Some hours past midnight 61st Summer, 513 AV I had every intention of simply returning to my room that night. Zeltiva was not an altogether unsavory place to be at night, at least not when compared to some other cities, but any locale populated by drunken sailors was bound to be unpredictable. As a man who has made a lot of poor decisions, I’ve grown mostly out of the habit of taking chances. Where was I? Right, the girl. Ordinarily, I would have decided she was not my problem and continued to the Grotto. What could a Nuit offer a young woman that wouldn’t terrify or repulse her? But upon the second glance, I noticed she was different from most. The moon was bright and almost perfectly round, valiantly beating back the shroud of the sparkling indigo sky. Even the clouds were visible, their misshapen gray mass hanging quietly in the cool, coastal air. Torias’ Eypharian eyes were not as sharp as others he had once used, so the copious light of the evening was appreciated and enjoyed. The warm, golden glow of burning street lanterns was hardly even necessary. Gradually, the slow rolling of the ocean behind Torias seemed to fade away, replaced by the chirping of insects and the distant laughing and lute music from a nearby pub. The Nuit’s tall, cloaked figure passed neatly through Zeltiva’s nocturnal hum at a steady pace, evidently sure of his destination and easily prone to distractions. What little could be seen of his aged and sullen expression looked either pensive or bored. One might expect a Nuit to look out of place in a city of natural, living people, and usually he did. It was why Torias had chosen to carry out the task of gathering ocean water at night. He did not spend his evenings sleeping, so he chose to perform whatever errands he could under the kind cover of Akajia’s kind veil. He was otherwise content to perform his studies indoors, away from accursed sunlight. Still, Torias managed to look slightly conspicuous. Zeltiva was a human city, and Torias looked like an Eypharian. His silhouette had an extra pair of arms, and two of them carried shining vials of water. Recalling his experiences in Ahnatep, Torias could not help but think that if he saw a lone Eypharian wandering the street at night, he might assume the vials contained something illicit. Fortunately, most of these people had not had the chance to visit Ahnatep or develop this brand of suspicion. Hopefully not, at least. |