35th of Spring, 515 A.V.
Surya Plaza
Well underway was the thaw of the past winter. Spring was edging in, with her charming life renewed. Small birds chased each other through the air, weaving expertly between tall, stony Lhavitian towers. But not tonight. They slept tonight. And the people of Lhavit thrived! Throngs of pedestrians ambled chaotically through the many delights of the Surya Plaza. Couples walked the wide stones of the promenade, with the air of the tourist. Never a goal in mind save to experience the sensation of the place. Others hurried through the wide nexus of Lhavitian activity to business meetings or arranged meals in one of the many restaurants. Merchants shouted their wares, or haggled stubbornly with those whose attention they snatched up.
Benji walked through it all with a faint smile on his face. This was the center of the city he now called home. This was the true heart of it all. He stepped past a few couples sitting at a fountain, the romantic backdrop ideal for youthful, hushed courting. The Alvadan was not interested in such activities however, and barely spared them a passing glance as he approached a hot tea vendor and debated on whether or not to give the wizened old woman his patronage. Her tea did have a pleasant aroma, one that he found he could not go without.
In the space of a few moments he had palmed over two topaz Kina in exchange for a small wooden cup filled to the brim with steaming Lhavitian tea. In Alvadas he had grown up drinking tea from Lhavitian tea leaves, dried and brought to Ionu’s city over the Suvan. But the fresh thing was something entirely different.
He smiled as he let the hot liquid, with a hint of sweetness, wet his throat. He let his eyes rise to the nighttime sky. Zintila’s high mountain city was ever equipped to gaze upon the many and brilliant stars of the sky. It was high atop the peaks of some of Kalea’s proudest mountains. No doubt this was the whole point of the locale. Benji sighed out the heat from his first taste of the fresh tea and walked over to a bench to sit. The old stone gave no protest as he plopped easily down upon it.
The rest of Lhavit walked on, ignoring his silent observations. He sipped his tea and watched the people come and go. In his mind he found elaborate stories to go along with them. It was a way he amused himself when there was not else. Probably it was due to his mother’s artistic and performer’s influence. The story was always better with a bit of embellishment.
Zintila’s graces were sprawled out across the sky, twinkling a silent laughter down upon the Benji and the other mere mortals. Benji found himself leaning back and gazing up at the star-strewn sky. Leth’s own bright visage also bled light down on him. In that moment he felt like all the stress and upheaval of his past few seasons melted with the winter’s chill. His move from Alvadas to Lhavit, his loss of Lori, his father’s downward spiral, all were nothing in contrast to the beauty and life of the Surya Plaza under Zintila’s stars. How could he possibly be somewhere other than the proper place right at that moment?
Benji watched the passers-by and sipped his hot tea, luxuriating in the night.
Surya Plaza
Well underway was the thaw of the past winter. Spring was edging in, with her charming life renewed. Small birds chased each other through the air, weaving expertly between tall, stony Lhavitian towers. But not tonight. They slept tonight. And the people of Lhavit thrived! Throngs of pedestrians ambled chaotically through the many delights of the Surya Plaza. Couples walked the wide stones of the promenade, with the air of the tourist. Never a goal in mind save to experience the sensation of the place. Others hurried through the wide nexus of Lhavitian activity to business meetings or arranged meals in one of the many restaurants. Merchants shouted their wares, or haggled stubbornly with those whose attention they snatched up.
Benji walked through it all with a faint smile on his face. This was the center of the city he now called home. This was the true heart of it all. He stepped past a few couples sitting at a fountain, the romantic backdrop ideal for youthful, hushed courting. The Alvadan was not interested in such activities however, and barely spared them a passing glance as he approached a hot tea vendor and debated on whether or not to give the wizened old woman his patronage. Her tea did have a pleasant aroma, one that he found he could not go without.
In the space of a few moments he had palmed over two topaz Kina in exchange for a small wooden cup filled to the brim with steaming Lhavitian tea. In Alvadas he had grown up drinking tea from Lhavitian tea leaves, dried and brought to Ionu’s city over the Suvan. But the fresh thing was something entirely different.
He smiled as he let the hot liquid, with a hint of sweetness, wet his throat. He let his eyes rise to the nighttime sky. Zintila’s high mountain city was ever equipped to gaze upon the many and brilliant stars of the sky. It was high atop the peaks of some of Kalea’s proudest mountains. No doubt this was the whole point of the locale. Benji sighed out the heat from his first taste of the fresh tea and walked over to a bench to sit. The old stone gave no protest as he plopped easily down upon it.
The rest of Lhavit walked on, ignoring his silent observations. He sipped his tea and watched the people come and go. In his mind he found elaborate stories to go along with them. It was a way he amused himself when there was not else. Probably it was due to his mother’s artistic and performer’s influence. The story was always better with a bit of embellishment.
Zintila’s graces were sprawled out across the sky, twinkling a silent laughter down upon the Benji and the other mere mortals. Benji found himself leaning back and gazing up at the star-strewn sky. Leth’s own bright visage also bled light down on him. In that moment he felt like all the stress and upheaval of his past few seasons melted with the winter’s chill. His move from Alvadas to Lhavit, his loss of Lori, his father’s downward spiral, all were nothing in contrast to the beauty and life of the Surya Plaza under Zintila’s stars. How could he possibly be somewhere other than the proper place right at that moment?
Benji watched the passers-by and sipped his hot tea, luxuriating in the night.