agentlenpc (
agentlenpc) wrote in
agentlelog2019-01-31 01:03 pm
walking in a field of fog
Who: You and Fayura
When: Today, a week after the Strangers' arrivals
Where: The Queen's Residence and the Old Town Bazaar
What: Q&A
Warnings: n/a
When: Today, a week after the Strangers' arrivals
Where: The Queen's Residence and the Old Town Bazaar
What: Q&A
Warnings: n/a
EARLY MORNING, THE QUEEN'S RESIDENCE
The morning is cold and dark. Inhaling the frigid air is so shocking that those who aren't expecting it cough and wheeze with their first breath. No one really wants to make their way to the training field. Even the Queen's court moves sluggishly, but move they do with muttered recriminations against Allairavar. Cold weather doesn't stop training.
A warming spell around the field keeps it warm enough to practice, and bobbling witchlights and steady e-line floodlights keep the darkness at bay. All along one side of the practice area are weapons with blades live and dulled. The court eases onto the field alongside the Strangers with sighs and grumbles aplenty. No one likes practice on chilly mornings, but they like Allairavar's retaliation against tardiness even less.
Everyone has paired off by the time Allairavar strides out of the manor home with his arm around a woman's shoulders. In the harsh e-line lights and softer witchlight, it's clear she hasn't been well and still isn't entirely healed. Sunken golden eyes scan the field, and her expression is vaguely nauseated. She trembles, either from weakness or discomfort, as Allairavar pulls away and calls in two bladed sticks—weapons caught somewhere between sword and ax.
"Let's go," he tells her, and she takes one stick from his hand as court and Strangers alike look on.
Another male follows them in, sleekly predatory in his slow prowl around the practice field. A dangerous look glazes his eyes, and he circles the whole field once before making a second, tighter pass around the marked off area where Allairavar and the woman square off.
Members of the court trade wary looks, sharing them with the Strangers. More than a few murmur things like, "Verim will go for his throat if he pushes her too hard," and, "Should she even be out of bed yet?"
It seems Allairavar's rule for training is absolute. Even the Queen takes part. Under his watchful eye and tutelage, they run through a warm up that clearly exhausts her, but when he asks if they should stop, she snarls at him and pushes on for another five minutes. Only then does she sit off to the side of the field and begin stretching.
As she lifts from a leg stretch, she catches your eye and offers a small, shy smile. "Would you like to stretch with me? Allairavar's workouts are always hardest the first day back," she says softly.
Allairavar's exercises may be hard, but she looks like she's seconds from collapsing from exhaustion. If she spent this last week resting and still looks so wan and thin and weak, her initial injuries must have been severe.
MID-AFTERNOON, THE BAZAAR PAVILION
Snow drifts lazily through frigid air. Though temperatures hover around freezing, the Old Town Bazaar bustles with activity. Slowly, people rebuild homes and shops burned by the Hunter Guild, and for perhaps the first time in the past fifty years, sentiment has turned against the Hunters.
Strangers out and about in the Bazaar hear:
There's some commotion toward the center of the Bazaar, where the Queen has settled at the pavilion with a group of landen and Blood children. Her only guard seems to be the elegant man seated across from her at the pavilion's wooden table, his eyes watchful as the people pass by.
The Queen herself looks unwell. Though she wears a bright smile and her golden eyes glitter with laughter, they are sunken and dark smudges circle them. Her arms are thin, little more than skin wrapped around bone. In spite of the freezing weather, she wears a tunic with wide sleeves that pool around her elbows as she holds up a small plank of wood and tugs at a ribbon embedded in it. Here, in the chilly winter morning, the woman who brought some twenty Strangers across the vast distances of many worlds looks very human, very mortal, and very fragile.
Her eyes meet yours as she looks up, and you feel a gentle brush against your mind. No matter how familiar or strange mental communication is, no matter how disconcerting or easy you find it, the touch strikes you as incredibly polite. *We can talk, if you'd like,* she tells you over a psychic thread.
Should you join her, you find respite from the cold. A warming spell makes the pavilion pleasantly toasty, explaining why no one wears a jacket and, maybe, the Queen's clothes. She's dressed plainly in a loose, knitted tunic and fitted breaches. She wears no coronet and no visible jewelry except for a golden chain that tucks beneath her tunic.
Fayura offers a quick smile in your direction as she guides the end of the ribbon in her hand through the thin strip of wood in a twisting loop. She offers a soft-spoken explanation to the children before inviting them to try—and inviting the Blood to explain the magic to the landens, too.
