishing of luck, is what this whole ordeal had become. The luck which periodically abandoned him from the very moment he stepped his foot on the Zeltivian soil. The red haired artist's very purpose at the docs was utmost innocent and terribly simple, for there is not a better place in the whole of Zeltiva, where a winter sunset can be viewed in all of it's bloody majesty. And such violence across the sky was precisely was captivated him, inspired him. Valo was not a violent soul, not in the least; but there was something about the hacked wound of red, weaved with deep purples and smudged with black. The way that the few clouds had their underbellies lit with fiery hues, drifting purposelessly like lambs, suspended in nothingness. There was truly something enchanting about this scenery. The open ocean and the sky, sliced in half by the horizon. He had few possessions on his that evening. A small sketchbook, a paintbox and about five gold mizas, no more. Of course it had not been in his plans to poke around placed where he may give them away. For a while now kelp beer was not suppose to touch the pale lips of the red haired artist. Though as recent events had shown, Valo was a weaker man that he thought him self to be. Art in fact was the only reason he had ventured out at such a late hour. In a manner of genuine tranquillity he positioned him self somewhere where no soul needed to pay attention to him and producing his materials, began working on, what was nothing more than, colour studies. Simple yet essential if he was to keep improving his technique. When it came to art, textbook knowledge was just as important as skill and skill could only be taught though meticulous repetition. His mind, though previously cluttered, had been wiped clean by the cloth of concentration. The beauty of water based mediums such as water colours was that it dried fast and blended of it's own accord. Perhaps the most comfortable and yet the hardest of mediums to master. But Valo had a perfect technique for representing the colours of the dying sky. Holding the paper vertically, he placed one line of water suspended pigment under another, causing it all to flow together into a perfect gradient. Dark colours towards the top, flowing into red and yellow hues. Consequently, imperfect rectangles of magnificent colours began appearing on the paper, perhaps not as jagged and raw as the sky, but these were just colour studies merely to describe, not portrait the scenery. Delicate patched of purples and reds and yellows interwoven. And as the paper dried, the sun had set and darkness fell on Zeltiva, and within that darkness there was silence, and within that silence there was perhaps a sudden thirst for cheep alcohol, a thirst for a little enjoyment towards the end of a long day. Besides, he had not been down to East street since the night of that murder - the memory of which still haunted him in his dreams - and perhaps it was time to once again walk the familiar cobble stones. Keeping an elegant posture, as always, Valo strolled past the alleys having expected this part of town to be perhaps a little livelier than it was at this time of day. But then again, he liked it a little better without all this constant racket and yelling of drunken men, with little better to do than drink until their bodies surrender completely. Perhaps the nearing end of the season was at fault, though Valo could not quite fathom why this would be the case. "Valo you are a mouse not a man." he thought to him self for he had halted at the entrance of the alley which resurrected his deeply buried ghosts. His deep set eyes now stared at the familiar tree, a haunting expression within their green surface, as if the owner him self had been but a ghost. He felt his self standing in precisely the same place, rooted into the cobbles as he looked upon the bear silhouette of his friend Ricky crouched over a mutilated corpse of that wave guard, Kip. The screams of his brown haired companion echoed still in the breeze. The residual haunting of that very spot had plaid over and over again from that very day. The ghostly memory still very alive. Valo exhaled loudly, forcing his thoughts back to reality. "You are a mouse not a man." he repeated, yet this time aloud, trembling within the otherwise smooth substance of his voice. He was of an idealistic mind and an easy upbringing, a shielded childhood from the horrors of reality. And murder to him was truly such a horror. This self criticism was of a self preserving nature. A realisation that it was time for him to grow up. Time to become a man. He hadn't been standing there for long when something struck him against the back of the head, not hard enough to knock him out, yet hard to make it somewhat painful. Startled, Valo fell to his knees as his bag of belongings was ripped from him with a quiet, poisonous snigger. A sharp tug on his long red hair. His head had been pulled up at a right angle so that now his eyes were fixed on the sky -fixed on the gods which will not save him - and something cold and sharp was pressed against his throat. A blade of some sort, but Valo could only feel it. "Give me three good reasons why I should not kill you right here, right now." proclaimed a rusty voice, hissing against his ear. His attacker as a man much older than him self, dressed in a black cape with a hood obscuring his features. An unpleasant stench of poverty came from him. But if he was just after Valo's money, why not leave him be? Why must it end in murder? The red haired artist swallowed hard in his paralysis.If he had only remained within the safety of his four walls that day. If he had only not been swayed by the lovely prospect of alcohol. If he had only had enough strength to merely walk straight pass the residual haunting, forgetting it ever took place. |