Speech | 3rd of Winter, 515 AV | Thoughts | ooc'Salt and Mirrors' because Naia's going to be salty af, though 'Common Critic' was another strong contender if you prefer that title?
Also, I'll let you dictate wherever they end up sitting or standing!
Also, I'll let you dictate wherever they end up sitting or standing!
As much as Naia liked to feign contempt for the flourishes of colour and wild costumes that those upon The Mischief so commonly donned, it would be a lie for her to claim that she did not adore the bright gowns and the striking colours.
For all a Svefra that she was, there was Nykan blood that ran through her veins, and though the sea and the waters north would always call her, as would those funny little nuances that put her mind right back in the city of monks, to the Heart of The World. Like colour, Gods she revelled in colour. Her older teenage years were clad in the brightest of reds and the most vibrant blues, and when the last pay had reached her pockets, and fellow sailors made mention of practically being required to attend the show in the Crooked Playhouse, the joy of the opportunity to purchase a dress almost outweighed her hatred of illusions.
Thus she stood tall and proud outside of The Crook, as she would insist she always did, bright brocade dress of blue and tan pulled close to her form, a light flaxen coat tucked under her arm in the unlikely event the weather would cool enough to warrant its use, though she did not discount the possibility of rain or an evening breeze. She was much earlier than she would have hoped, and she could not quite place what had propelled her to get ready and arrive with such speed.
Perhaps the dire need for preparation at sea was merely taking her, pushing, pulling, and fraying her mind until she has accounted for every possibility. As if on cue, her thoughts soon dug themselves into a hole. The playhouse could catch fire, she thought, the anxiety that seemed to have taken the city could take the crowd, the illusions could fail, or they could scare her out of sensible thought - she could go to the bathroom and later be accused for failing to help or attend, and face the wrath of her fellows.
'It's the paranoia of the city, it has got me too. This wasn't a good idea. I shouldn’t have to be here, I should be able to take my damn nice dress to a damn nice bar and be done with it.'
She caught a glimpse of one of the performers then, or at least she was quite convinced she had, and all the joy she had leeched out of the glory of wearing nice clothes finally ran dry, and it was not from the cold that gooseflesh took to her arms. There was no wild costume worn, not by The Mischief’s standards, but the wrinkled face was unmistakable, the performer’s pace brisk and gaze blank, pressed forward as he strode by. It was always the ones that looked the least beguiling that conjured the wildest tricks, and her feet followed him in an uneven pace. She was not going to let some balding man in his late forties make her wish for a blanket covering her head, Zulrav damn it. She was going to find him, make sure he at least vaguely recognised her, and she was going to wish him Kelwyn’s luck. Yes. She was going to wish an illusionist well right in his bright, beady little eyes.
She knew she was probably going to have her wits spooked out of her, for even the most stunning of illusions could unnerve the Svefra, but they didn’t have to know that. It was less the illusions themselves, and more the prospect that her senses could be so easily fooled that left her so uncomfortable. If she could so easily believe that a whale could fly through the sky, then what of those she spoke to? Were they as they seemed, or something far more horrible?
Bitterness took to her tongue and thoughts as she delved deeper into the amphitheatre, darting gaze quickly losing the man’s gleaming skull as she lost herself in the peculiarity of the place. The conflicts of wood and stone and stacked galleys were all too fitting for the city, and she was all at once overcome with awe, breath rolling from her lungs in a hefty sigh.
It was going to be a long night, she might as well make herself comfortable.
For all a Svefra that she was, there was Nykan blood that ran through her veins, and though the sea and the waters north would always call her, as would those funny little nuances that put her mind right back in the city of monks, to the Heart of The World. Like colour, Gods she revelled in colour. Her older teenage years were clad in the brightest of reds and the most vibrant blues, and when the last pay had reached her pockets, and fellow sailors made mention of practically being required to attend the show in the Crooked Playhouse, the joy of the opportunity to purchase a dress almost outweighed her hatred of illusions.
Thus she stood tall and proud outside of The Crook, as she would insist she always did, bright brocade dress of blue and tan pulled close to her form, a light flaxen coat tucked under her arm in the unlikely event the weather would cool enough to warrant its use, though she did not discount the possibility of rain or an evening breeze. She was much earlier than she would have hoped, and she could not quite place what had propelled her to get ready and arrive with such speed.
Perhaps the dire need for preparation at sea was merely taking her, pushing, pulling, and fraying her mind until she has accounted for every possibility. As if on cue, her thoughts soon dug themselves into a hole. The playhouse could catch fire, she thought, the anxiety that seemed to have taken the city could take the crowd, the illusions could fail, or they could scare her out of sensible thought - she could go to the bathroom and later be accused for failing to help or attend, and face the wrath of her fellows.
'It's the paranoia of the city, it has got me too. This wasn't a good idea. I shouldn’t have to be here, I should be able to take my damn nice dress to a damn nice bar and be done with it.'
She caught a glimpse of one of the performers then, or at least she was quite convinced she had, and all the joy she had leeched out of the glory of wearing nice clothes finally ran dry, and it was not from the cold that gooseflesh took to her arms. There was no wild costume worn, not by The Mischief’s standards, but the wrinkled face was unmistakable, the performer’s pace brisk and gaze blank, pressed forward as he strode by. It was always the ones that looked the least beguiling that conjured the wildest tricks, and her feet followed him in an uneven pace. She was not going to let some balding man in his late forties make her wish for a blanket covering her head, Zulrav damn it. She was going to find him, make sure he at least vaguely recognised her, and she was going to wish him Kelwyn’s luck. Yes. She was going to wish an illusionist well right in his bright, beady little eyes.
She knew she was probably going to have her wits spooked out of her, for even the most stunning of illusions could unnerve the Svefra, but they didn’t have to know that. It was less the illusions themselves, and more the prospect that her senses could be so easily fooled that left her so uncomfortable. If she could so easily believe that a whale could fly through the sky, then what of those she spoke to? Were they as they seemed, or something far more horrible?
Bitterness took to her tongue and thoughts as she delved deeper into the amphitheatre, darting gaze quickly losing the man’s gleaming skull as she lost herself in the peculiarity of the place. The conflicts of wood and stone and stacked galleys were all too fitting for the city, and she was all at once overcome with awe, breath rolling from her lungs in a hefty sigh.
It was going to be a long night, she might as well make herself comfortable.