Cair!
Fallen Far goes dead still in that Lunarian way, like a spirit tablet processing footage. (Which usually takes a while after a filming shoot. After you take one picture, the painting function is still filling it out as you watch; taking hundreds at a time leaves it rendering in the background for ages. But experimentation is its own reward, isn’t it?)
Finally, Fallen Far nods. “This is the interpretation performed sufficiently. I am the endeavor of safekeeping to my sick suit. You are not the acquisition of that which is in possession. You are the managing of materials for the Recurrence.” A hitch in the buzzing voice. “…for the Heron? The maintenance of my sick suit is the objective. I am the successful use of the Shaping Matrix. You are dictating how this occurs.”
An awkward moment of silence, and then a hapless gesture at the tablet. “You are the active appreciation of our gift?” Some gift. Well, technically this was a gift. From Civelia. Heron somehow getting her to agree that the whole Handmaiden team needed their own tablets was a major coup on her part, and likely an accounting headache for somebody else. If you break this, some Civil is going to be sarcastic at you on her behalf (because she barely ever changes her facial expressions out of the defaults of Refined, Thoughtful, or Appropriately Pleased, see). Anyway, the point is that these things are expensive imports.
“I…” For a moment the Lunarian just locks up again. “…am not the provision of this gift.” Is that a buzz of defeat? “You are dictating how this occurs. You are the contractual formation. I am the subject of contracting. I am not the relinquishment of this sick suit or the teaching of the Pure Land. You are the service offered the Heron.”
The gloved hand offered, palm-up, is slender. The fingertips are all orange, like the ridges of the suit, but not hard. This is a wild thing to be offered. You may very well be the first person who gets an invitation to touch this hand like this? The Lunarians are very good at keeping their distance, fighting with polearms, bowing politely before leaving a room, ignoring offers to shake hands: that sort of thing. Posterity and science have their eyes upon you, as do the members of the small, curious crowd accreting around the two of you.
Eclair!
Travel directly through the Outside is harrowing. This is something that is taken into account by just about everyone, even the Order. Everyone uses the Stone Roads to travel from hub to hub, settlement to settlement, because they may have their own dangers, but they are at the very least stable.
The Outside is unstable. It is what is left over from the wars between existence and the void, the turbulent half-places of strange adventure. The venturer guilds know its rules, by and large, and exploit them to bring back treasures, exotic materials, and goblins. Goblins like these riding beasts, actually.
That’s the lesser part of the boast that is being made here today: look at our goblins, o you city of colors and serpents! This one, grey and clammy and long-haired, was bridled at the side of a treacherous stream; that one, maned and tusked and full of cowed rage, was wrestled into submission. This one, thick-shelled and heavy-pincered, is broad and flat enough that a Nagi rides on its back; that one, a goblin-mouse of unusual size, long-tailed and clever-handed, with a slight-framed rider low in the saddle. There’s even a Civil in a fur-lined coat riding a hippogriff with the forequarters of a dove and the hindquarters of a pony.
And there, in place of honor, is the Khatun. Not that you would recognize her on sight, mind you— you are not familiar with her night-black steed, its crescent horn, its vicious fangs. Neither does she wear a crown to mark her leadership of the Khaganate. All that there is to mark who she is are the furs draped over her shoulders, the straightness of her back, the single golden torc about her neck, and the eyes as hard and sharp as flint. Eyes which take in the city of Crevas and offer nothing in return.
“She rode through the flipping Outside?” Mel breathes, holding the tablet close to her chest. “All the way here?”
“And they’ve barely changed at all,” Jaks— adds. “I’ve heard they all have to swear to her that they won’t. And she refuses to let the Outside change them, so they just… don’t. Because they promised her they wouldn’t."
(This may sound familiar to you: the promises that you have made the Order and the securities which you have been granted when traveling into the cities are similar. But the thoughts of three dreaming dragons armor you and your body while walking through a dreaming world, not one grey-haired woman.)
Those flint eyes fall on you. The Khatun pulls back her reins; the night-black monster she rides complies, fangs grinding against the bit. The procession halts, with most of the riders managing to rein in their goblins with half as much skill and authority. (The goblin-crab scuttles sideways and nearly crushes a teenager against an ice cream stall before the Nagi gets it in check.)
She stares. dum-te-dum, dum-TE-dum. Members of the procession, as well as onlookers, glance from her to you and back. Mel is shrinking back into a doorway like it would save her, if it came to that.
