87th of Fall, 515 AV
Mid-day
Gods, did it smell refreshing. She inhaled deeply, letting the air enter her nostrils and fill her lungs with its coveted fragrance. Salty air. It certainly wasn't the first time she'd gotten her fill of its familiar scent. She'd had a harder time getting away from it as of late. The past few seasons had left her biding her time upon the deck of some type of vessel, and the Myrian was still far from seaworthy despite her troubles. Yet the air surrounding Riverfall was different. The smell of its nearby sea signaled the approaching end of her agonizing journey. Just one more trip across Laviku's domain and she'd be back upon the neighboring shore of Falyndar. One more round of retching overboard and she'd be home, free to drop to her knees upon its sands and kiss the ground her Goddess Queen dominated. Free to forget the wounds inflicted by the world across the Suvan Sea, and recover from the cruel lessons each season abroad instilled with scars to remind her.
Kaie moved through the masses that traversed Riverfall's streets, like a thread of bronze woven between patterns of blues, purples, and greens. Her cloak hood was firmly tugged over her wavy brown hair to conceal her exotic features with a deep shadow. Bladed boots clicked a steady rhythm upon the path that took her northwest of the falls, and away from the port filled with ships fit to sail her home. Each step elicited a hiss from healing wounds upon her torso. Dark spots still fresh upon her skin lulled a dull pain. The young woman took a sip of wine from the water skin hanging from her side. Not even the numb of alcohol could sway the logic of common sense: she wasn't ready. Trekking through the jungle was no easy task whether the traveler was native or otherwise. No sense in ending her odyssey so close to her final destination over some trivial, temporary vulnerabilities.
The words of an unusually friendly tavern keep led her toward a place rumored to be extraordinary in its exhibition. A true intrigue of Riverfall, he promised. When the Myrian's boots halted in their tracks, wide eyes and a craned neck found they couldn't discredit his suggestion. Towering above its subject complexes was a massive translucent dome. Syna's assault was captured and shimmered across its surface, giving the swirling aerial creatures dwelling within a brighter glow to their colorful wings. Whatever it was made of, it was certainly a glass far superior to those the savage had found elsewhere in her travels. Amber eyes blinked away their incredulity, an curiosity let her into a nearby complex. The corridor swallowed her whole in its absence of light, leading her down and down with enough mystery to keep her on her toes.
Before long the corridor opened into a wider room with gentle lighting. To one side it seemed she had entered a cave. Stalagmites and stalactites gave authenticity to the scene in a way that made the Myrian heartbeat quicken with distant memory of eerie howls. Hammocks hung here and there about the dim place. The intricate weaving of spider webs above sent the woman's sword hand shooting for her gladius hilt, lip curling as stories and experiences hinted at what was near. She ventured further from the corridor to explore what laid within the room. Movement in her left peripheral vision sent the Myrian in a rapid pivot, adrenaline gently rushing her veins to feed anxious muscles. What had I seen flitting from her view? Pale flesh? a cautious mind demanded from higher powers rhetorically. Another step and the faintness of her own reflection brought forth a rational mind. Glass. An exhibit like the tavern keep had raved about. Her left hand reached forth to confirm just that, fingers curling to gently rake down the surface to ensure its solidarity.
A pale figure in the innermost left corner, the same place that sent her into a tizzy prior, reappeared just long enough for her to catch the resentful expression of a male. Just as quickly he completed his disappearing act at the back of his prison. Coming into the foreground, however, arrived a female far bolder than her counterpart. Her agile frame posted against a stalagmite that touched the ceiling. The claw-like fingernail of her index finger teased her bottom lip. Kaie swallowed hard. A discomfort entered her middle that was not fear. The dark eyes of the creature settled on the newest visitor. Her brow arched for a tick before curiosity sent her sauntering closer to the glass to inspect the cloaked face. The firmness of her gaze sent a dagger through the Myrian's body. Kaie's right hand slipped defeated from the gladius hilt. The savage stared back with a gaze just as unwavering, and as if the Symenestra had voiced the command, the Myrian found herself foolishly removing the cloak from her head.
Shadows vanished from her face to reveal the fiercely sharp features beneath. Wavy brown hair cascaded around her shoulders. Delight entered the Symenestra's expression at the sight of the bronze skin that gave off its foreign, sun-kissed glow. Has she ever seen a Myrian before? The Tigress growled from the back of her conscious mind. The Symenestra were enemies to her people, abominations long ago eradicated from the jungles Myrians now dominated. They were marked for death in the borders of Falyndar. Still the swell of guilt, like the conscience warning of something wrong, consumed her. She reminds me of Shai, Kaie finally concluded, unable to shake the resemblance between the creature behind the glass and her Scar comrade. The two hadn't exchanged so much as a word, but the ingenuity of the fragile woman had won the jungle-born's respect. Loyalty never wavers.
Yet she would be a liar if she claimed it was easy to still the traitorous sword-hand's impulse, to take the pommel of her gladius and shatter the glass walls of her racial enemy's prison.
