A brief, wistful smile crossed the woman's lips. She listened with attention, yet all the while her fingers played with themselves, nervous, twitching. Distantly, a hawk's cry echoed above the still streets, high up in the sky, its call melancholy and gradually fading. Eleanor looked over at Aislyn as she started to draw, and although she couldn't have known what the other woman was drawing- at least, not from that angle- she self-consciously shook her hair over her face.
Eleanor soon nodded as if to say, 'no problem'. Then cast a glance down towards the street, pensive...
"There are many things in this city which seem hidden from view. Haven't you found that? It's the same with me. Something about this house has always managed to hide me from view." She laughed cynically. "Apart from the day I decide to end it all, of course. Of course. But before that, and before this, it's always been very quiet around here."
She looked up through fragile eyelashes, her gaze suddenly piercing. "I know what you're thinking. It happens to everyone I've ever talked to about this house. 'Oh, Ionu must disfavour you.' 'DId you have a hard childhood?' 'I bet you killed someone, right?'" Each phony sentence was said with growing mockery, yet at the end of her speech she trailed back down again, as if the energy exerted was too much, even for something as small as that.
"If Ionu hates me, I would think I would know by now. It's not like it's a fault of the gods, not any of this. Where I am is my own fault and that's that. But, enough of me. I'm sick of me. Would you let me look at your drawing? I have... I used to have at least a vested interest in the arts."
With that, the woman leaned forwards slightly onto her elbows. But something about her posture would show that she really didn't think the other woman cared so much to show her artwork. Eleanor wouldn't mind if Aislyn decided not to give her the opportunity to see her drawing, but in reality she was apprehensive to see what was on the page. Whether that was because she didn't like being drawn, or whether it was because of some other reason would be hard to tell.
Eleanor soon nodded as if to say, 'no problem'. Then cast a glance down towards the street, pensive...
"There are many things in this city which seem hidden from view. Haven't you found that? It's the same with me. Something about this house has always managed to hide me from view." She laughed cynically. "Apart from the day I decide to end it all, of course. Of course. But before that, and before this, it's always been very quiet around here."
She looked up through fragile eyelashes, her gaze suddenly piercing. "I know what you're thinking. It happens to everyone I've ever talked to about this house. 'Oh, Ionu must disfavour you.' 'DId you have a hard childhood?' 'I bet you killed someone, right?'" Each phony sentence was said with growing mockery, yet at the end of her speech she trailed back down again, as if the energy exerted was too much, even for something as small as that.
"If Ionu hates me, I would think I would know by now. It's not like it's a fault of the gods, not any of this. Where I am is my own fault and that's that. But, enough of me. I'm sick of me. Would you let me look at your drawing? I have... I used to have at least a vested interest in the arts."
With that, the woman leaned forwards slightly onto her elbows. But something about her posture would show that she really didn't think the other woman cared so much to show her artwork. Eleanor wouldn't mind if Aislyn decided not to give her the opportunity to see her drawing, but in reality she was apprehensive to see what was on the page. Whether that was because she didn't like being drawn, or whether it was because of some other reason would be hard to tell.