Timestamp: 25th of Autumn, 512 A.V. There was a storm advancing angrily towards celestial Lhavit when Alses awoke with the dawn – not that the sunlight was particularly noticeable through the louring thunderheads; all she had was her vague sense of the sun overhead, completely blotted out by the clouds. Bruised purple, night-black, battleship gray...all the foreboding colours of the spectrum were arrayed across the vast bowl of the Lhavitian sky in a vast wavefront, a boiling charivari of cloud that looked decidedly menacing as it came closer and closer. Winds howled and whipped about Lhavit's high peaks, the vanguard advance of the main tempest itself, sending volleys of rain like bullets against the serene skyglass, confounded and confused by the spiralling, winding streets but roaring, full-force, along the grand procession of squares and plazas that led up to the Koten Temple. Banners and flags flapped wildly, snapping and racing with abandon from their chains and moorings – some tore free and hurtled across the rain-slick flagstones, batted hither and yon by the furious winds. The fadeong trees in their thousands along Lhavit's idyllic boulevards and avenues shivered and trembled in the autumnal gales; the approaching storm's vanguard of fighting air tore free millions upon millions of their brilliantly-coloured leaves, outlining the flows and currents of the winds in a river of skirling, dancing light. Kariino branches lashed the sky, the energy of the storm lifting their drooping branches in raucous and wild abandon, the elements playing and gambolling through the near-deserted streets. Until the storm burned itself out, and Syna's steady, beating influence dispersed the clouds once more, Lhavit's streets were the playground of Kalea's violent skies. Lhavit, it seemed, had only two types of weather – either it was a splendidly sunny, bright day, or it was a foully vicious tempest, seeking redress for the pleasantry the city generally experienced. The cloud deck rarely mounded up high enough to disrupt the sunny climes of Lhavit, but when it did...well, that was a day – or night, of course - when the city was in for a show indeed. Clouds fought and raged against one another, fuelled by the battling fronts of warm and cold air funnelled by Kalea's towering, dramatic mountains – Unforgiving in every aspect. As the buttressed thunderheads rose, they were trapped, corralled and herded and channelled by those same peaks, building up rage and – crucially – voltage, their rocky prisons forcing them to rise higher and higher for freedom, and as they did so, they encountered the normally-serene city of the stars. When the rising fury of a storm met the serene skyglass city, the results were always spectacular, to say the least. The poetically-inclined – or perhaps merely those attuned to the divine – likened the climax of the storms to the wild dance of Zulrav, the exultation in the raw power of wind and rain, the electric thrill of the lightning and the endless conflicts of the air, rising, falling, only to rise anew, wreathed in a cloak of thunderbolts. There were stories – there were always stories – of the Slap of the World manifesting to those brave enough to stand and glory in the middle of the fury and majesty of his storms, spiriting the lucky few away. Personally, Alses thought that the fools who stood on the rooftops during the more vicious storms deserved everything they got – which was probably a long, long fall and then a messy death, courtesy of the winds sweeping them clean off the mountain city rather than any godly manifestation of the Lord of Storms. The Shinya, whose unenviable job it generally was to organize the tidy-up after a storm had battered the city of stars, were tight-lipped on the subject, of course, as they were with almost anything save for directions and the laws of Lhavit. 'Well,' Alses added, in the spirit of fairness 'All the on-duty ones, at any rate.' Her circles – such as they were – and those of the Shinya guard didn't really overlap. Off-duty, they could be the most easygoing and fun-loving people on all of Mizahar, but how would she know? 'Stop faffing,' she admonished herself absently, throwing her cape over her shoulders. It wouldn't provide much protection from the driving wind and the vicious slash of the rain, true, but it was better than nothing. “Wild morning,” murmured one of the Respite staff, by way of greeting as Alses crossed the entrance hall. “The Dusk Tower have you running messages in this weather? Take my advice and stay home - we don't need anyone being lost over the side of the bridges or something.” Alses shrugged, philosophical. She wasn't about to risk her apprenticeship, trusting to her surety of foot and celestial grace - as well as strength - to see her through the short journey safely. “We've not been told to the contrary, so come rain or shine I must report to the Tower secretary for work. At least, if we want to keep living.” A slightly sardonic grin. “We might not eat, or drink anywhere near as much as anyone else, but living is still expensive.” Shaking her head at the vagaries of kina, and how they always seemed to slip through her fingers, Alses moved towards the doors. An absent smile from behind a tottering pile of papers. “Well, take care. And for the love of Zintila, don't open the doors too wide – I don't have enough paperweights for all of this lot and I don't want them blowing all over the place.” Too late – a mischievous wind had hold of the doors and slipped in through the opening as Alses fought with the doorhandles, a playful gust of air that sent papers flying even as the Ethaefal decided that discretion was the best part of valour, vanishing into the storm-lashed city. It was still just the outriders, the forerunners of the main tempest, which was fortunate – when the storm really got into full voice, out on the open skyglass bridges, it could be difficult even to maintain one's footing, let alone actually make forward progress, in the face of the scything winds and driving rain. Alses kept low and ran, feet slapping against the slick skyglass and splashing in the puddles that were a result of the sheer amount of water bucketing down, defeating the gargoyles' efforts at draining it away. Each and every one of the skyglass figures along the span of the bridge was in full, gushing flow, torrents of water pouring down and away into space, but still it wasn't enough. As she ran, muscles singing and blood hammering a thunderous rhythm in her head, Alses blessed the grace of her celestial form and the surety of foot it gave her as flesh met skyglass, swift and sure, speeding her on her way towards the glowing spire of light that was the Dusk Tower. The skyglass beneath her feet, just a little ahead and behind her, glowed brightly, illuminating her way in the uncertain, wavering light of the mounting storm. Alses kept her head down and sprinted for the Tower doors, flashing between the soggy Shinya guards in an instant, relying on the rain-slick shine of her skin and the glitter of her crown-of-horns to stop the hiss of sword-blades from their sheath. It worked – thankfully – and Alses was free to cross the last few yards to the Tower doors unopposed.
