Date, Season, Year
"Speech"
"Speech"
"Have I ever told you about the time I was pushed off the Skybridge and died?"
It was Winter, but every centimeter of the Outpost burned with summer heat. Madeira's eyes were narrowed against the glare off the tinted glass and sandstone buildings as she skirted the bazar, a sleek shadow at her heel.
"I beg your pardon?" Spooks' armored head turned to stare incredulously up at his master. The problem with someone knowing you were a liar was that they never believed you when you spoke the truth.
"Hitting the ground is bad, don't get me wrong", Madeira assured, her eyes not lifting from the path in front of them, "but the worst part is right before you're even falling in the first place. It's the moment right before your balance is tipped past the point of no return." If she concentrated she could still feel the bite of the ghost's manifested fingers in her shoulders, feel the unforgivingpress of the railing against the small of her back. But the memory had lost the power to scare her anymore. "Your body knows you're petched the second before your mind does, and it just kind of... leaves without you. Abandons ship", she sighed. That was the only way she could explain it.
"I'd like to remind you you're having lunch, not riding into battle."
"All aboard", Madeira muttered under her breath.
The Bazaar was packed, but people seemed to be able to find a little extra room to give Madeira and her hai beast as they passed. Spook's fur was silky and brushed, his claws and teeth and bone plates gleaming and polished like oiled stone in the harsh desert light. He always looked dangerous, but something about him being so carefully tended put an edge on it, like a whetstone. Madeira was equally tended, straight and proper in dress and jewels. But if Spooks' polished gleam was an unsheathed knife, Madeira's careful beauty and colourful attire warned that her species was poisonous.
If they were not riding into battle, why all this armor?
She could see a break in the dense market where the tents stopped and the arched doorways of the restaurant began. They were almost there.
"Don't speak, even if you're asked a question" Madeira warned. "Actually, It might be better if you're just not there. Go wander around. I'll buy you some food when I'm done, so try to stay away from the cats and pigeons."
Spooks just eyed her with a single lamp-like eye. She never let him wander the Outpost, thick as it was with religiously significant and fanatically protected small animals, unsupervised.
"My time is limited and you are too much to explain", Madeira answered the stare curtly. "I'll call if I need you."
He was dismissed. The beast didn't waste time questioning this sudden freedom. With a slightly worrying gleam in his eye, Spooks vanished in a curl of soulmist. Madeira waved the gust of licorice scented mist away from her face and finally broke out of the market. In ticks she had crossed under the gates of The Courtyard Cantina.
[/color]It was Winter, but every centimeter of the Outpost burned with summer heat. Madeira's eyes were narrowed against the glare off the tinted glass and sandstone buildings as she skirted the bazar, a sleek shadow at her heel.
"I beg your pardon?" Spooks' armored head turned to stare incredulously up at his master. The problem with someone knowing you were a liar was that they never believed you when you spoke the truth.
"Hitting the ground is bad, don't get me wrong", Madeira assured, her eyes not lifting from the path in front of them, "but the worst part is right before you're even falling in the first place. It's the moment right before your balance is tipped past the point of no return." If she concentrated she could still feel the bite of the ghost's manifested fingers in her shoulders, feel the unforgivingpress of the railing against the small of her back. But the memory had lost the power to scare her anymore. "Your body knows you're petched the second before your mind does, and it just kind of... leaves without you. Abandons ship", she sighed. That was the only way she could explain it.
"I'd like to remind you you're having lunch, not riding into battle."
"All aboard", Madeira muttered under her breath.
The Bazaar was packed, but people seemed to be able to find a little extra room to give Madeira and her hai beast as they passed. Spook's fur was silky and brushed, his claws and teeth and bone plates gleaming and polished like oiled stone in the harsh desert light. He always looked dangerous, but something about him being so carefully tended put an edge on it, like a whetstone. Madeira was equally tended, straight and proper in dress and jewels. But if Spooks' polished gleam was an unsheathed knife, Madeira's careful beauty and colourful attire warned that her species was poisonous.
If they were not riding into battle, why all this armor?
She could see a break in the dense market where the tents stopped and the arched doorways of the restaurant began. They were almost there.
"Don't speak, even if you're asked a question" Madeira warned. "Actually, It might be better if you're just not there. Go wander around. I'll buy you some food when I'm done, so try to stay away from the cats and pigeons."
Spooks just eyed her with a single lamp-like eye. She never let him wander the Outpost, thick as it was with religiously significant and fanatically protected small animals, unsupervised.
"My time is limited and you are too much to explain", Madeira answered the stare curtly. "I'll call if I need you."
He was dismissed. The beast didn't waste time questioning this sudden freedom. With a slightly worrying gleam in his eye, Spooks vanished in a curl of soulmist. Madeira waved the gust of licorice scented mist away from her face and finally broke out of the market. In ticks she had crossed under the gates of The Courtyard Cantina.