Returning to Lhavit had been a great idea. After three seasons of having had to live by the rules of others, the bat could finally do whatever the heck he wanted. In Wind Reach there had been few rules, true, but they were extremely annoying. “If you don’t work, you don’t eat”, that had been the most prominent one, the one law he hadn’t been able to bypass. He’d thought about stealing food of course, but time and time again he had reminded himself he was trying to lay low and avoid too much attention; something which had been met with not too much success. Well, at least it hadn’t been due to larceny.
But now, in the Star of Kalea, Brandon was his own boss. He lived by his own rules, by his own rhythm. He did things when he felt like doing them, and if he didn’t, he didn’t. Period. Easy life. Money could be easily acquired here –everywhere, really, but in Wind Reach money just hadn’t had the same value like it did everywhere else- and with coin one could buy anything. Food included. Needless to say the bat had enjoyed his first days in the crystal city far more than those he’d spent in the volcanic one.
Not that he’d done all that much. He’d taken care of the formalities; having exchanged his money to the right currency, and he’d also inquired about any big news from past seasons. What had bothered him most was the landslide, but soon after having heard about it, the Kelvic had been glad to conclude his house wasn’t even close to the location of the disaster. And thus he had pushed it to the back of his mind while he had browsed through his stuff, and cleaned his residence of the excess dust and cobwebs, as well as the small corpses of spiders, rats and other vermin. Not quite a pleasant task, but a necessary one.
It had taken way too long though, and Brandon had had to splice it into separate parts, sleeping in between. But now that was over, The Kelvic had a relatively clean place to live, and he decided he needed some fresh air. That and now that the somewhat important objectives had been cleared, his curiosity demanded he’d take a look at the disaster that had struck the Zintia peak last season. And so he got dressed, smothered the flames crackling in the fireplace, and headed out.
By just strolling about he wouldn’t find the landslide all that quickly, Brandon realized, but he also had no idea where exactly the damage was localized. The solution for that problem was obvious though; ask for directions. A great idea. Soon enough he was on his way, now actually knowing where to walk straight, what places to go left or right, as well as the general direction of the scene of destruction. It wasn’t all that difficult to find; for one, Brandon knew Lhavit like inside of his pockets, and secondly, the skyglass renovations and patched up buildings acted like a trail of breadcrumbs, leading him right to his destination.
However. The Shinya were everywhere, standing guard on various strategic locations, on crossroads that led to the damaged part of the peak. Understandable of course, the safety of the citizens was their responsibility, and no one wanted to have children, oblivious and innocent- play in the treacherous, dangerous, but oh so awesome playground that was the landslide. Nor did they want retarded citizens to go there of course. Brandon wasn’t really planning to try and get a look from afar though, heck no, it was up close or nothing. And naturally, nothing was not an option.
From his current position, Brandon could easily see that the destruction was not something to underestimate; countless buildings had crumbled, skyglass shattered. The proud Lhavitian architecture had fallen by Semele’s hand. It was not quite satisfying though, as the bat had heard rumors of a hole in the floor, a hole that allowed one to see the unforgiving below. Kind of like the bridges connecting the peaks did, but not quite. And Okomo refused to come close to the gaping mouth, fanning the flames of the Kelvic’s curiosity even more. Yet, there was something that made the thief stop in his tracks, freezing in place, earning him a quizzical look from the Shinya he’d been approaching. Inquiries on the progress of rebuilding this part of the city would have to wait, something else had his attention now.
Saying it wasn’t familiar would be a lie, but in truth, stating that it was not alien was not correct either. This smell, this feeling, he’d definitely come across it before… Brandon knew it was his mark responding to something. Something that was dead, should be dead, or refused to be dead. But which was it? There was no rot, no decay in what he could smell, so it was certainly not a walking corpse. It smelled like … like mist. Like a misty day, but not fresh. Stale. Stale mist. He could taste it too, the faint sensation of some creature darting around the edge of his mark’s sphere of detection. It was not a corpse, but it was dead. Brandon could tell from the addled scent; it was as if someone had bottled some fog and tried to conserve it for a couple years. No mist ever smelled that way. Not to mention that it’s smell grew slightly stronger when he walked in the right direction. If he could track it like that, so the thief had learned last season, it meant it was his mark’s work.
Tracking it he did, using a method similar to trial and error to weave through the streets in search of the anomaly. Slowly but surely, the taste and scent grew stronger and stronger, though they did not drown out the other smells –the mundane ones- from all around the area. As he walked, his progress slowing down for some reason –had the anomaly started moving away from him?- it surprised the bat to find that he was circling the area of the landslide. He frowned, and broke into a run, not quite a dash, but not a slow jog either. His body assumed a comfortable rhythm, one that was a lot faster than walking, but also would allow to be used for extended periods of time without tiring the Kelvic too much.
After a brief while, Bran knew he was getting really close. And indeed, in front of him he saw two people; one was walking, and the other floated. A ghost, a spirit. The bat slowed down to a stop immediately, ducking into an alley, and sliding his hands in the half-gauntlets. The cold iron would make quick work of the apparition, he thought, but he did not take action right away. Acting without some sort of plan was beyond stupid, especially with dangerous creatures, such as ghosts. For the moment, the spirit did not appear to be agitated, and to be honest, the thief was not quite willing to change that. Attacking a non-aggressive ghost was about just as dumb as kicking a sleeping pack of wolves. No, he’d approach casually, try to interact with it in a positive, non-threatening way, and try to get it to move on. Yes, like he’d done with Amora.
Brandon did exactly that, strolling out of the alley, his pace brisk enough that he’d close in slowly, but not too fast. Casually. “Hey,” he called out when he was rather close, his footsteps starting to follow the rhythm of the man who seemed to be accompanying the sprite. “Mind if I ask you something?”