A The inside of the Tower was beautifully warm and snug; fires blazed brightly in the grates, throwing out vast amounts of heat to complement the natural warmth of the skyglass, beating back the autumnal chill. Alses' sodden clothes immediately began to steam as the heat struck a blow against the perfidious water – she hurried to put herself as close as possible to the nearest fireplace, almost standing in the dancing flames and making them hiss and crackle as drops fell from the tips of her horns. Alses was the recipient of more than one pitying – and, admittedly, wondering – look from the various Tower servants and guards; who, on such a foul day, would risk the thunderstorm just to come to work? Steam rose in shimmering curls and curlicues of vapour as she dried out, the base of her horns feeling deliciously taut as her skin tightened in the heat, her hair lightening from a sodden black to the deep crimson of her autumnal form. A lazy smile tugged at the corners of her plump mouth – how many mornings in rainy and damp Zeltiva had she spent huddled close to the fire, enjoying the warmth and the sensations it sent racing through her body? She wasn't a pyromaniac, not by any stretch of the word, but warmth was something she cherished. A low, rumbling boom signalled the first assault of the thunderstorm just as she was mounting the shallow spiral staircase – out of one of the windows she saw the opening barrage of lightning bolts go dancing and skittering through the clouds, followed a split second later by the blunt thunder of their passage, splitting the air with the sheer heat and force of their strike. To her complete and total surprise, the Tower secretary wasn't at his desk, no, the mahogany-and-brass trays full of paper were unattended, the shelves of books and scrolls left alone, the chair tilted back from the marble desk. The dapper man was instead leaning casually on the windowsill, eyes distant as he looked out at the storm. “Isn't it beautiful?” he murmured, voice even softer than usual. “The weather, I mean. The boil of cloud and wind and rain, sculpted by the mountains of Kalea.” Only then did he turn, and seem to come a little closer to earth. His pale gray eyes were as direct as ever, though, focusing clearly and directly on her. “Did you struggle up here through that?” he asked, eyebrow raised. Alses nodded, confused; when she'd been given the job of couriering Dusk Tower messages about the city, she'd been told to report to the Tower secretary every day, by no later than the tenth bell of the morning. No-one had bothered to tell her about using common sense, about when it was appropriate to turn up and when any right-thinking person would just curl up at home in front of a blazing fire and wait for the storms to pass. “Um...yes?” she ventured. “It's my job?” “We're not monsters, Alses! Zintila above, you could be swept off the bridges in an instant if I sent you out in this weather! If the storms are this bad, it's understood that you can't very well make it to the Tower – you can stay at home, you know.” Alses flushed, dull red. “We didn't know,” she murmured. “We don't want to risk our apprenticeship, in any case.” A sigh. “Well, in future bear it in mind – the odd missed day here and there due to the weather or illness isn't a problem.” His eyes flicked over to the window again, longingly. “Best you enjoy the weather whilst it's here – we don't often get storms. This one's shaping up to be a beauty, wouldn't you say? It's just at the Amaranthine Gates now, look!” there was a boyish excitement to his voice that was unmistakeable – Alses smiled, unreserved, at such delight, and followed the secretary's pointing finger. “What are we looking for?” she asked, eyes straining to penetrate the murk. There was a sudden, bright flash. “There, did you see?” the secretary was as excited as a child. “That's lightning streaking up from the Gates, likely as not.” “Lightning...going up?” she echoed, incredulous. Lightning came down, even she knew that. Everyone knew that. Everyone except the secretary, that was. “Yes. There's a little thin, thready bolt that goes up before the big one comes down.” he gave her an apologetic, slightly embarrassed smile. “I've watched storms all my life, see.” |