Mid-day
Gods, did it smell refreshing. She inhaled deeply, letting the air enter her nostrils and fill her lungs with its coveted fragrance. Salty air. It certainly wasn't the first time she'd gotten her fill of its familiar scent. She'd had a harder time getting away from it as of late. The past few seasons had left her biding her time upon the deck of some type of vessel, and the Myrian was still far from seaworthy despite her troubles. Yet the air surrounding Riverfall was different. The smell of its nearby sea signaled the approaching end of her agonizing journey. Just one more trip across Laviku's domain and she'd be back upon the neighboring shore of Falyndar. One more round of retching overboard and she'd be home, free to drop to her knees upon its sands and kiss the ground her Goddess Queen dominated. Free to forget the wounds inflicted by the world across the Suvan Sea, and recover from the cruel lessons each season abroad instilled with scars to remind her.
Kaie moved through the masses that traversed Riverfall's streets, like a thread of bronze woven between patterns of blues, purples, and greens. Her cloak hood was firmly tugged over her wavy brown hair to conceal her exotic features with a deep shadow. Bladed boots clicked a steady rhythm upon the path that took her northwest of the falls, and away from the port filled with ships fit to sail her home. Each step elicited a hiss from healing wounds upon her torso. Dark spots still fresh upon her skin lulled a dull pain. The young woman took a sip of wine from the water skin hanging from her side. Not even the numb of alcohol could sway the logic of common sense: she wasn't ready. Trekking through the jungle was no easy task whether the traveler was native or otherwise. No sense in ending her odyssey so close to her final destination over some trivial, temporary vulnerabilities.
The words of an unusually friendly tavern keep led her toward a place rumored to be extraordinary in its exhibition. A true intrigue of Riverfall, he promised. When the Myrian's boots halted in their tracks, wide eyes and a craned neck found they couldn't discredit his suggestion. Towering above its subject complexes was a massive translucent dome. Syna's assault was captured and shimmered across its surface, giving the swirling aerial creatures dwelling within a brighter glow to their colorful wings. Whatever it was made of, it was certainly a glass far superior to those the savage had found elsewhere in her travels. Amber eyes blinked away their incredulity, an curiosity let her into a nearby complex. The corridor swallowed her whole in its absence of light, leading her down and down with enough mystery to keep her on her toes.
Before long the corridor opened into a wider room with gentle lighting. To one side it seemed she had entered a cave. Stalagmites and stalactites gave authenticity to the scene in a way that made the Myrian heartbeat quicken with distant memory of eerie howls. Hammocks hung here and there about the dim place. The intricate weaving of spider webs above sent the woman's sword hand shooting for her gladius hilt, lip curling as stories and experiences hinted at what was near. She ventured further from the corridor to explore what laid within the room. Movement in her left peripheral vision sent the Myrian in a rapid pivot, adrenaline gently rushing her veins to feed anxious muscles. What had I seen flitting from her view? Pale flesh? a cautious mind demanded from higher powers rhetorically. Another step and the faintness of her own reflection brought forth a rational mind. Glass. An exhibit like the tavern keep had raved about. Her left hand reached forth to confirm just that, fingers curling to gently rake down the surface to ensure its solidarity.
A pale figure in the innermost left corner, the same place that sent her into a tizzy prior, reappeared just long enough for her to catch the resentful expression of a male. Just as quickly he completed his disappearing act at the back of his prison. Coming into the foreground, however, arrived a female far bolder than her counterpart. Her agile frame posted against a stalagmite that touched the ceiling. The claw-like fingernail of her index finger teased her bottom lip. Kaie swallowed hard. A discomfort entered her middle that was not fear. The dark eyes of the creature settled on the newest visitor. Her brow arched for a tick before curiosity sent her sauntering closer to the glass to inspect the cloaked face. The firmness of her gaze sent a dagger through the Myrian's body. Kaie's right hand slipped defeated from the gladius hilt. The savage stared back with a gaze just as unwavering, and as if the Symenestra had voiced the command, the Myrian found herself foolishly removing the cloak from her head.
Shadows vanished from her face to reveal the fiercely sharp features beneath. Wavy brown hair cascaded around her shoulders. Delight entered the Symenestra's expression at the sight of the bronze skin that gave off its foreign, sun-kissed glow. Has she ever seen a Myrian before? The Tigress growled from the back of her conscious mind. The Symenestra were enemies to her people, abominations long ago eradicated from the jungles Myrians now dominated. They were marked for death in the borders of Falyndar. Still the swell of guilt, like the conscience warning of something wrong, consumed her. She reminds me of Shai, Kaie finally concluded, unable to shake the resemblance between the creature behind the glass and her Scar comrade. The two hadn't exchanged so much as a word, but the ingenuity of the fragile woman had won the jungle-born's respect. Loyalty never wavers.
Yet she would be a liar if she claimed it was easy to still the traitorous sword-hand's impulse, to take the pommel of her gladius and shatter the glass walls of her racial enemy's prison.