Smoke and Mirrors
30th of Fall, 516 AV
Twentieth Bell
[661]
30th of Fall, 516 AV
Twentieth Bell
It had been a long while since Aislyn had last set eyes on that building.
An old, broken building, with a door the colour of grass and the texture of broken glass. A building that, as far as Aislyn could remember, had gone missing several years before. A building that was rather inconspicuous, all things considered. But purposely inconspicuous. There was nothing eye catching, nothing amazing or fantastic as many Alvad houses were. All that pulled the eye was the emerald door that christened the entryway and the sign that dubbed the place,
The Unnayme.
Perhaps it was just due to Aislyn’s memories, but there was most definitely something distinctly suspicious about the appearance. There wasn’t any proof of this, persay, but it just felt off. It shouldn’t have been there. Yet there it was, sitting on the street as any other building did, like it had been there for all of time.
But it hadn’t.
The last time Aislyn had seen the Trapped House, she had been, what, twelve years old? Thirteen, maybe? It didn't matter, she couldn't remember her age clearly. What she did remember was the place itself. Warm and hazy, with a very, very particular scent. She didn't remember a lot from her visits, but the smell was one thing she couldn't forget. Strong, pungent odor that invaded every pore it could. Not only the nose but everywhere else as well, an irritating substance that turned the whites of eyes red and made everything seem surreal. She remembered a burning throat and a persistent cough. An atmosphere that was so different from the outside, from the troubles and the worries.
Atmosphere, of course, in both senses of the word. The feeling of the room and the air of the room had quite the same feel. Intoxicating, and vaguely immoral.
Or, at least, that was how Aislyn had remembered it.
Seeing it in person once again was a very different feeling.
Stopped in the middle of the walking path, Aislyn had stared blankly at the peculiar establishment for a good chime or so, weighing her options in her mind. She had her notebook and charcoals at the ready, her plan for the day meant to be an exciting combination of work and more work. But this was a rather large wrench in her plans. She wasn’t exactly going to pass the building up- oh no, she had made her decision the very tick she laid eyes upon the aged green door- but she still stood to the side, as if she were debating against herself. In the end, of course, curiosity won, and with a creak the heavy wooden door was pushed open by curious hands.
The sights and smells of the inside of the house came rushing up to meet the woman, subdued chattered enveloped by the warm, hazy light of candles laced with something pungent. Drawn curtains with leaves of various plants giving the room an air of privacy. The place was decorated passionately, coves of fabric creating makeshift walls that had silhouettes of various shapes illuminated just behind them. Couches in deep reds and purples with the occasional figure just as hazy as the smoke around them laying upon them. The place was fairly barren, with the only other patron being the woman stretched out upon the couch, a small bottle of shimmering liquid clutched between her palms. Her hands visibly shook, her eyes wider than what Aislyn had previously assumed to be possible. Smears of the same liquid danced upon her lips in the dim light, her mouth slightly parted in a strangely content smile.
At least she appeared to be having a good time.
Crossing her fingers over each other, Aislyn had just begun to believe she’d begun to understand what the Trapped House had turned into when a smooth voice came suddenly from her side, ”Welcome to the Unnayme. What do you want to feel?”
An old, broken building, with a door the colour of grass and the texture of broken glass. A building that, as far as Aislyn could remember, had gone missing several years before. A building that was rather inconspicuous, all things considered. But purposely inconspicuous. There was nothing eye catching, nothing amazing or fantastic as many Alvad houses were. All that pulled the eye was the emerald door that christened the entryway and the sign that dubbed the place,
The Unnayme.
Perhaps it was just due to Aislyn’s memories, but there was most definitely something distinctly suspicious about the appearance. There wasn’t any proof of this, persay, but it just felt off. It shouldn’t have been there. Yet there it was, sitting on the street as any other building did, like it had been there for all of time.
But it hadn’t.
The last time Aislyn had seen the Trapped House, she had been, what, twelve years old? Thirteen, maybe? It didn't matter, she couldn't remember her age clearly. What she did remember was the place itself. Warm and hazy, with a very, very particular scent. She didn't remember a lot from her visits, but the smell was one thing she couldn't forget. Strong, pungent odor that invaded every pore it could. Not only the nose but everywhere else as well, an irritating substance that turned the whites of eyes red and made everything seem surreal. She remembered a burning throat and a persistent cough. An atmosphere that was so different from the outside, from the troubles and the worries.
Atmosphere, of course, in both senses of the word. The feeling of the room and the air of the room had quite the same feel. Intoxicating, and vaguely immoral.
Or, at least, that was how Aislyn had remembered it.
Seeing it in person once again was a very different feeling.
Stopped in the middle of the walking path, Aislyn had stared blankly at the peculiar establishment for a good chime or so, weighing her options in her mind. She had her notebook and charcoals at the ready, her plan for the day meant to be an exciting combination of work and more work. But this was a rather large wrench in her plans. She wasn’t exactly going to pass the building up- oh no, she had made her decision the very tick she laid eyes upon the aged green door- but she still stood to the side, as if she were debating against herself. In the end, of course, curiosity won, and with a creak the heavy wooden door was pushed open by curious hands.
The sights and smells of the inside of the house came rushing up to meet the woman, subdued chattered enveloped by the warm, hazy light of candles laced with something pungent. Drawn curtains with leaves of various plants giving the room an air of privacy. The place was decorated passionately, coves of fabric creating makeshift walls that had silhouettes of various shapes illuminated just behind them. Couches in deep reds and purples with the occasional figure just as hazy as the smoke around them laying upon them. The place was fairly barren, with the only other patron being the woman stretched out upon the couch, a small bottle of shimmering liquid clutched between her palms. Her hands visibly shook, her eyes wider than what Aislyn had previously assumed to be possible. Smears of the same liquid danced upon her lips in the dim light, her mouth slightly parted in a strangely content smile.
At least she appeared to be having a good time.
Crossing her fingers over each other, Aislyn had just begun to believe she’d begun to understand what the Trapped House had turned into when a smooth voice came suddenly from her side, ”Welcome to the Unnayme. What do you want to feel?”
[661]