“Girl. How is Noon?” Her voice is not loud; it doesn’t need to be. It is not even cruel. It is burnished steel and a velvet sheath. There is a turquoise stud in one ear. There is a ring made out of the skull of a small avian goblin on the ring finger of her right hand. Under her coat, a shirt of scales (goblin-drake, not dragon, you know dragon scales better than anyone in this city) is cinched tight against her wiry frame, her slight breasts. There are bags under her eyes, suggestive of chronic insomnia; no sign of how she handles it. But she must.
She is a warlord without a war, so the hunt will have to do. How is Noon, Eclair? That most rambunctious and aggressive of dreamers and mistresses. Dreams herself out beyond the Mansion, sometimes, to run into travelers. Or hunters.
Perhaps that was a hint of fondness in her voice, though— for the chase, or for memories as old as you, or for a worthy adversary well-remembered. Or perhaps it’s just a threat from a brute, an iron fist in a velvet glove, an old woman slavering at the thought of skinning a dreaming dragon and seeing what’s underneath.
Yuki!
Sulochana slowly, languidly curls around your legs. It’s a very natural instinct for Nagi, reflected in their furniture; it feels much like a cool, smooth blanket tucking you into bed, enough to lock you in place but not putting your legs under strain.
She approaches giving you scritchies in the same relaxed fashion. Her long nails graze your scalp, running along the natural lines of your hair pulled into that ponytail. You’d swear that your scalp becomes twice as sensitive in Thellamie, comparatively, especially riiiiiight there just behind your ears. Do your best not to melt in a complete puddle, dear.
“Shhh,” she whispers. Nagi would be amazing at ASMR, actually. Their hypnosis runs on something similar; since you’re not staring deep into her eyes right now, listening to her is just a pleasurable, relaxing buzz. “Keep that adorable voice down, Yuki. Didn’t I just say I’m not supposed to know? But… they say that when it chooses you, your head is wreathed in light. It’s all curves and arches in the Civil art, but of course I’ve never seen it.
“Long ago, generations ago, another one of the Fallen tried to conquer Thellamie. This one was worse than Azaza, if you can believe it— at least she was just economically ruinous and expected everyone to accept slavery under her ‘enlightened’ rule. This one had light which filled the trees, the flowers, and the bodies of the dead, and it overwhelmed several northern hubs, the ones where the Avel lived.”
She’s got the cadence of the opening scroll of a dubbed JRPG, and she’d do an amazing job at that. Her coils shift against themselves slightly as she adjusts her position, rubbing against your legs; she cups the back of your head.
“Vesper the Conqueror, who brought the Serigalamu back to the light of Civelia, led the final defense at Willowbrook. And she sealed the Fallen there, somehow, and Civelia forbade anyone from trying to find her body. If you try to travel there by stone, you’ll emerge in a dark forest which has swallowed up the hub, where all the trees are a little bit alive, and all of them hate you… but the forest’s advance was stopped there.
“But without the Crown of Light, which Vesper wore to battle, we haven’t been able to perform effective rituals to expand out into the Outside, and we have to rely on Outside hunting to supplement our farms— which makes the Outside more hostile in turn— and thus we have to run blessed Heron ragged keeping the mirrorfolk and rampaging goblins at bay. So land prices have been steadily rising, multiple hubs are at risk of housing crises, and there was a famine two years ago which… I did my best to make sure no one in Crevas went hungry, Yuki.”
She leaves unspoken: my best wasn’t good enough.
She leaves unspoken: when I am the Queen, there will be neighborhood expansions underneath Crevas, and I will order the creatures of the Outside to leave the hubs alone, and I will run myself into the ground to make sure that famine never touches anywhere in Thellamie again.
[And here, darling Yuki, you may roll to offer her Emotional Support, or you will add to her Need.]
Hazel!
A memory, dredged up while you’re in the “shower space” of dancing: one of the first interactions that Yuki had with these two was being offered guidance in the seedy areas of a hub— and then they revealed, when they had her in a tight spot, that there were fees involved. Oh, how could this have slipped your—
Keli guides you into lifting her, and you manage, given that you’re both putting momentum into it, you’re doing a spin, and she comes right back down—
That would be why. They want your money. Though there’s reasonable evidence that they’d accept sizable discounts for “kissing us and deciding which one is the better kisser” or “taking your shirt off, handing it to us, and posing, actually, do some of those dance moves again, and maybe you’ll get the shirt back.”
You have experience with girls like this, haven’t you? Not a lot of experience, but you know the way that some girls can treat boys who are quiet, shy, weird, and, well, bullyable. Even if these two think you’re entertaining, maybe even more than that, you’re doomed to humiliation, impoverishment, and inevitable rescue by Yuki unless you can figure out how to weasel your way out of—
Oh, you’ve been going longer than you think, haven’t you? Song flowed into song into song. And the crowd’s applauded a few times, and Keli’s showing you how to bow properly (at the waist). And then, oh, lucky boy, you get to experience the after-performance: members of the crowd coming up to offer donations, praise, and requests.
