41st of Spring, Solar Winds Apartments
Atticus sat on the edge of the singular window in his apartment, his feet hanging off the ledge and over Zintia peak. Most of Lhavit was asleep now, but Atticus was... Restless. Sleep evaded him on nights like this, where the air was still and the lights were dim and the night shone in glorious brilliance that seemed to project their light past the young boy's ever-observing eyes and directly to his memory. It was on nights like this Atticus remembered why he did what he did.
The late Spring air was refreshing, and smelled lightly of distant flowers and pollen. It felt inviting, but the boy didn't dare leave and wander on that night. Not when he could miss such a beautiful sight. He kicked his legs happily above the streets, tightening his grip on the window's edge from inside the apartment, as he smiled to himself, happily reminiscing about nothing in particular. He loved it all, without a single doubt. It was such a beautiful night. Such a beautiful night. He raised a finger to the unending cosmos, tracing out distant constellations and wondering about distant worlds, distant stars. He wondered what things there would look like. If things there wondered about him. What their constellations would look like. It was all entrancing. Remarkable, without a single doubt.
Sometimes he wondered if his love was peculiar. Atticus - unlike the others of Leslie blood - wasn't keen on travelling the world he lived in. He hadn't visited Zeltiva or Riverfall or Kenash, Syliras or Sahova. He hadn't wandered the wilderness or hunted for bestial blood, nor had he any desire to. He hadn't seen any wonders that were beyond Lhavit, and he didn't at all consider himself at the lesser for it. Occasionally, he had wondered if others may. Everyone seemed so... Cultured. Davor Aveloz from Kalinor, Aimee Fabron from Zeltiva, Boo Beckett from a smathering of distant cities and cultures Atticus could hardly remember upon concentration, much less recite off the top of his head. No, Atticus wasn't a traveler, he figured. Why would he traverse this world when there were so many more? Sometimes he peered at the cosmos in all their infinite glory and thought it a shame that, out of the countless thousands, he had only been to one of the stars. Only walked one of the worlds. Only breathed one world's air.
A shame, in all honesty.
But it wasn't a bad view.
Actually... It was probably his favorite view.
Absently, questions began to race, as they always had when Atticus hadn't slept much recently. Most were more non sequitur, wondering how many people before him had sat on this windowsill and why, how many people had sat in the plaza below him, how many people had leaned against the wall he was above. He wondered how many people had fallen in love here. How many people had done exactly what he was doing now. What gods they held reverence to.
Which had gotten Atticus thinking...
Atticus sat on the edge of the singular window in his apartment, his feet hanging off the ledge and over Zintia peak. Most of Lhavit was asleep now, but Atticus was... Restless. Sleep evaded him on nights like this, where the air was still and the lights were dim and the night shone in glorious brilliance that seemed to project their light past the young boy's ever-observing eyes and directly to his memory. It was on nights like this Atticus remembered why he did what he did.
The late Spring air was refreshing, and smelled lightly of distant flowers and pollen. It felt inviting, but the boy didn't dare leave and wander on that night. Not when he could miss such a beautiful sight. He kicked his legs happily above the streets, tightening his grip on the window's edge from inside the apartment, as he smiled to himself, happily reminiscing about nothing in particular. He loved it all, without a single doubt. It was such a beautiful night. Such a beautiful night. He raised a finger to the unending cosmos, tracing out distant constellations and wondering about distant worlds, distant stars. He wondered what things there would look like. If things there wondered about him. What their constellations would look like. It was all entrancing. Remarkable, without a single doubt.
Sometimes he wondered if his love was peculiar. Atticus - unlike the others of Leslie blood - wasn't keen on travelling the world he lived in. He hadn't visited Zeltiva or Riverfall or Kenash, Syliras or Sahova. He hadn't wandered the wilderness or hunted for bestial blood, nor had he any desire to. He hadn't seen any wonders that were beyond Lhavit, and he didn't at all consider himself at the lesser for it. Occasionally, he had wondered if others may. Everyone seemed so... Cultured. Davor Aveloz from Kalinor, Aimee Fabron from Zeltiva, Boo Beckett from a smathering of distant cities and cultures Atticus could hardly remember upon concentration, much less recite off the top of his head. No, Atticus wasn't a traveler, he figured. Why would he traverse this world when there were so many more? Sometimes he peered at the cosmos in all their infinite glory and thought it a shame that, out of the countless thousands, he had only been to one of the stars. Only walked one of the worlds. Only breathed one world's air.
A shame, in all honesty.
But it wasn't a bad view.
Actually... It was probably his favorite view.
Absently, questions began to race, as they always had when Atticus hadn't slept much recently. Most were more non sequitur, wondering how many people before him had sat on this windowsill and why, how many people had sat in the plaza below him, how many people had leaned against the wall he was above. He wondered how many people had fallen in love here. How many people had done exactly what he was doing now. What gods they held reverence to.
Which had gotten Atticus thinking...
Boxcode by Verena