Spring 78th, 513 Sunset-ish. The tall, horned figure stood propped against the white-painted façade of Sakana's Alchemy Lab, positioned unevenly between two crimson pillars. Curls of golden hair cradled his face, and the rest of him was hidden beneath the draping folds of his familiar grey cloak, which was as dear to him as a close friend. Rounded points at his sides hinted at elbows, bent slightly to accommodate tucking his hands into his pockets. For a while, Laszlo just passed his time watching the sky fade from liquid yellow to smoldering orange. He let go of his thoughts, allowing them to overlap and run rampant. Happy, stupid, and disjointed daydreams floated aloft on evening breezes as the Ethaefal watched them from behind half-lidded eyes. As the hour gradually dripped away, he remained deliberately oblivious to the casual migration of lights and bodies weaving through the Sharai streets, bathing in the unintelligible wisps of mingling conversations that blew his way. Laszlo was still while the city breathed around him. The ages, if he lived to surpass them, would be like this. Always moving onward, while the Ethaefal remained frozen and untouched, immune to the tides of Tanroa's eroding waters. If that didn't sound dreary as hell. Eventually, the last of Sakana Dai's students emerged from the mansion, jogging past Laszlo in a colorful blur. The alchemist appeared shortly afterward in the open door, marked by a set of horns that gleamed handsomely in the bloodied sunset. Laszlo gathered his wits and floated out of his stupor, leisurely turning his head to regard the older Ethaefal. As Sakana approached him, Laszlo studied the way he moved and walked, wondering if he could discern the centuries he carried hidden behind his youthful features. "I'm sorry that took so long. You could have waited inside." Even his voice was smooth and ageless, lacking any gravel that might betray his years. "It's warmer," he added, noting the unusual chill in the late Spring air. "I brought a cloak," Laszlo pointed out quaintly, adding a half-hearted shrug. Both of them knew that the weather hadn't been the reason for his warmer dress. He'd been forewarned that it would probably be past sunset by the time Laszlo finished his task for Sakana, and the Symenestra were more known here (and thus more despised) than in Alvadas. "I prefer being outside, anyway." Sakana watched him warily for a moment, as if trying to catch him in a lie. Laszlo twitched an eyebrow and looked away in resignation. It was rare, these days, when Laszlo had the chance to be by himself for any stretch of time. He loved Abalia, dearly, and he knew his time with her was limited. Duvalyon was pleasant in measured doses (the sentiment was probably mutual). But, occasionally, Laszlo craved the quiet. "In any case, these are finally finished." Sakana pulled a large wooden tube from under his arm and handed it to Laszlo. It was long and bluntly cylindrical, meant for carrying rolled sheets of paper. Laszlo tucked it against his body, somewhere in the confines of is cloak. "They're meant for the Library. There's a Seeker expecting them. You know your way around the city, I assume?" "More or less. I was given a short tour by an Acolyte yesterday." Laszlo rubbed absently at his abdomen. Sakana nodded curtly, though private thoughts could be gleaned from subtle creases in his features. Laszlo wondered if the other Synaborn had heard anything. "Good. Come by tomorrow, if you can. One of the Twilight wants something done, and I've been putting it off. I should have it finished by late afternoon." The two Ethaefal parted cordially, with a certain bleakness that made Laszlo grimace. Sakana was a brother, another son of Syna. They had both known and lost the same thing, and still invested their faith in the same brilliant Goddess. It seemed like an insult to their origins that they would interact so formally, conducting simple business for mortals. Two Ethaefal coming together should have had a greater meaning than that. Laszlo sighed. That's what the Temple was for, he supposed. The brilliant light of his shift occurred as Laszlo was still traversing bridge from the Sharai to the to Zintia. Beneath him, and all around him, the gorge was enormous and hungry. He was a speck suspended above the Unforgiving by a thin strip of gently shimmering skyglass. When Syna settled down for the evening, Laszlo resembled a coin glinting in the rising evening mist. He flipped up his hood. |