Timestamp: 84th of Fall, 514 AV
The night was young, and as the Autumn was want to cause had come early. There were several bells yet until Leth’s apex. The little spider perched on the Quay dock, on one supporting timber. Her barefeet gripping the grain with racial ease. The waves lapped gentle on the dock, threatening but never reaching her but more than a spray or splash. Inhuman, her pupils dilated to make efficient use of the waning moon. A Handful of Fall bugs still snickered and hissing around the waterside. Though she wore her black pants and shirt, with no evidence of her armor in sight, Shai was not unarmed. In her right hand rested the bone hilt of her ancestral weapon, the Symenstra Lash.
The thief held as still as a living body would allow, or so she believed. Waiting for the next large insect to flitter by. When it did she struck out with the lash, missing. The whip cracked harmlessly in the air.
Drawing the leather and razor metal back up into a coil, and securing it with her right hand she waited again for her next chance. There was no one foolish enough to practice with her whip and it’s razor, so the spider had started to get creative. Thus far nothing had all had fallen prey to the whip, but perhaps someday it would. Then when bugs had reason to fear the Quay docks, she would invest in a training dummy. Until then though, she worked on understanding the way the weapon moved, the fluidity and abrupt rigidity were unlike any weapon Shai had set hands on.
At her breast, Chell rested nestled in the silver necklace mount Shai had purchased for him years ago. Though he appeared as nothing more than a pale crystal, a mage would know him rapidly. Any such outing of of the thief, required outing oneself as a mage. There was simply no other way to divine the Irylid’s presence unless he wanted it. Or she did, Shai had never tried to force the familiar into an action at least not through sheer strength of will. Part of her suspected it was possible, since they shared their essence as one.
The Quay seemed oddly quiet tonight, like a deep breath before a racking cough. She had no idea why, but it suited her purposes so the question wasn’t dwelt upon. Only a handful of the residents of the Quay knew who she was, for the most part the owner of the new building liked it that way. The fewer that knew her, the fewer that walked around her awkwardly. Humans always seemed to think she was constantly malicious. It must have been the strangeness they felt about her foreign heritage, whether conscious or not. The Symenestra shrugged, the humans always seemed blocky and rotund to her. Only in Sunberth were the poor ones the appropriate size.
Her toes curled and the Spider struck again, lashing out with her whip. Crack, and the dragonfly buzzed away to live another day.
The night was young, and as the Autumn was want to cause had come early. There were several bells yet until Leth’s apex. The little spider perched on the Quay dock, on one supporting timber. Her barefeet gripping the grain with racial ease. The waves lapped gentle on the dock, threatening but never reaching her but more than a spray or splash. Inhuman, her pupils dilated to make efficient use of the waning moon. A Handful of Fall bugs still snickered and hissing around the waterside. Though she wore her black pants and shirt, with no evidence of her armor in sight, Shai was not unarmed. In her right hand rested the bone hilt of her ancestral weapon, the Symenstra Lash.
The thief held as still as a living body would allow, or so she believed. Waiting for the next large insect to flitter by. When it did she struck out with the lash, missing. The whip cracked harmlessly in the air.
Drawing the leather and razor metal back up into a coil, and securing it with her right hand she waited again for her next chance. There was no one foolish enough to practice with her whip and it’s razor, so the spider had started to get creative. Thus far nothing had all had fallen prey to the whip, but perhaps someday it would. Then when bugs had reason to fear the Quay docks, she would invest in a training dummy. Until then though, she worked on understanding the way the weapon moved, the fluidity and abrupt rigidity were unlike any weapon Shai had set hands on.
At her breast, Chell rested nestled in the silver necklace mount Shai had purchased for him years ago. Though he appeared as nothing more than a pale crystal, a mage would know him rapidly. Any such outing of of the thief, required outing oneself as a mage. There was simply no other way to divine the Irylid’s presence unless he wanted it. Or she did, Shai had never tried to force the familiar into an action at least not through sheer strength of will. Part of her suspected it was possible, since they shared their essence as one.
The Quay seemed oddly quiet tonight, like a deep breath before a racking cough. She had no idea why, but it suited her purposes so the question wasn’t dwelt upon. Only a handful of the residents of the Quay knew who she was, for the most part the owner of the new building liked it that way. The fewer that knew her, the fewer that walked around her awkwardly. Humans always seemed to think she was constantly malicious. It must have been the strangeness they felt about her foreign heritage, whether conscious or not. The Symenestra shrugged, the humans always seemed blocky and rotund to her. Only in Sunberth were the poor ones the appropriate size.
Her toes curled and the Spider struck again, lashing out with her whip. Crack, and the dragonfly buzzed away to live another day.