Circles within circles, lines within lines. The streets of the four outer peaks of Lhavit were indeed a maze to any who were not entirely used to them, and those who knew not where they wandered to. It was made all the more complex tonight by the various performances and entertainments that had been set up by the residents in their respective area, and Ignisa had to mentally keep track of where she and Jenni were wandering to when they had to make diversions around various obstacles. Yet, in this night of somewhat rowdy entertainment, Ignisa felt at home as she had never had truly felt elsewhere, even when she had once visited the city of Avanthal in her youth as a stranger. Having all but grown up in Lhavit, her way of life was Lhavitian, her ideals with Lhavitian, and she would never have changed it for the world. Indeed, heritage played an important role in the life of the family of Lanna Winterflame, and the full-blooded Vantha in their family still paid tribute to the Queen of Winter despite their exile. Silence did grow between them. But it was not an uncomfortable silence, no. It was a silence made by those who felt no pressing urge to say anything inane or unnecessary, who decided to appreciate the companionship of the people around them, of the person walking beside them, while enjoying the surroundings at the same time. And Ignisa did enjoy such moments. Much as she like to talk, she also liked to think, to relax, to enjoy the moment. It was something she had learned to do, to seize the most of what could be. And so they walked, occasionally pausing to watch a street ballad or performance, or listen to the echoing voices of the choirs bouncing off the peaks, or even to admire the glowing nature of the flora in Lhavit under the stars. Humming a quiet tune to herself, she joined into accompaniment to one of the songs in the distance as she looked up at the full harvest moon, so close to Mizahar was Leth, that she could even begin to see the unevenness in the celestial object. Then Jenni decided to break the silence with a question, and it was a question that Ignisa had expected the girl to answer eventually. Curiosity had to be expressed sooner or later, and Ignisa had to admire the attempt at diplomacy the girl had displayed with regards to her family background. But the truth was, Ignisa would not be able to satisfy that curiosity, and could not. "My family entered a … you could say that it is a sort of self-imposed exile from the city of Avanthal. I do not know the reasons behind it, truly, but all I recall is that when I was very young, perhaps about five or so, our family was no longer truly welcome in the city. We were not driven out, nor cast out in any manner, but my grandmother deemed it prudent to leave the city." She shrugged, a flicker of ancient pain in her eyes flashing to the surface in a trace of deep blue before disappearing in the liquid brown. "I cannot say that I truly know what it is to be a Vantha of Avanthal though, because I left before I could learn about the culture of my native city. For all intents and purpose, I grew up in Lhavit." She laid a comfortable hand on the girl's arm, a slightly sad smile playing on her features as she turned to the north for a short moment, as though trying to see the icy depths of the city of Avanthal. Then she turned back to the scenes in front of her as they stepped on one of the Skyglass bridges leading from the Tenten Peak to the Zintia Peak. The ground dropped away beneath them as they walked, and occasionally mist would drift below, bringing a grey cloud that obscured the occasional lights that floated below in the lower circles and streets of the city of Lhavit. In this remote space, this overarching majesty of Zintila's power, time stood still as they drifted up towards the centre of the bridge, the Skyglass material glittering in varying and beautiful hues that shimmered and rippled with every step that they took. "What about your family, Jenni? What was it like growing up in the Twilight House?" |