14th of Fall, 519AV
Lhavit was a spectacle at night. Yvaleth had been genuinely unprepared for the sight of it.
Most places obeyed the ebb and flow of daylight, working and commuting during the day and retiring at night. Torches only burned for so long, and nightwatchmen could only patrol so far. The surface races possessed poor eyesight in low light and feared the creeping things that moved unseen in the shadows.
Wise. Sometimes those creeping things were Symenestra.
Long after the sun had dipped below the misty horizon, Yvaleth stalked the streets of Zintia Peak. But in Lhavit, the city glowed around him. The skyglass structures here luminesced in the moon and starlight, shimmering in emerald green, smokey blue, and rosy hues. Even the hanging gardens, which were common, but lovely spectacles during the day, glimmered in ways he’d never seen before. The entire city was a surrealist dreamscape of lights. Yet easy on his sensitive eyes.
In the distance, he could see the glowing bridge leading off to another Lhavitian Peak, which he couldn’t recall the name of. Tentin? Even from here, Yvaleth could make out the distant gleam of the architecture. Overhead, the stars glittered brightly in reverence to their Lady, the Alvina Zintila, faithfully attended by the lonely moon.
How had a place like this existed for so long, so close to Kalinor, and yet Yvaleth knew so little about it? Yvaleth had heard of Ethaefal, and of the Alvina who supposedly resided here. But the thought of divinity had always seemed so far from Kalinor. Even Viratas was only a nominal presence.
It felt like this had been intentionally hidden from him. Somehow, Yvaleth felt lied to. The surface was not the barbaric, filthmongering wasteland as he’d been led to believe.
The thrum of strings sounded nearby. A busker played his lute and sang a haunting tune on the corner, at the edge of the Surya Plaza. A wide brimmed hat sat at his feet, eagerly awaiting monetary appreciation. Yvaleth stalled for a moment, and then he passed on by.
“The Shinya had no right.” A young woman’s voice noised from a stand nearby. “He only used magic to defend me. Did you hear what that μπάσταρδος called me?”
Yvaleth tilted his head. Perhaps this would be a good time to eavesdrop on the locals. There were large swathes of the Common language he still didn’t understand. He paused at a booth, overlooking various fruits on display, pretending not to listen.
“If he’s a mage, why didn’t he register?” The stand operator seemed familiar with her.
“That registry tripe is μαλακίες. It only exists so the Shinya can control you.”
“I don’t know…”
“He’s really sweet! Most of the time...”
“Hey.” This voice came from the booth in front of Yvaleth. He glanced upward. A bearded Lhavitian merchant glared at him from beneath a bushy brow. “I don’t do business with Widows. Get moving.”
The merchant briefly brushed aside his robe, revealing the hilt of a long dagger at his hip.
Yvaleth lingered momentarily locked eyes with the human. For a second he wondered what his whip would look like wrapped around the human’s neck, pinching so tightly that the veins began to pop out of his skin. How his choked cries would sound as he apologized and begged for mercy. How his foot would feel planted on the man’s chest.
“Fine," was all he said.
The Symenestra turned and moved on and the direction of the Mhakula Tea House.