by Philomena on March 9th, 2013, 4:08 pm
There is a certain light that comes in mid-winter afternoons, cold and bright and illuminating, while somehow managing to distill any of the kindly warmth of the sun into cold, still air. It was still, the particular day in question, an oddity for Zeltivan winters, which partook far more of the wildness of sea-winter, than the serenity of snow-winter. The storms had, temporarily gone to Laviku to sulk, and left only the mountains of their drifts behind as a sigil of their coming return.
The forum, being one of the largest areas of open ground of the University, was a conclave of these drifts, a great mother-drift rising in the center of the collonade, with a a ring of her daughters frozen in dancer's arcs around her. The groundsmen had come to wend winding salt-paths through the snow, and the students had followed, now, draggin the natural footpaths of hob-nailed shortcuts, cloaks once thrown down to protect and impress the owner of a dainty foot. The drifts survived, but lived now in a sea of raucously silent pitter-pats of the last night's creation - too late to have the tail end of carousals wending drunkenly along them, too early to have the repentant steps of the larger crowds of hungover students on their way to class. The walks were prolific, then, and sparsely attended.
Sparsely attend, but not unattended. The professorate took constitutionals, or stood enjoying the rare feel of still air, snipping irritably over the clumsy fellow with the dog, sipping mildly at kelp-tea, gossiping, always gossiping. It was a ring of pairs and trios, then, some meandering, some standing.
This made Minnie Lefting stand out - at least to an external observer. One who knows the University well would be surprised, honestly, to see the ugly dwarf-creature NOT alone on her morning walk. She was notoriously unpopular with the other members of faculty - a 'low woman', a 'shipper', with her uncouth slips into her childhood accent, and her hideous clothes and poor hygiene.
And then, with the plague, there was all the more reason to avoid her - when she passed, groups subtly shifted away from her, looking at her with a mix of pity and horror. The hand, bandaged tightly over an infected wound that not even the head of the infirmary had been entirely able to cut out, was clutched tightly to her breast inside the shifting folds of a battered Mackintosh. Her walk, even, had the air of sickness to it - slow, tottering, delicate in the way her joints shifted uneasily against each other.
She saw the dog, and just perceptibly took a sharp intake of breath.
//Dog... oh, god, not a dog... not this morning.//
Minnie had never liked dogs - no, that was not terribly true. She did not know, perhaps she had once, long ago. But then, she was too young then to remember. Since she was old enough to totter through the streets of Zeltiva herself, dogs had been not companions, but angry guardians, chasing her if she tried to snitch an apple, sometimes set on her and the other Kennel girls simply as a diverting amusement. She was grown now, and respectable - or at least acceptable, marginally - in society, and no longer had reason to fear, generally, the approach of a dog. But she had never quite gotten over that early impression. She had read the reams of poetry men had written throguh the years, about the loyalty of a dog, the love of a dog, the kind servitude of a dog. She'd never been quite able to believe it. Dogs, in her mind, were like soldiers - loyal to whoever threw them bread and circuses, fierce and wild to whoever you threw them up against.
She cringed slightly as the dog went running... straight towards her in her perception. There was no scorn in the look - it was not that she thought dogs worthy of scorn. Just terrifying. The dog barrelled along, as a call came into her ears, quite close to her, and as it continued on its beeline, Minnie actually audibly whimpered, and stumbled backward, hands before her face.
"No, no, no!"
But the dog ran past her at just the last moment to... just behind her, an attractive, but peculiarly horned gentleman behind her.
She looked up at him. He was not short, and she was not tall - it was a long, long look up. And she blushed, "Sorry... sir. Your dog, it startled me."
//Minnie Lefting, really? He doesnt' need you to apologize. That means he has to respond, now. He needs to just scurry off out of the way, you snipe.//