As the children turn to their task, Fayura turns to you. "I'm glad to see you made it through the Hunters' attack relatively unscathed." She sets her plank down and taps her mug. Steam beings to rise from it and she lifts it to her lips with a sigh. "And I apologize that I wasn't there to greet you." A wry smile tugs at her lips; her appearance is, in her mind, enough of an explanation for why. "How have you found Draega?"
The morning is cold and dark. Inhaling the frigid air is so shocking that those who aren't expecting it cough and wheeze with their first breath. No one really wants to make their way to the training field. Even the Queen's court moves sluggishly, but move they do with muttered recriminations against Allairavar. Cold weather doesn't stop training.
A warming spell around the field keeps it warm enough to practice, and bobbling witchlights and steady e-line floodlights keep the darkness at bay. All along one side of the practice area are weapons with blades live and dulled. The court eases onto the field alongside the Strangers with sighs and grumbles aplenty. No one likes practice on chilly mornings, but they like Allairavar's retaliation against tardiness even less.
Everyone has paired off by the time Allairavar strides out of the manor home with his arm around a woman's shoulders. In the harsh e-line lights and softer witchlight, it's clear she hasn't been well and still isn't entirely healed. Sunken golden eyes scan the field, and her expression is vaguely nauseated. She trembles, either from weakness or discomfort, as Allairavar pulls away and calls in two bladed sticks—weapons caught somewhere between sword and ax.
"Let's go," he tells her, and she takes one stick from his hand as court and Strangers alike look on.
Another male follows them in, sleekly predatory in his slow prowl around the practice field. A dangerous look glazes his eyes, and he circles the whole field once before making a second, tighter pass around the marked off area where Allairavar and the woman square off.
Members of the court trade wary looks, sharing them with the Strangers. More than a few murmur things like, "Verim will go for his throat if he pushes her too hard," and, "Should she even be out of bed yet?"
It seems Allairavar's rule for training is absolute. Even the Queen takes part. Under his watchful eye and tutelage, they run through a warm up that clearly exhausts her, but when he asks if they should stop, she snarls at him and pushes on for another five minutes. Only then does she sit off to the side of the field and begin stretching.
As she lifts from a leg stretch, she catches your eye and offers a small, shy smile. "Would you like to stretch with me? Allairavar's workouts are always hardest the first day back," she says softly.
Allairavar's exercises may be hard, but she looks like she's seconds from collapsing from exhaustion. If she spent this last week resting and still looks so wan and thin and weak, her initial injuries must have been severe.
MID-AFTERNOON, THE BAZAAR PAVILION
Snow drifts lazily through frigid air. Though temperatures hover around freezing, the Old Town Bazaar bustles with activity. Slowly, people rebuild homes and shops burned by the Hunter Guild, and for perhaps the first time in the past fifty years, sentiment has turned against the Hunters.
Strangers out and about in the Bazaar hear:
A landen woman, to her friend: It's not right what the Hunters did, burning down our homes, too.
A well-to-do Blood male, at a food stall: …believe what that pompous Grand Master has to say about a Queen of the Blood.
There's some commotion toward the center of the Bazaar, where the Queen has settled at the pavilion with a group of landen and Blood children. Her only guard seems to be the elegant man seated across from her at the pavilion's wooden table, his eyes watchful as the people pass by.
The Queen herself looks unwell. Though she wears a bright smile and her golden eyes glitter with laughter, they are sunken and dark smudges circle them. Her arms are thin, little more than skin wrapped around bone. In spite of the freezing weather, she wears a tunic with wide sleeves that pool around her elbows as she holds up a small plank of wood and tugs at a ribbon embedded in it. Here, in the chilly winter morning, the woman who brought some twenty Strangers across the vast distances of many worlds looks very human, very mortal, and very fragile.
Her eyes meet yours as she looks up, and you feel a gentle brush against your mind. No matter how familiar or strange mental communication is, no matter how disconcerting or easy you find it, the touch strikes you as incredibly polite. *We can talk, if you'd like,* she tells you over a psychic thread.
Should you join her, you find respite from the cold. A warming spell makes the pavilion pleasantly toasty, explaining why no one wears a jacket and, maybe, the Queen's clothes. She's dressed plainly in a loose, knitted tunic and fitted breaches. She wears no coronet and no visible jewelry except for a golden chain that tucks beneath her tunic.
Fayura offers a quick smile in your direction as she guides the end of the ribbon in her hand through the thin strip of wood in a twisting loop. She offers a soft-spoken explanation to the children before inviting them to try—and inviting the Blood to explain the magic to the landens, too.
