Timestamp: 5th of Fall, 522 A.V.
The firelight danced across the pavilion, which Tazrae had completely open to the sea. The front was rolled up, secured, and the back sides were down. Her little reading nook with her green wing-backed chair was exposed to the world, with a brazier set up next to it keeping the bugs at bay while Tazrae read by its light. Taz found the sounds of the world around her soothing; the crackle of the fire in its pit and the sea gently lapping the sand. She loved the breeze blowing through, toying with her spiraled locks and sometimes even lifting tiny goose bumps on her bronze skin. It was blistering hot, but the breeze negated the long still-summer night.
Syka was endless summer, even in its coldest nights. And the beginning of fall was no different. Night animals – insects, frogs, darkness-loving birds – all created a melody that couldn’t be replicated anywhere. Everything was dark and if she mustered the energy to rise and walk a few steps from her home, she’d see a million stars above her past the firelight. But she wasn’t interested in stargazing tonight nor rising from where she lounged. Tonight, she wanted to relax, get some good sleep and put a few things out of her mind.
But first, she wanted to finish her book. It was something she’d borrowed from Reclaimed Knowledge… though borrowed might not have been an operative word. The Silas Journals section was a playground for her and she currently had one on psychology on her lap and another one on herpetology ready to be read. So far, she hadn’t had much luck into getting the psychology one to open its contents for her to read, but she had high hopes that one of these evenings she’d talk the damn thing into it.
Stifling a yawn, Taz tried once more, running her hands over the spine and whispering how much she wanted to know more about the human mind and how people thought. The book wasn’t convinced though and its bound and locked cover had remained so, not unfastening as her magecrafting tome had.
She sighed and leaned back in her chair, her legs outstretched on her footstool. Taz smiled thoughtfully, yawned again, and felt her body relax. The setup was amazingly comfortable, as comfortable if not more so than her giant bed. She’d slept in the chair more than once, a warm blanket draped over one wing ready to be pulled down into position. She reached up, only half aware she was doing so, and made a grab for the blanket. She really didn’t need it.
It was more for the weight of its comfort than for its warmth. Yawning again, she shifted her spot in the chair, snuggling down, and let her eyes drift closed. She didn’t bother to make another try for the blanket, nor did she seem to notice when the psychology tome slipped from her lap to thud on the floor with its oversized weight. She was fast asleep, more exhausted than she realized, as her body demanded the rest whereas her mind usually demanded nocturnal wanderings.