Timestamp: 80th of Summer, 510 AV
The Welcome Home had always held a special fascination to the Nuit. Perhaps it was the slightly isolated position from the castle, being neither attached to it nor standing outside the protecting walls. Perhaps it was the emotions she had observed inside, a while ago. To her, who looked back to centuries of learning and traveling, it had only been a short while she had spent inside its walls, and yet the memories were so varied and unique.
That might be one of the reasons why she had come back so quickly. She had to study human behavior to find back to something she had lost. Her reason was a purely logical one: She would practice her ability to convince others of her cause. Someone more than trustworthy had instructed her to find allies.
While away from the Welcome Home and its inhabitants, she had had time to rethink everything that had happened. Stitch and the children had gotten her emotions to stir in ways that were foreign to her. She had let confusion and frustration overwhelm her and influence her action. The stupidity of fleeing that place, running over to Sahova, didn’t bother her anymore though. Mistakes were made to learn from them. And what didn’t kill her – metaphorically speaking, of course – only made her stronger.
So she had returned. Firstly, the experiments she had carried out in the last few days had drained her financial resources. Secondly, she had to find a way of controlling those emotions. She couldn’t hide forever. When facing serious issues, she had to work with logic and reason rather than emotion.
It was part of her studying and gathering information. Power was what mattered most in the end, and power came in many different ways.
So, without doubt the girl that approached the three-storey building this time had changed a great deal. Not only physically, although that was the most obvious sign. The grey cloak was the same, but underneath she was dressed in an elegant dark blue blouse and black trousers. High black boots concluded her wardrobe. Most likely whoever answered the door upon her knock would consider her a stranger. Sweet features were framed with blood-red hair. Her eyes were as dark and hollow as ever. But although her complexion appeared quite pale, face powder created at least a remotely healthy look. Indeed, she looked like a human ready to talk business with the owner of the establishment.
When the door opened, she would give a polite nod. “Greetings, my name is Azola. I’d like to speak with the owner regarding a possible employment contract.” Her voice was smooth, polite, but nothing else. Different, very different from the first time.
Who’d believe that Malia was indeed back?