As the children turn to their task, Fayura turns to you. "I'm glad to see you made it through the Hunters' attack relatively unscathed." She sets her plank down and taps her mug. Steam beings to rise from it and she lifts it to her lips with a sigh. "And I apologize that I wasn't there to greet you." A wry smile tugs at her lips; her appearance is, in her mind, enough of an explanation for why. "How have you found Draega?"

no subject
Idly, she rubs her thin arm. She knows well how hard Allairavar's training can be and how much he doesn't like uneven pairings.
"Magic?" For a moment, she's confused. Then she makes a quiet sound of understanding. "Ah, Craft. You mean Craft. If you'd like to learn, there are schools, but you'd have to learn with the children." She tapped the table thoughtfully. "There are primers in the library at the residence. They're very broad and foundational. You might start there?"
no subject
An arch of her brow at joining lessons with children but if she had an objection, AIthne kept it to herself. "I shall, though I have to ask is Craft so much different from the magic that I know, and maybe others that you have brought here?"
no subject
Fayura pressed her lips together and glanced away, her brows drawing together. Her body language shifted, becoming closed off and uncertain, and the male across from them sat straighter, his eyes narrowing. She touched the tips of his fingers with hers, settling him.
"Admittedly, my spell was a net cast wide. My requirements were few and broad. I didn't pay much attention to the worlds I pulled you from." This clearly embarrassed her. "But I can try to assist. What kind of spells did you possess in your own world?"
no subject
She understood that latter statement. It fell well within the definition of desperate times, require desperate measures. She mulled her answer in her head. "As a base explanation I command the elements, with an affinity to fire as well as healing." It was broad for certain but perhaps some common terms would allow a better understanding. "There are other aspects that reach far beyond those."
no subject
But leaving that embarrassment behind was easy as Aithne continued, as she explained. The "elements" were a foreign concept, but Fay supposed "fire" was meant to count as one. "Fire like this?" she asked, holding out her palm and creating a tongue of witchfire. It snapped and danced in her palm, harmless to her but casting heat for everyone else. "If your power is similar, then I imagine it's simply a matter of projecting intent through your Jewel." There was a faint brush against Aithne's mind—feminine and just as polite as the initial overture that brought the other woman to the pavilion.
Fay nodded absently. "Purple Dusk is a good Jewel." She worried about the Strangers who wore the darker Birthright Jewels. "It's potent, but not so likely as some to blow your arm off your torso." She laughed softly, and the male across from her looked momentarily alarmed. "No, Prince," she said to him. "I never did." That didn't ease his troubled expression.
no subject
"Yes like that and more. Air, Earth, Water. From my world my own Craft is called Elementalism and there are many more." She had already encountered the limit of her jewel. "Is it through the Jewel or from the Jewel?"
"I am far to ignorant to argue one way or the other Fayura. I do know I am limited to what I can do here, compared to my home." She laughed lightly. The dark humor was appreciated by the Valkyrie. "To be honest I would carry that risk, even if I have to admit the gem does suite my colour."
no subject
She pinched thumb and forefinger together inside the illusion and drew a strand of White light from it.
"—and then applies it to a spell. Without the power of the Jewel behind it, a spell is just a fanciful wish."
Dropping her hand, she dispelled the illusion and picked up her coffee once more. "A Jewel is far more than an aesthetic piece," she continued dryly, though Aithne wasn't the first Stranger to imply that. Good humor softened her dry tone. "Without it, we are not Blood."
no subject
Even though she is well aquatinted with some of those that thought as such. That she would hold her tongue on for the by and by.
"Lady, one must admit it does suite." Her tone even but her expression light. "After that first night, some became obvious. May I ask how only the Blood came into possession of these Jewels?"
no subject
She had a strange, muted feeling about her, as though she'd become an old photograph at some point, all the color drained out of her.
"The Jewels didn't go to the Blood. The Jewels made us Blood." Her eyes refocused on Aithne. "Before the Jewels, there were only landens. But the Blood have lived long lives and some live for many years. They've forgotten that, I think."
no subject
After all it would be considered rude, at the very least.
A slight nod. "I believe that is a common trap many fall into Fayura. Even those that live till the end of times are not immune.
Some, like the Blood, of my home are made via.." A slight pause looking for an apt word. " gifts? Perhaps that is one word to describe the varied beings. Though I think that example is more of a similarity at best. I would be interested hearing more then, though I wish not to monopolize your time."