“That was wonderful!”
“Are you a new addition to Keli and Seli’s act?”
“You added so much to the performance!”
“Here’s my ID, message me later~” ([.mashbash], if you’re wondering.)
“Here, you simply must accept this!” (A handful of Coronets for your purse, and is that a purple gem? Keli will insist on that for sure.)
“May the light of the stars illuminate your path!”
A little Nagi kid actually wraps around your leg and gives it a big, big hug, nuzzling their soft cheek against your knee. Their mother eventually convinces them to let go, apologizing profusely, but the kid still waves bye to you over mom’s shoulder as she slithers away.
The crowd finally thins out, but before you can attempt an escape from the nefarious duo and their intentions on your purse, a shadow falls over you.
Have you ever listened to ASMR, Hazel? Ever felt that shiver run down your spine as something in your brain shifts straight to relax? Especially after, say, a moderately intense workout?
“You’re very talented,” the Nagi singer says, leaning over you, to your left. (That’s a thing they can do! Most of her body is behind you!) “But you don’t look Aestivali. What led you to fall in with these two ashiqs?” Her voice is melodious, as soft as Keli’s silks, and perhaps this is when you realize that you’re dangerously susceptible. Her eyes are barely visible through her bangs, but every glint of gold is intoxicating.
“We’re showing him around, Anat,” Seli says, on the other side of you, dangerously sudden (you just didn’t notice). “It’s his very first time in Crevas.”
Anat Amora-Ugari lifts one ringed hand to her vividly black lips. “Oh, well. You should keep him around, I think.”
“What,” Keli jokes, a little titter in her laugh, a little bush in her tail, “and share the spotlight?” And whatever is under that, and there is something, is lost to the shift of Anat’s bangs and the sway of her upper body. She’s not even doing it on purpose, sweetie. (But it does have something to do with that dance, and how perhaps their answer is a little different now; how, perhaps, they might be considering you more than just a victim, having seen how quickly you took to performing. But that goes right over your silly little head.)
“If you don’t steal him away,” Anat says, and places one hand on your shoulder with a squeeze, “I just might~”
Fallen Far goes dead still in that Lunarian way, like a spirit tablet processing footage. (Which usually takes a while after a filming shoot. After you take one picture, the painting function is still filling it out as you watch; taking hundreds at a time leaves it rendering in the background for ages. But experimentation is its own reward, isn’t it?)
Finally, Fallen Far nods. “This is the interpretation performed sufficiently. I am the endeavor of safekeeping to my sick suit. You are not the acquisition of that which is in possession. You are the managing of materials for the Recurrence.” A hitch in the buzzing voice. “…for the Heron? The maintenance of my sick suit is the objective. I am the successful use of the Shaping Matrix. You are dictating how this occurs.”
An awkward moment of silence, and then a hapless gesture at the tablet. “You are the active appreciation of our gift?” Some gift. Well, technically this was a gift. From Civelia. Heron somehow getting her to agree that the whole Handmaiden team needed their own tablets was a major coup on her part, and likely an accounting headache for somebody else. If you break this, some Civil is going to be sarcastic at you on her behalf (because she barely ever changes her facial expressions out of the defaults of Refined, Thoughtful, or Appropriately Pleased, see). Anyway, the point is that these things are expensive imports.
“I…” For a moment the Lunarian just locks up again. “…am not the provision of this gift.” Is that a buzz of defeat? “You are dictating how this occurs. You are the contractual formation. I am the subject of contracting. I am not the relinquishment of this sick suit or the teaching of the Pure Land. You are the service offered the Heron.”
The gloved hand offered, palm-up, is slender. The fingertips are all orange, like the ridges of the suit, but not hard. This is a wild thing to be offered. You may very well be the first person who gets an invitation to touch this hand like this? The Lunarians are very good at keeping their distance, fighting with polearms, bowing politely before leaving a room, ignoring offers to shake hands: that sort of thing. Posterity and science have their eyes upon you, as do the members of the small, curious crowd accreting around the two of you.
Eclair!
Travel directly through the Outside is harrowing. This is something that is taken into account by just about everyone, even the Order. Everyone uses the Stone Roads to travel from hub to hub, settlement to settlement, because they may have their own dangers, but they are at the very least stable.
