45th of Fall, 520
The forty-fifth of the season rolled around quite quickly, that amount of time seeming to flash by. Time waited for no one. Alice soon found herself back in the Outpost plaza where she had that fateful, if rocky, meeting with the young Spiritist, Moritz. She first offended the young Kelvic by instantly bringing his age into the equation, mistakenly thinking that the child-looking figure was lost and needed help. Just how wrong could one be? Moritz, while he may have looked like a child, neither spoke nor acted like one. The only hint to his age would have been his seeming naivete about the way the world works with his very firm and unmoving stance on telling the truth.
But besides that little tidbit that the two had a slight disagreement on, Alice found Moritz refreshingly straightforward, blunt, practical, and most importantly, useful. They both had something to gain by working with one another and both sought to capitalize on that. Hopefully using that wish to grow and develop to forge a strong partnership between the two, leading to both gaining what they wished to gain in the end.
Let’s just not scare him off with what I what out of this partnership right off the bat, shall we? She chucked to herself while passing through the Sunberth Dovecote, entering the building, wrapping a bit of her shroud around the door, and pushed it shut behind her with a small force of will. Finding herself alone within the small, silent room. The gentle coo of the birds it was named after could be heard somewhere just out of sight. The area was calming and relaxing, Alice knew this was one of the few places you could go to be isolated from the world for a scant few seconds. But all good things must come to an end and as soon as the door latched shut behind her she began to count to three in her head before turning around. She reached a strand of her cool, gossamer thread down to the infernal contraption, now a bit practiced at using doorknobs without hands. She turned it underneath the soulmist, slowly and with much concentration before the door popped open with a faint thunk! Swinging open to reveal a much larger Dovecote than the one she entered in Sunberth.
Alice drifted out into the open without a sound into the larger area, hanging to the sides as to not disturb the few people that wandered in and out, spreading out her soulmist to fade into the background. It was all well and good to be a ghost but people tended to be nervous of them, avoiding detection or at least making yourself less noticeable was for the best. It was...mostly successful to say the least. The few merchants moving in and out with a purpose missed the hazy, translucent woman, glancing over what they were not looking for. But the man’s whose sole purpose was to greet those entering and exiting and dovecote was harder to avoid.
“Well met, Spirit.” He spoke calmly while she tried to slip out into the plaza beyond. “I hope you find what you need in the Outpost again, a pleasure to have you back.”
Alice stopped herself briefly, giving the man a short curtsey while dipping her head. “The pleasure is all mine.” Greeting done, she slipped out of the large dovecote and into the plaza proper.
The dovecote fell away behind her while the architecture bloomed in front. The walls rapidly expanded to form a large squared area surrounded by arched apartments marked with swirling blue decorations and stuccoed roofs. A few musicians strummed their instruments providing a calming atmosphere as they moved their way around the central pond and the few trees planted about it. The sound fading in and out as they moved closer or farther away in their busking quest.
Keiss acolytes stood underneath the shade of the apartment, brooms in hand, maintaining the entrance area of the Outpost, all while keeping an eye on the few people moving through the plaza to ensure no one got out of hand. If one strained their hearing they would hear the hustle and bustle of the Bazaar just through the arched path and could see flashes of movement as people walked beyond.
‘Walking’ along the ground to attract a bit less attention she maneuvered to get out from under the sun that hung fat in the sky, casting its warming rays down through the clear sky, coming to rest underneath a balcony that shot off from one of the apartments. The shadow wrapping around her form and made her seem more substantial as she waited for Moritz to show up whenever he would. She realized that they never specified a time so she decided to show up in the late morning and was content to wait as she had nowhere to be and a few hours early wouldn’t do her any harm.
Briefly, she wondered if she should find a more conspicuous place to rest as she was getting partially consumed by the shadows around her but ended up shrugging, figuring that finding a ghost would be a good exercise for young Moritz.
The forty-fifth of the season rolled around quite quickly, that amount of time seeming to flash by. Time waited for no one. Alice soon found herself back in the Outpost plaza where she had that fateful, if rocky, meeting with the young Spiritist, Moritz. She first offended the young Kelvic by instantly bringing his age into the equation, mistakenly thinking that the child-looking figure was lost and needed help. Just how wrong could one be? Moritz, while he may have looked like a child, neither spoke nor acted like one. The only hint to his age would have been his seeming naivete about the way the world works with his very firm and unmoving stance on telling the truth.
But besides that little tidbit that the two had a slight disagreement on, Alice found Moritz refreshingly straightforward, blunt, practical, and most importantly, useful. They both had something to gain by working with one another and both sought to capitalize on that. Hopefully using that wish to grow and develop to forge a strong partnership between the two, leading to both gaining what they wished to gain in the end.
Let’s just not scare him off with what I what out of this partnership right off the bat, shall we? She chucked to herself while passing through the Sunberth Dovecote, entering the building, wrapping a bit of her shroud around the door, and pushed it shut behind her with a small force of will. Finding herself alone within the small, silent room. The gentle coo of the birds it was named after could be heard somewhere just out of sight. The area was calming and relaxing, Alice knew this was one of the few places you could go to be isolated from the world for a scant few seconds. But all good things must come to an end and as soon as the door latched shut behind her she began to count to three in her head before turning around. She reached a strand of her cool, gossamer thread down to the infernal contraption, now a bit practiced at using doorknobs without hands. She turned it underneath the soulmist, slowly and with much concentration before the door popped open with a faint thunk! Swinging open to reveal a much larger Dovecote than the one she entered in Sunberth.
Alice drifted out into the open without a sound into the larger area, hanging to the sides as to not disturb the few people that wandered in and out, spreading out her soulmist to fade into the background. It was all well and good to be a ghost but people tended to be nervous of them, avoiding detection or at least making yourself less noticeable was for the best. It was...mostly successful to say the least. The few merchants moving in and out with a purpose missed the hazy, translucent woman, glancing over what they were not looking for. But the man’s whose sole purpose was to greet those entering and exiting and dovecote was harder to avoid.
“Well met, Spirit.” He spoke calmly while she tried to slip out into the plaza beyond. “I hope you find what you need in the Outpost again, a pleasure to have you back.”
Alice stopped herself briefly, giving the man a short curtsey while dipping her head. “The pleasure is all mine.” Greeting done, she slipped out of the large dovecote and into the plaza proper.
The dovecote fell away behind her while the architecture bloomed in front. The walls rapidly expanded to form a large squared area surrounded by arched apartments marked with swirling blue decorations and stuccoed roofs. A few musicians strummed their instruments providing a calming atmosphere as they moved their way around the central pond and the few trees planted about it. The sound fading in and out as they moved closer or farther away in their busking quest.
Keiss acolytes stood underneath the shade of the apartment, brooms in hand, maintaining the entrance area of the Outpost, all while keeping an eye on the few people moving through the plaza to ensure no one got out of hand. If one strained their hearing they would hear the hustle and bustle of the Bazaar just through the arched path and could see flashes of movement as people walked beyond.
‘Walking’ along the ground to attract a bit less attention she maneuvered to get out from under the sun that hung fat in the sky, casting its warming rays down through the clear sky, coming to rest underneath a balcony that shot off from one of the apartments. The shadow wrapping around her form and made her seem more substantial as she waited for Moritz to show up whenever he would. She realized that they never specified a time so she decided to show up in the late morning and was content to wait as she had nowhere to be and a few hours early wouldn’t do her any harm.
Briefly, she wondered if she should find a more conspicuous place to rest as she was getting partially consumed by the shadows around her but ended up shrugging, figuring that finding a ghost would be a good exercise for young Moritz.