Obviously she was working something over in her head. Eyes narrowed, with a bit of a scrunch to her brows for a long moment, returning to that softer expression. "You not only called us, you asked the jewels to choose which Stranger to bond with." A quirk of one questioning brow.
no subject
If anything, he looked concerned every time her expression became distant, perhaps concerned she might not come back.
But she did, and she smiled as she waved a dismissive hand. "I don't mind talking. I've had no one for company by my Prince—"
Across from them, her Prince sputtered quietly.
"—and his perspective on things is so very male. Speaking with another witch is refreshing." Her smile broadened, but she shook her head. "Oh, no, I didn't ask the Jewels to choose you. Here, may I show you something?" Fayura held out her hand for Aithne to take. At the same time, her mind reached for Aithne's, pausing just outside it as though knocking and waiting for permission at the front door of a house. "The Blood guard our minds very carefully. May I have permission to enter yours?"
no subject
A dry chuckle. "Do not be so harsh on him, in his position with one I was charged to protect I may not be much different. If paths have been different that might have been a title I was named with." The latter said slightly offhand. "Though I know such does not translate here."
"Of course." Aithne was a curious creature and extended her matching hand to grasp the Queen's. Lightly, of course. And here is where she paused, at the request. It was not a reaction of mistrust, one more of uncertainty. Somewhat silly, somewhat instinctual, considering her acceptance of the invitation to come to the woman's, and the land's aid.
"Another thing we have in common." A slow blink and she nodded. "Yes you may."
no subject
But once she had permission, Fay slipped into Aithne's mind with stunning ease. She didn't rummage through Aithne's thoughts. If anything, she ignored them entirely and turned her attention to a very specific part of Aithne's mind.
Threads stretched through thought in this place. *Sometimes, adults will go into a child's mind, to this place,* she explained on a Purple Dusk distaff thread so that Verim couldn't eavesdrop. *Here, we can...* She plucked the thread that matched with Purple Dusk, and a resonating hum came from the abyss. *That's your current strength.* She plucked the Opal thread. Another hum vibrated through Aithne's mind, but this was softer, weaker, and not quite in harmony. *You could wear Opal, but based on that response, it's unlikely.* Fay moved on to the Green and Sapphire threads, plucking each in turn. They sang much louder than Opal, and their resonant hum came in harmony to the original Purple Dusk.
Fay withdrew politely, severing the psychic link and releasing Aithne's hand. "I chose nothing. I only found what resonated best at the moment, which really isn't much different than a Birthright ceremony."
no subject
Her rejoinder came after more than a few moments of thought. "In a way what you did was a birthing of sorts, so perhaps it fits? I would think this has not been fully accepted by all of the Blood."
Power, after all, does not oft like to be shared.
no subject
She trailed off, pursing her lips.
"Forgive me, we don't usually talk about what we experience during our Birthrights or our Offering." Reticence filled her voice, and her body language shifted, becoming guarded. For her, at least, one of those experiences wasn't something she liked talking about.
no subject
"No forgiveness needed. Such should be expected, these difference that seem of no consequence to one but heavy with meaning to another." She withdrew her touch, much longer it might be more inappropriate than reassuring. "Much to learn between us, eh?" A slight raise of one corner of her lips.
Though she noted the trailing though from Fayura's first statement. It would be something that she would replay later in her head.
no subject
The weariness in her voice suggested she thought that someone had to be her.
"But I can't do it all myself."
no subject
A slight pause as the Queen took her draught.
"I offer this as simply something to think upon. I am far to ignorant of the Blood to definitely to advise reliably. Have you thought of establishing a new Protocol? A derivative of the old, fitting the circumstances of the present?"
no subject
As old as Fay was, she hadn't quite figured out she couldn't shoulder the burden for other people's bad decisions.
no subject
She gave a light shrug. "If one presses that beyond a certain limit without proof, or of simple politics, then that is upon them."
A light chewing of her lower lip. "The key, and it is far from perfect is that such applies to all."
no subject
She set her coffee down with a weary expression. "Do you have any other questions for me?"
no subject
A pause, and then said said in the most serious of tones but with a barely contained smile on her lips. "Or at least a moment to not be pestered with questions from a Stranger."
And with that she stood. "My thanks for indulging me. I have enjoyed your company. Perhaps when you have recovered I can return the indulgence."
no subject
As she spoke, one of the children clambered up to her, and Fay turned her attention to the young Blood girl and the landen boy at her side, examining their magic while Verim looked on.
fin
The encounter gave the Valkyrie much to think about.