OocThis was originally meant as a Eywaat gnosis thread, but when I applied for that I'd completely forgotten about the applying-through-the-HD-only-once rule, so I had to scrap the gnosis part of the story. It makes it a little less... eventful, but hopefully it's still a little entertaining! It also has Ayatah go to library to do some reading about the God - but this is in preparation of hopefully applying for the gnosis another time!
|| 11th Winter, 512AV || Ayatah’s room, Student Dormitories. || 8th Bell ||
It was the seventh day in a row that the bird had appeared outside Ayatah’s window, so the frantic little taptaptap came no longer as a surprise. Instead, she lay in bed, listening to the big noise created from the small bird. It’ll go away, eventually.
Twenty chimes later, the taptaptap-ing was still going on. Ayatah had left her bed, but remained in her room in the student accommodation building. There were, every now and again, small breaks in the repetitive noise. In those times of silence, Ayatah would sigh in relief. But, soon enough, the bird would restart and the Myrian would give a frustrated groan.
The first time the bird had woken her, Ayatah had initially thought that someone was breaking into her room.
But instead, she found a small, brightly coloured bird on her window ledge - not a hardened criminal. The thing hopped along the ledge out of her window, frantically tapping at the glass with its short little beak.
The only way Ayatah could escape the noise was by leaving her room. By the time she’d return that evening, there was no sign of the bird.
Six days later, the hysterical tapping had simply become part of Ayatah’s morning ritual. She pulled her curtains apart, and there the bird was. It was a pretty little thing, really. And it was surprisingly ballsy around people; on more than one occasion over the past week, Ayatah had opened the window to shoo the bird away, and it simply stared up at her with black eyes, completely unafraid.
Sliding her window open, Ayatah waved her arms at the bird as she had started to most mornings, to scare it away.
”Go! Shoo! Go away, I don’t have any food for you!”
The bird chirped
Exasperated, Ayatah turned briefly away from the window, finding something that she could use to push the bird off her ledge - but not kill the thing. Picking up a few sheets of paper, she curled them into a tight tube. She turned back to the window and --
The bird had hopped to the other side of the window ledge. It was inside her room.
”No, go out!” Using the rolled paper as a weapon, she gently pushed at the bird’s chest, hoping it would go back outside. Instead, it hopped onto her makeshift tool and edged its way up the paper roll. It nipped gently at her fingers, and then eyeballed Ayatah once again.
Ever so slowly, Ayatah edged towards the window and dangled her hand out of it. She flicked her hand upwards, and her notes went floating downward.
But the bird remained on her hand. It looked a little annoyed, if anything. So it hopped further up her arm again, until it was just beyond the threshold of her window, and fluttered onto her desk.
”What do you want?” She begged, glancing out of her window to see her notes had landed on the shrubbery just outside.
The bird chirped delightedly and defecated on the paper it had landed on.
Ayatah stared in disbelief and annoyance. I needed those papers, she thought. ”Right, off you go.” She approached the bird and held out her finger for it to climb on. It obliged happily. She began to make her way back to the open window, but the bird cried out and flew back to the desk. It turned back to face her, looking smug.
I refuse to be outsmarted by a bird.
”You have the wrong room.” Ayatah told the thing, ”I don’t have food for you. The person who lived here before me might’ve fed you, but I don’t have anything.”
The bird watched her carefully, and bobbed its head a few times.
I have things to do today… Ayatah had planned to dedicate the morning to exploring the library. But her plans were quickly going out of the window, which was ironically the one place that damn bird would not go.
”You must be someone’s pet.” She decided as the bird flapped onto her shoulder. It cooed softly into her ear and nipped at her lobe. Ayatah had not had a pet since she was a child in the Jungle city of Taloba. PikPik had been the name of her Riamm, a little bundle of bright red fur. The thing had died when Ayatah was twelve, and she had been devastated. ”Your owner is probably looking for you.”
The little bird squawked loudly, nearly deafening Ayatah, and flew onto her windowsill. It leant out of the window, peeping at the papers Ayatah had dropped earlier.
“Close the door!”it half-squawked, and looked at her accusingly.
”Excuse me?”
“Close. Close. The. Door.”Ayatah had seen speaking birds before. There was an old man who constantly wore a large, multi-coloured parrot on his shoulder whilst he pottered around Zeltiva. The parrot spoke more than it’s owner, throwing insults to some people and saying explicit things to pretty girls.