The Outside is unstable. It is what is left over from the wars between existence and the void, the turbulent half-places of strange adventure. The venturer guilds know its rules, by and large, and exploit them to bring back treasures, exotic materials, and goblins. Goblins like these riding beasts, actually.
That’s the lesser part of the boast that is being made here today: look at our goblins, o you city of colors and serpents! This one, grey and clammy and long-haired, was bridled at the side of a treacherous stream; that one, maned and tusked and full of cowed rage, was wrestled into submission. This one, thick-shelled and heavy-pincered, is broad and flat enough that a Nagi rides on its back; that one, a goblin-mouse of unusual size, long-tailed and clever-handed, with a slight-framed rider low in the saddle. There’s even a Civil in a fur-lined coat riding a hippogriff with the forequarters of a dove and the hindquarters of a pony.
And there, in place of honor, is the Khatun. Not that you would recognize her on sight, mind you— you are not familiar with her night-black steed, its crescent horn, its vicious fangs. Neither does she wear a crown to mark her leadership of the Khaganate. All that there is to mark who she is are the furs draped over her shoulders, the straightness of her back, the single golden torc about her neck, and the eyes as hard and sharp as flint. Eyes which take in the city of Crevas and offer nothing in return.
“She rode through the flipping Outside?” Mel breathes, holding the tablet close to her chest. “All the way here?”
“And they’ve barely changed at all,” Jaks— adds. “I’ve heard they all have to swear to her that they won’t. And she refuses to let the Outside change them, so they just… don’t. Because they promised her they wouldn’t."
(This may sound familiar to you: the promises that you have made the Order and the securities which you have been granted when traveling into the cities are similar. But the thoughts of three dreaming dragons armor you and your body while walking through a dreaming world, not one grey-haired woman.)
Those flint eyes fall on you. The Khatun pulls back her reins; the night-black monster she rides complies, fangs grinding against the bit. The procession halts, with most of the riders managing to rein in their goblins with half as much skill and authority. (The goblin-crab scuttles sideways and nearly crushes a teenager against an ice cream stall before the Nagi gets it in check.)
She stares. dum-te-dum, dum-TE-dum. Members of the procession, as well as onlookers, glance from her to you and back. Mel is shrinking back into a doorway like it would save her, if it came to that.
“Girl. How is Noon?” Her voice is not loud; it doesn’t need to be. It is not even cruel. It is burnished steel and a velvet sheath. There is a turquoise stud in one ear. There is a ring made out of the skull of a small avian goblin on the ring finger of her right hand. Under her coat, a shirt of scales (goblin-drake, not dragon, you know dragon scales better than anyone in this city) is cinched tight against her wiry frame, her slight breasts. There are bags under her eyes, suggestive of chronic insomnia; no sign of how she handles it. But she must.
She is a warlord without a war, so the hunt will have to do. How is Noon, Eclair? That most rambunctious and aggressive of dreamers and mistresses. Dreams herself out beyond the Mansion, sometimes, to run into travelers. Or hunters.
Perhaps that was a hint of fondness in her voice, though— for the chase, or for memories as old as you, or for a worthy adversary well-remembered. Or perhaps it’s just a threat from a brute, an iron fist in a velvet glove, an old woman slavering at the thought of skinning a dreaming dragon and seeing what’s underneath.
Yuki!
Sulochana slowly, languidly curls around your legs. It’s a very natural instinct for Nagi, reflected in their furniture; it feels much like a cool, smooth blanket tucking you into bed, enough to lock you in place but not putting your legs under strain.
She approaches giving you scritchies in the same relaxed fashion. Her long nails graze your scalp, running along the natural lines of your hair pulled into that ponytail. You’d swear that your scalp becomes twice as sensitive in Thellamie, comparatively, especially riiiiiight there just behind your ears. Do your best not to melt in a complete puddle, dear.
“Shhh,” she whispers. Nagi would be amazing at ASMR, actually. Their hypnosis runs on something similar; since you’re not staring deep into her eyes right now, listening to her is just a pleasurable, relaxing buzz. “Keep that adorable voice down, Yuki. Didn’t I just say I’m not supposed to know? But… they say that when it chooses you, your head is wreathed in light. It’s all curves and arches in the Civil art, but of course I’ve never seen it.
“Long ago, generations ago, another one of the Fallen tried to conquer Thellamie. This one was worse than Azaza, if you can believe it— at least she was just economically ruinous and expected everyone to accept slavery under her ‘enlightened’ rule. This one had light which filled the trees, the flowers, and the bodies of the dead, and it overwhelmed several northern hubs, the ones where the Avel lived.”
