37
th SPRING 517
Kuahala Estates
Kuahala Estates
Syna’s light filtered in through the hollows in the clean, smooth, white walls, basking the goddess in Her warmth. Although goddess she was not, so she would have called herself, if not for the fear of invoking the wrath of those whose birthrights were wholly divine.
It would be a forgivable mistake at a glance. Gilded skin glistened in the late morning light, while long, luscious wavy hair, dreaded in a few places, cascaded down her back as the maiden lounged on a bed not her own. Cheekbones delicately painted in faded rose, arms with an artwork of gold painted in spirals, her hips exposed by her dress equally decorated in stylish, gold geometrical shapes.
The maiden was propped up on a rolled wolf pelt, in her top-left hand she held a leather bound book and in her middle-left was poised a stick of charcoal. Her nose wrinkled lightly as the hush hush of the charcoal against the parchment filled the quiet. Her hands leaned lightly, so as not to smudge the outlines already done of a man and a dog.
The subject of her drawing had been one of the merchants she had travelled with. Quite handsome, for a human sailor, she thought. She moved her hand in light, airy strokes, inside the lines of his face. Creating grey strokes down the right of the representation, on the opposite side to where she imagined the light to hit his features. The concentration was intense in the line wrinkling between her thick brows.
As her light strokes took her charcoal toward the centre of the drawn face, she halted then. This point took an expert gaze, to shade where the light and curves of his visage would meet. The artist decided she had not the patience for this portion of her drawing. Huffing a breath through puffed cheeks, she flopped the journal and charcoal down beside her, and reclined in the bed with a faint smile.
Though, it was not a lover’s bed she found herself in. “Brother.” Her voice greeted the six-armed man who had just stepped into the room. His sister, the owner of that voice, set down her book and charcoal, lifted her three right arms to settle them more comfortably above her head. She had not even turned to face him, the subject of her greatest affections.
She was playing at aloof, pretending lofty ignorance. “How did you get yourself into this mess.” There, a smile, lilting at the tips of her rosy, painted lips, as a deep brown, seeing gaze swept the apartment with a whimsical hint of distaste. “This is not home.” She drawled the word, home. Home. Those monumental palaces, forged in gold and marble, a jewel in the heart of the desert.
Finally, her gaze alighted on her dearest, and Shaqira swept up in one graceful arch to her feet. Tucking her lower arms back, she breezed over toward him, a whirlwind of beige floating fabric of her dress, and wolfish grin. “Surprise!”
There was a child-like lilt to her tone then; even though she, revealingly, flaunted the body of a woman, her heart sung with the immaturity of one accustomed to a sheltered life. Reaching up to clasp her brother’s cheek and jaw in her topmost right hand, she leant up on tip-toes to plant a kiss passionately on his lips. Too intimate for comfort, but brief.
When she broke the embrace, she still clung to his shoulders with her upmost hands, her middle clasped around her waist, her lower perched on her hips. She clucked a giggle and beamed up at him as she took in his expression, amusement filling hers with a playful pout as heavily kohl-lined eyes flickered over his features. “Did you miss me?”