88th of Winter There were more warm days now. The sun was shining, gulls were screaming, and the sounds of horses and people shouting at each other covered everything in an aura of routine. Winter had almost lost its grip. Eorar was finding it easier. After the Winter Ball, he was finding it easier to walk among humans as a human, realizing that even though true form differed, he and they were not as radically different as he’d thought. Well, most of them. He was also finding it a bit easier to slide into his morph model now, as well as keep it functional for longer. It wasn’t major, but it was comforting. He kept to the sidewalk, avoiding the majority of the crowd, and once again checked the little slip of paper he carried with him. Upon it was what he assumed was supposed to be directions, but Common letters were completely different from Char and he had difficulty reading them, and the words themselves were even less clear. Once again he sighed, unable to make heads or tails of it, and tucked it back into his pocket. He had been told that his destination was right between the city and the University, and he did know where the University was, so that was where his feet were taking him. As he neared he noticed that the crowd was thinning, and through them he saw it: Marcel’s Magical Supplies. It stood on the cusp of the University’s campus, and the other buildings kept a polite distance away. He shuffled his feet, knocked on the door before remembering that it was a shop and that he didn’t have to, and walked in. In comparison to Anais’s shop, this was a large room. Shelves lined the walls, housing everything from the normal to what defied description. He simply stood there, gawking, until a cleared through caught his attention. “Oh. Sorry,” he said to the woman walking towards him. “No trouble at all,” she said, taking his hand and shaking it firmly. “How may I help you today?” “Do you having cold candles?” She nodded, unreactive to his strange rushed accent and grammar, and led him to one of the more out-of-the-way shelves that was covered completely with candles. She reached to some of the ones in the middle, then looked at him. “How many were you thinking? They’re a gold miza each.” He considered. “Oh… ten?” She retrieved them and headed to a counter at the back that he hadn’t noticed. He handed over the money with a minimal amount of fumbling, she showed him how to light them, and then he bid a polite goodbye and hurried out the door. He got to the warehouse district quickly. He knelt at the edge of a pier, made sure no one else was in sight, and dove into the water. He released his hold on his form, and the sea washed it away gently as he sank. He slipped out of his tunic at webbing sprung from his shoulder to connect his elbow and ribs, his pink skin receding to vibrant blue, and his eyes widening and changing color. He jumped as something prodded him from behind, and sighed in relief when he turned to see Tenten. The seahorse looked at his grin strangely for a moment, but his master had always been a bit odd and so the creature set about to nuzzling him, looking for the attention he felt he deserved. Only then, after a solid two minutes of petting and scratching, did he allow himself to be mounted. * * * As always, Tenten stayed near the cave’s entrance without going inside. He had never been quite at ease there. Eorar clicked as he swam, more out of ritual than actual need, keeping the cold candles close to his chest. His pace was slower than usual, but it still seemed as if the pocket of air came too quickly. He slid smoothly onto the stone ledge and to his feet, walking to the center of the pitch-black cave, looking for the stone stalactite-stalagmite pillar in the center, and found it without a problem. He ran his hands over it lovingly, reluctant to reach for the candles. Lighting the cave would dispel the sense of mystery, the magic of not knowing. It was like a riddle; you couldn’t simply look at a riddle and know the answer, you have to love the question itself, and through it the answer would present itself in its own time. Here, he wasn’t sure if the answer was quite as lovely as the question. Bah, he told himself. I’m rambling. I need light if I’m going to live here. He reached for a candle, a sadness weighing on his heart. “Goodbye,” he whispered to the darkness. The candle sparked to life. |