Timestamp: 76, Winter 513AV [Eleventh Bell]
Zeltiva. It had been nearly two seasons since Ariann had left the city of Nyka and made her way back to Zeltiva, the swim taking a long while up-current. Yet miraculously enough, Ariann survived the trip. She had swum and swum for hours a day until she saw the familiar wooden planks of Zeltiva's docks.
And there she sat, today, her legs pulled up against her chest and her arms wrapped about them. Her sapphire skin was pock-marked with small white dots every now and then, giving a contrast to the beautiful shade of blue. Her eyes, a stark contrasting emerald color, a strange mark for her race. Another distinct difference between her and the rest of the charoda race would be the dorsal fins that adorned her head, fashioned to mimic flat planes of hair instead of a simple ride upon her head. Two fins breached her forehead and hung over her eyes like bangs, another two sprouted from the back of her head and bent over like pony tails and three more flattened the sides of her head, like normal locks of hair.
Ariann was sad. Her chin rested upon her knees as she felt the spray of water on her skin, cool and refreshing. She wore no clothing, nude in the evening as most charodae were. She waited and watched the water's surging, remembering her training in Reimancy.
Extending a gentle hand, she held her arm out over the water. Her fingers dipped and swerved, mimicking the motion of the water. The water reflected her movements, resisting the tide to follow her gesture and will. The water surged upwards in a single spire, swirling as it thickened until the tube of water was almost half a foot in width.
Ariann watched, holding the water still for a moment and feeling the strain of her Djed, the want to make more, to craft and destroy. She realized she had not been breathing while using her Reimancy, and sucked in a shaky breath. The water began to slow and whiten, the substance of the water slowly churning into snow and then ice. After only a moment, the water spout was a frozen spire of ice, with gentle grooves in the shape from the twisting of the spout as it froze.
It was an incomplete work, her Djed failing her as she let out her breath, closing her eyes. Yet the iced spire remained, afloat upon a platform of ice that rocked against the pier.
I miss having a home. Having friends. She thought to herself mournfully, frowning at the spire before her. I miss Charbosi.