32nd Fall, AV 511 – Night
Zandelia strode the streets of Sunberth, her presence most likely well noted despite her all but invisible form, Shadowsilk Robes being the closest she could yet afford to living in the shadows. However, she was not troubled by the majority of vagabonds, ragamuffins and psychotics that idly meandered their way through the alleys and buildings of her beloved city. She was entering a sanctum of villainy that few of the gangs even entered unless deemed absolutely necessary – Stumble Alley. Oh, she was sure they collected ‘taxes’ and that their eyes and ears were squirreled very firmly into the very woodwork of the buildings here, but she knew all too well that they had long ago given up trying to control Stumble Alley. After all it was fundamentally impossible to control something that couldn’t even be made to be still. Its borders shifted and the area it was deemed part of grew and shrunk in size regularly. Not to mention the fact that the people had a tendency to fight back to the last drop of blood, a reputation for indombitable will in itself.
And here I am, unharmed and facing no trouble at all. If I weren’t aware that this area of Stumble Alley was of no interest at all I would feel rather special she thought to herself as she turned another sharp corner and paced her way to the end of yet another small side street, gazing about out of her hood to gain her bearing once more.
It was strange that for a building so close to her place of employment, The Establishment, she still had considerable difficulty finding the damned thing. It was almost as if, she thought, the city of Sunberth itself was so ashamed of its existence that it tried to hide it behind other buildings. Many stated that it was relatively easy to get to but she was beginning to think that the way they had told her those words with straight faces made them deserving of a bloody medal, followed very swiftly with a punch to the jaw. Her path had taken her in a veritable spiral she reckoned, always getting closer to its centre but not quite getting there. It was only as she turned another left, hope beginning to fade now as to her quest, that she finally breached a clearing of alleys and stepped out into the open – the building directly in front of her.
“Sunberth’s only library,” she uttered out loud to no one in particular, her surroundings deserted, “and it has seen far better days too” she finished as her single green orb took in its shabby and ramshackle appearance, sandwiched as it was between slightly grander buildings.
She padded onwards, her destination now its threshold, and passed through it with only a little tugging and shoving of the rusty hinged doors. It was when she slammed them shut and felt the sound almost reverberate throughout the absolute silence within that she felt the first twinge of embarrassment experienced in years. Looking around to see if anyone was around to see her enter she saw nothing and merely shrugged before pulling back her hood and gazing around the interior. It was dusty, almost criminally so, and the very air seemed to be made of dried parchment. It brought a tickling to the back of her throat and gave the sensation she was about to sneeze at any moment – unknowing that this was a universal character of all libraries in the universe itself. She shambled forwards through the maze of books, piled here and there in some cases but for the most part upon shelves that seemed to groan with their weight, hinting at giving way at any minute. Her fingers trailed their spines as her eye strove to understand the words written upon them. It was hard, devilishly so. She had had no reading training in any formal sense – her meagre knowledge self-taught and taken from fragments of memories of better times.
“What secrets do you hide? What knowledge lies within your cracked pages” she whispered to her new companions, trying to figure a way to find her desires and assimilate them properly.
It was only as she case out of the brief reverie she had been pushed into that she became aware of another figure close to her, perhaps only a handful of feet behind her. The back of her neck prickled and her ears caught the shuffle of leather upon floorboard. Whirling she held a book in hand, ready to throw it and flee if necessary – her instincts all too powerful after years of drudgery in the ‘Berth. It was man, she noticed, though there was something about him that tried to niggle at her brain, ignored as it operated of its own volition.
“Don’t you petching dare” the words came out, well before she could stop them as she began to notice the startled expression upon his face and the characteristics that marked him as decidedly strange indeed.