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Timestamp: 39th Day of Summer, 515 A.V.
Location: The Kinell Hotsprings
Summer in Lhavit, that most agreeable of seasons. A time of abundant sunlight, bell upon bell of solar glory pouring down from on high – was it any wonder Alses delighted so in the summertime? Any Synaborn worth the name craved Summer and the long bells of celestial fulfilment it brought – how could they not?
Yes, there were few downsides to the season, as far as Alses was concerned – the heat that made nearly everyone else lethargic and slow served instead to fuel her meteoric rise; merely watching her work like a demon was enough to make most people tired at the sight.
That, of course, was as a beautiful celestial Ethaefal, chosen and favoured. When the sun went down and she was stuck in her Konti chain, though, Alses suffered just as much as the other citizens of the Diamond as it roasted in the muggy heat of the height of summer. Today had been particularly bad; barely a breath of air had stirred through the streets of the city all day; the doughty citizens of the city had wilted beneath Syna's burning gaze and prayed silently for relief from the heat and humidity.
Their prayers, it seemed, had been answered; out in the Unforgiving, beyond the city and the tamed summits of the Misty Peaks, the clouds billowed and proliferated from nothing as hot and wet met cold and dry, battling and duelling amid the knife-edged peaks, erupting into prodigious thunderheads that were already sending outriders to tease and tantalise glittering Lhavit.
Those rolling clouds quickly took away the starry vault of the heavens and swallowed up the silvery glow of the moon, wrapping Lhavit in a cocoon of cloud above and mist below, all of it lit by the shimmer of the city; skyglass and calias luminescence alike. They were the harbingers, growing in depth and menace as each tick passed, heavily pregnant with rain and waiting for a critical mass before opening.
'Apres moi,' the last gasp of heat seemed to murmur, 'the deluge.'
Alses rocked on the edge of the hotsprings, unselfconsciously naked. Volcanic heat struck up through the slick rocks beneath her feet; she curled her toes in pleasure at the warmth, a contrast to the chill coming down in tumbling drops from the louring sky. A shiver raced up her spine and down again at the delicious conflict of hot and cold; she felt her breath catch.
Kinell was gorgeous, and in its current state – deserted – perfect. The rain whispered its subtle serenade from all around, playing its toccata on the myriad leaves, the verdant foliage that owed its year-round existence to the geological fury of the region, the heat that forever radiated from the springs. In the glow from the calias-infused plantlife, the world was thrown into high contrast; the light had that curious quality of drinking much of the colour from around it, leaving only its own blue blaze in solitary glory. Green became a shadow, a mere hint in the black depths of the leaves, flowers turned mere ghosts of themselves.
The perfumes, though, like that from the bougainvillea tumbling with reckless abandon down the striated bluffs, or the wild roses that scrambled and clambered through the trees, wasn't dimmed in the least, and it lay thickly around the pools, great banks of it filling the air with all the scents of summer.
A million million raindrops danced on the emerald surface of the pools, and, almost too fast to see, the jewel-bright flit of a kingfisher, darting from one sheltering overhang to the next, flashed over them, leaving a snatch of its haunting song hanging in the moisture-laden air.
The continual thunder of superheated water jetting high into the air and crashing down on unyielding granite enveloped Alses as she carefully rounded the poolside, the sound whispering promises of supporting, cradling warmth, its comforting roar already working against the head-splitting drone of unceasing thought. Her clothes had already been left behind, in niches carved with cunning and care into the cliff-face, kept dry and warm by the heat of the rocks and sheltered from the worst of the spray, and now she was headed for the pool itself.
Anticipation – and another delicious thrill – quickened her step. Swift and sure, now, she padded along the pathway, a ribbon of rough-hewn and algae-slick black that hugged the steaming pools, her goal and prize now in view.
Alses had lived in Lhavit long enough – and frequented the springs enough – to have a favourite place there. For her, it was a perfect little plateau of granite jutting up from the water's surface, right in the path of the waterfall, the hottest part of the springs. A few swift strokes took her there, still gasping from the million million lances of warmth that prickled across her rain-chilled skin, the tumbling cascade drawing a pleasured groan from her lips as she settled in place, gills opening and luxuriating in the water-rich environment.
The heat and the pressure, constantly renewed, forever shifting, never exactly the same from one tick to the next, acted like the finest of masseuses, a battering massage that pounded the tight-wound knots of tension that she wasn't even consciously aware of into submission, kneading away the poisons of fatigue and anxiety.
Alses closed her eyes and allowed herself to drift, shutting out the world and letting herself simply feel.
e
Timestamp: 39th Day of Summer, 515 A.V.
