- 77th of Fall, 518
"Don't give me attitude, not this early", Madeira huffed as she walked the circumference of her room that topped the Infinity Manor. Golden hair loose down her back, barefoot in her pink silk dressing gown, she was tired and finally ready for sleep. But twitching the drapes closed over one of the six tall, narrow windows set into each of the walls only resulted in the one on the other side of the room flying open again.
"Please," she pleaded, as she tied shut the window overlooking the front yard, where Emma was dancing in the manors first attempts at a garden. Great sprays of blue and purple flowers were set in drunken, whirling patterns like an oil spill in patches all across the property. Unseasonal blooms were pushed up from the ground to only to grow crispy and brittle and die every evening when the frost set in. Yet every morning there were more flowers to replace them. "It'll be light soon, and I need to take the midnight rest. As soon as I'm up I'll tie the drapes back and open the windows all day. How about
that?"
As if in answer the window overlooking the back of the yard swung open with a whoosh of drapery. To add insult to it, the window itself swung open with an ominous rattle of expensive glass. The chill cut through the airy space and set Madeira to shivering in her thin robe.
"House, I swear to gods."
The manor stirred weakly in the connection they shared, and from deep within she felt an insistence. A force of will that didn't have words was adamant she do something, but couldn't explain what.
"What's wrong? If you're playing games with me..." she let the threat hang in the air as she stalked to the open window, pulling her robe tight around her.
Out in the pre-dawn blackness the skinny beech trees reflected starlight on the backs of their silvery leaves. Crickets sang in the long untended grass and bats swooped low to snatch at pale, moon-bright moths. It was a perfectly ordinary night.
Yet that insistence didn't let up. The house was flickering with thought, and she could sense a low burning frustration under its young, scattered will. Frankly, she related. The two could communicate in nothing but emotions, and the house was too young to know how to control them. But giving it the benefit of the doubt, she lingered at the window and shivered, straining to see into the dark.
Soon her eyes adjusted to the darkness, and she could see the sparkling of frost that covered the flower petals and the rustle of grass as small critters fled. Then it got brighter, and the bats became more than just a dark flutter of wings. Then brighter still,
and Madeira looked up in time to see a shooting star fall to earth. A burning white ball broke from the velvet black of Leth's sky and dropped screaming to the ground. Madeira ducked behind the window sill as it hit, and great clods of earth struck the side of the house and flew into her third story window.
WC: 541
"Please," she pleaded, as she tied shut the window overlooking the front yard, where Emma was dancing in the manors first attempts at a garden. Great sprays of blue and purple flowers were set in drunken, whirling patterns like an oil spill in patches all across the property. Unseasonal blooms were pushed up from the ground to only to grow crispy and brittle and die every evening when the frost set in. Yet every morning there were more flowers to replace them. "It'll be light soon, and I need to take the midnight rest. As soon as I'm up I'll tie the drapes back and open the windows all day. How about
that?"
As if in answer the window overlooking the back of the yard swung open with a whoosh of drapery. To add insult to it, the window itself swung open with an ominous rattle of expensive glass. The chill cut through the airy space and set Madeira to shivering in her thin robe.
"House, I swear to gods."
The manor stirred weakly in the connection they shared, and from deep within she felt an insistence. A force of will that didn't have words was adamant she do something, but couldn't explain what.
"What's wrong? If you're playing games with me..." she let the threat hang in the air as she stalked to the open window, pulling her robe tight around her.
Out in the pre-dawn blackness the skinny beech trees reflected starlight on the backs of their silvery leaves. Crickets sang in the long untended grass and bats swooped low to snatch at pale, moon-bright moths. It was a perfectly ordinary night.
Yet that insistence didn't let up. The house was flickering with thought, and she could sense a low burning frustration under its young, scattered will. Frankly, she related. The two could communicate in nothing but emotions, and the house was too young to know how to control them. But giving it the benefit of the doubt, she lingered at the window and shivered, straining to see into the dark.
Soon her eyes adjusted to the darkness, and she could see the sparkling of frost that covered the flower petals and the rustle of grass as small critters fled. Then it got brighter, and the bats became more than just a dark flutter of wings. Then brighter still,
and Madeira looked up in time to see a shooting star fall to earth. A burning white ball broke from the velvet black of Leth's sky and dropped screaming to the ground. Madeira ducked behind the window sill as it hit, and great clods of earth struck the side of the house and flew into her third story window.
WC: 541
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