35th of Summer, 514
This was very, very, very not good.
Very, very, very, very, very not good.
Alia had done a lot of not-good things in her life, but this was way up there.
She was late.
To a performance.
Alia had done everything late that day. She had woken up late, gone for her walk late, skipped breakfast all together, and had gotten lunch literally a bell before the performance was meant to begin. This was not how her day was supposed to go at all. After her short lunch of half an hour, Alia had taken another fifteen chimes searching for her bag after leaving it somewhere in the restaurant. She now had fifteen chimes to get the Amphitheater, dress in her costume, and get the hai onstage.
Not exactly the best schedule, especially since Alia was now rushing down the covered path towards the Amphitheater, bag full of clothes and mind full of swears. This was not going to look good when she arrived, and the costume she had to wear for the play; An almost full-length dress, was quite possibly the most annoying thing Alia had ever worn, albeit pretty. The sleeves were itchy, the collar was tight, but that’s the price you pay in acting. Become your character and like it, or you don’t work anymore.
As she rushed towards the Amphitheater, Alia took the time to think over her life decisions. An appropriate thing to do, at the time. It took her mind off imagining all the things the stagemaster would yell at her, with his no-tolerance rule for ‘Slacking off’, also known as being late in any way, shape or form. She thought about how much she really loved her job, instead of how much she loved acting. They were two separate things, really.
She loved the thrill of being onstage, in the spotlight, but hated the pressure that came with it. She loved how she was paid to do what she loved, but hated the complications that came when weather, sickness, or really just a bad day got in the way. There was an entire list of what she did and didn’t like, yet she couldn’t decide what to put in either. Her thoughts were just as complicated as acting itself, albeit less interesting.
Alia’s thoughts dragged her on, and eventually, dragged on her concentration. Not the best idea, when running through a tunnel. Or, at least, groups of trees that practically formed a tunnel. She had let go of the skirt of her costume at least a chime ago, not realizing until then that the dress was dragging along the ground. Alia only noticed the trailing fabric when it caught on a sapling, dragging her backwards.
Or rather, dragging the sapling forwards.
Through the dress.
The horrible riiip of fabric was almost as horrible as the sound of all Alia’s hopes being torn with the flimsy material of the dress. The stagemaster was going to kill her. Not only was she late, but she was only half costumed, had a deformed dress, and was all around unready for the play. As if the day couldn’t have gotten worse, it did.
Picking up the mop of fabric as quickly as she could, Alia tried to place the strip that was torn off back in place, to no avail. She didn’t have any string or needles, nevermind any sewing experience. There was no way she could fix it.
Well, isn’t today going great?
What could she do? Tape it back together and pray no one noticed? The dress wasn’t even on straight, so what was supposed to be the back would actually be in full view during performance. When Alia screwed up, she screwed up badly.
Really, really badly.