Location: The Kinell Hotsprings
Summer in Lhavit, that most agreeable of seasons. A time of abundant sunlight, bell upon bell of solar glory pouring down from on high – was it any wonder Alses delighted so in the summertime? Any Synaborn worth the name craved Summer and the long bells of celestial fulfilment it brought – how could they not?
Yes, there were few downsides to the season, as far as Alses was concerned – the heat that made nearly everyone else lethargic and slow served instead to fuel her meteoric rise; merely watching her work like a demon was enough to make most people tired at the sight.
That, of course, was as a beautiful celestial Ethaefal, chosen and favoured. When the sun went down and she was stuck in her Konti chain, though, Alses suffered just as much as the other citizens of the Diamond as it roasted in the muggy heat of the height of summer. Today had been particularly bad; barely a breath of air had stirred through the streets of the city all day; the doughty citizens of the city had wilted beneath Syna's burning gaze and prayed silently for relief from the heat and humidity.
Their prayers, it seemed, had been answered; out in the Unforgiving, beyond the city and the tamed summits of the Misty Peaks, the clouds billowed and proliferated from nothing as hot and wet met cold and dry, battling and duelling amid the knife-edged peaks, erupting into prodigious thunderheads that were already sending outriders to tease and tantalise glittering Lhavit.
Those rolling clouds quickly took away the starry vault of the heavens and swallowed up the silvery glow of the moon, wrapping Lhavit in a cocoon of cloud above and mist below, all of it lit by the shimmer of the city; skyglass and calias luminescence alike. They were the harbingers, growing in depth and menace as each tick passed, heavily pregnant with rain and waiting for a critical mass before opening.
'Apres moi,' the last gasp of heat seemed to murmur, 'the deluge.'
A
Alses rocked on the edge of the hotsprings, unselfconsciously naked. Volcanic heat struck up through the slick rocks beneath her feet; she curled her toes in pleasure at the warmth, a contrast to the chill coming down in tumbling drops from the louring sky. A shiver raced up her spine and down again at the delicious conflict of hot and cold; she felt her breath catch.
Kinell was gorgeous, and in its current state – deserted – perfect. The rain whispered its subtle serenade from all around, playing its toccata on the myriad leaves, the verdant foliage that owed its year-round existence to the geological fury of the region, the heat that forever radiated from the springs. In the glow from the calias-infused plantlife, the world was thrown into high contrast; the light had that curious quality of drinking much of the colour from around it, leaving only its own blue blaze in solitary glory. Green became a shadow, a mere hint in the black depths of the leaves, flowers turned mere ghosts of themselves.
The perfumes, though, like that from the bougainvillea tumbling with reckless abandon down the striated bluffs, or the wild roses that scrambled and clambered through the trees, wasn't dimmed in the least, and it lay thickly around the pools, great banks of it filling the air with all the scents of summer.
A million million raindrops danced on the emerald surface of the pools, and, almost too fast to see, the jewel-bright flit of a kingfisher, darting from one sheltering overhang to the next, flashed over them, leaving a snatch of its haunting song hanging in the moisture-laden air.
The continual thunder of superheated water jetting high into the air and crashing down on unyielding granite enveloped Alses as she carefully rounded the poolside, the sound whispering promises of supporting, cradling warmth, its comforting roar already working against the head-splitting drone of unceasing thought. Her clothes had already been left behind, in niches carved with cunning and care into the cliff-face, kept dry and warm by the heat of the rocks and sheltered from the worst of the spray, and now she was headed for the pool itself.
Anticipation – and another delicious thrill – quickened her step. Swift and sure, now, she padded along the pathway, a ribbon of rough-hewn and algae-slick black that hugged the steaming pools, her goal and prize now in view.
Alses had lived in Lhavit long enough – and frequented the springs enough – to have a favourite place there. For her, it was a perfect little plateau of granite jutting up from the water's surface, right in the path of the waterfall, the hottest part of the springs. A few swift strokes took her there, still gasping from the million million lances of warmth that prickled across her rain-chilled skin, the tumbling cascade drawing a pleasured groan from her lips as she settled in place, gills opening and luxuriating in the water-rich environment.
The heat and the pressure, constantly renewed, forever shifting, never exactly the same from one tick to the next, acted like the finest of masseuses, a battering massage that pounded the tight-wound knots of tension that she wasn't even consciously aware of into submission, kneading away the poisons of fatigue and anxiety.
Alses closed her eyes and allowed herself to drift, shutting out the world and letting herself simply feel.
e