40 Summer 512, late evening
Dove scudded barefoot along the battered corridors, keeping as quiet as she could, her head down to hide the bruise darkening on her cheek. Even this late in the day, there were people eerywhere, and the weight of their stares pressed down on her as heavily as the weight of all the stone caging her in, blocking her view, trapping her in a citadel instead of out in the fields. A scabbed graze showed through a tear in her trousers where she'd fallen before she managed to escape her father's renewed grief. Her own grief was a harder knot in her gut and she had no idea how to solve it. For now she turned corners almot randomly, more concerned with staying out of her father's reach for the night than going anywhere in particular.
A breeze floated past her nose, cooler and fresher than the air trapped inside the city, and as Dove turned to follow it, the ache shifted upwards from her gut to her chest. She hurried faster as the crowd thinned out finally, and then found herself staring through a doorway into a place that was open to the sky. What little she could see told her it was a garden more of stones than plbnts, but it was empty, and she could look up to the sky and see... She stepped in quickly before anyone spotted her, and slid down to sit against the wall just inside. Hugging herself to hold the grief inside, she tilted her head back and looked up into a clear sky freckled with stars. It was the closest thing she'd seen to home in over a season, and the stars blurred and trembled as she blinked away tears. Last summer, she and her brother and sister had spent most of a night hiding and stargazing. Now... now they were both dead, and the stars were there just the same as aways.