Still, the fact that the little bird in front of her had told - no, commanded - her to shut the door (by which she assumed it meant the window), certainly caught her off guard.
”At least I know who your owner is.” She muttered, as she pulled the window to a close. She dressed quickly, hoping to find that parrot-man who she believed to be the owner of the pain-in-her-ass.
Twenty chimes later, the taptaptap-ing was still going on. Ayatah had left her bed, but remained in her room in the student accommodation building. There were, every now and again, small breaks in the repetitive noise. In those times of silence, Ayatah would sigh in relief. But, soon enough, the bird would restart and the Myrian would give a frustrated groan.
The first time the bird had woken her, Ayatah had initially thought that someone was breaking into her room.
But instead, she found a small, brightly coloured bird on her window ledge - not a hardened criminal. The thing hopped along the ledge out of her window, frantically tapping at the glass with its short little beak.
The only way Ayatah could escape the noise was by leaving her room. By the time she’d return that evening, there was no sign of the bird.
Six days later, the hysterical tapping had simply become part of Ayatah’s morning ritual. She pulled her curtains apart, and there the bird was. It was a pretty little thing, really. And it was surprisingly ballsy around people; on more than one occasion over the past week, Ayatah had opened the window to shoo the bird away, and it simply stared up at her with black eyes, completely unafraid.
Sliding her window open, Ayatah waved her arms at the bird as she had started to most mornings, to scare it away.
”Go! Shoo! Go away, I don’t have any food for you!”
The bird chirped
Exasperated, Ayatah turned briefly away from the window, finding something that she could use to push the bird off her ledge - but not kill the thing. Picking up a few sheets of paper, she curled them into a tight tube. She turned back to the window and --
The bird had hopped to the other side of the window ledge. It was inside her room.
”No, go out!” Using the rolled paper as a weapon, she gently pushed at the bird’s chest, hoping it would go back outside. Instead, it hopped onto her makeshift tool and edged its way up the paper roll. It nipped gently at her fingers, and then eyeballed Ayatah once again.
Ever so slowly, Ayatah edged towards the window and dangled her hand out of it. She flicked her hand upwards, and her notes went floating downward.
But the bird remained on her hand. It looked a little annoyed, if anything. So it hopped further up her arm again, until it was just beyond the threshold of her window, and fluttered onto her desk.
”What do you want?” She begged, glancing out of her window to see her notes had landed on the shrubbery just outside.
The bird chirped delightedly and defecated on the paper it had landed on.
Ayatah stared in disbelief and annoyance. I needed those papers, she thought. ”Right, off you go.” She approached the bird and held out her finger for it to climb on. It obliged happily. She began to make her way back to the open window, but the bird cried out and flew back to the desk. It turned back to face her, looking smug.
I refuse to be outsmarted by a bird.
”You have the wrong room.” Ayatah told the thing, ”I don’t have food for you. The person who lived here before me might’ve fed you, but I don’t have anything.”
The bird watched her carefully, and bobbed its head a few times.
I have things to do today… Ayatah had planned to dedicate the morning to exploring the library. But her plans were quickly going out of the window, which was ironically the one place that damn bird would not go.
”You must be someone’s pet.” She decided as the bird flapped onto her shoulder. It cooed softly into her ear and nipped at her lobe. Ayatah had not had a pet since she was a child in the Jungle city of Taloba. PikPik had been the name of her Riamm, a little bundle of bright red fur. The thing had died when Ayatah was twelve, and she had been devastated. ”Your owner is probably looking for you.”
The little bird squawked loudly, nearly deafening Ayatah, and flew onto her windowsill. It leant out of the window, peeping at the papers Ayatah had dropped earlier.
“Close the door!”it half-squawked, and looked at her accusingly.
”Excuse me?”
“Close. Close. The. Door.”Ayatah had seen speaking birds before. There was an old man who constantly wore a large, multi-coloured parrot on his shoulder whilst he pottered around Zeltiva. The parrot spoke more than it’s owner, throwing insults to some people and saying explicit things to pretty girls.
Still, the fact that the little bird in front of her had told - no, commanded - her to shut the door (by which she assumed it meant the window), certainly caught her off guard.
”At least I know who your owner is.” She muttered, as she pulled the window to a close. She dressed quickly, hoping to find that parrot-man who she believed to be the owner of the pain-in-her-ass.
|| Ayatah's speech || Ayatah's thoughts || Others' speech ||