She’s got the cadence of the opening scroll of a dubbed JRPG, and she’d do an amazing job at that. Her coils shift against themselves slightly as she adjusts her position, rubbing against your legs; she cups the back of your head.
“Vesper the Conqueror, who brought the Serigalamu back to the light of Civelia, led the final defense at Willowbrook. And she sealed the Fallen there, somehow, and Civelia forbade anyone from trying to find her body. If you try to travel there by stone, you’ll emerge in a dark forest which has swallowed up the hub, where all the trees are a little bit alive, and all of them hate you… but the forest’s advance was stopped there.
“But without the Crown of Light, which Vesper wore to battle, we haven’t been able to perform effective rituals to expand out into the Outside, and we have to rely on Outside hunting to supplement our farms— which makes the Outside more hostile in turn— and thus we have to run blessed Heron ragged keeping the mirrorfolk and rampaging goblins at bay. So land prices have been steadily rising, multiple hubs are at risk of housing crises, and there was a famine two years ago which… I did my best to make sure no one in Crevas went hungry, Yuki.”
She leaves unspoken: my best wasn’t good enough.
She leaves unspoken: when I am the Queen, there will be neighborhood expansions underneath Crevas, and I will order the creatures of the Outside to leave the hubs alone, and I will run myself into the ground to make sure that famine never touches anywhere in Thellamie again.
[And here, darling Yuki, you may roll to offer her Emotional Support, or you will add to her Need.]
Hazel!
A memory, dredged up while you’re in the “shower space” of dancing: one of the first interactions that Yuki had with these two was being offered guidance in the seedy areas of a hub— and then they revealed, when they had her in a tight spot, that there were fees involved. Oh, how could this have slipped your—
Keli guides you into lifting her, and you manage, given that you’re both putting momentum into it, you’re doing a spin, and she comes right back down—
That would be why. They want your money. Though there’s reasonable evidence that they’d accept sizable discounts for “kissing us and deciding which one is the better kisser” or “taking your shirt off, handing it to us, and posing, actually, do some of those dance moves again, and maybe you’ll get the shirt back.”
You have experience with girls like this, haven’t you? Not a lot of experience, but you know the way that some girls can treat boys who are quiet, shy, weird, and, well, bullyable. Even if these two think you’re entertaining, maybe even more than that, you’re doomed to humiliation, impoverishment, and inevitable rescue by Yuki unless you can figure out how to weasel your way out of—
Oh, you’ve been going longer than you think, haven’t you? Song flowed into song into song. And the crowd’s applauded a few times, and Keli’s showing you how to bow properly (at the waist). And then, oh, lucky boy, you get to experience the after-performance: members of the crowd coming up to offer donations, praise, and requests.
“That was wonderful!”
“Are you a new addition to Keli and Seli’s act?”
“You added so much to the performance!”
“Here’s my ID, message me later~” ([.mashbash], if you’re wondering.)
“Here, you simply must accept this!” (A handful of Coronets for your purse, and is that a purple gem? Keli will insist on that for sure.)
“May the light of the stars illuminate your path!”
A little Nagi kid actually wraps around your leg and gives it a big, big hug, nuzzling their soft cheek against your knee. Their mother eventually convinces them to let go, apologizing profusely, but the kid still waves bye to you over mom’s shoulder as she slithers away.
The crowd finally thins out, but before you can attempt an escape from the nefarious duo and their intentions on your purse, a shadow falls over you.
Have you ever listened to ASMR, Hazel? Ever felt that shiver run down your spine as something in your brain shifts straight to relax? Especially after, say, a moderately intense workout?
“You’re very talented,” the Nagi singer says, leaning over you, to your left. (That’s a thing they can do! Most of her body is behind you!) “But you don’t look Aestivali. What led you to fall in with these two ashiqs?” Her voice is melodious, as soft as Keli’s silks, and perhaps this is when you realize that you’re dangerously susceptible. Her eyes are barely visible through her bangs, but every glint of gold is intoxicating.
“We’re showing him around, Anat,” Seli says, on the other side of you, dangerously sudden (you just didn’t notice). “It’s his very first time in Crevas.”
Anat Amora-Ugari lifts one ringed hand to her vividly black lips. “Oh, well. You should keep him around, I think.”
“What,” Keli jokes, a little titter in her laugh, a little bush in her tail, “and share the spotlight?” And whatever is under that, and there is something, is lost to the shift of Anat’s bangs and the sway of her upper body. She’s not even doing it on purpose, sweetie. (But it does have something to do with that dance, and how perhaps their answer is a little different now; how, perhaps, they might be considering you more than just a victim, having seen how quickly you took to performing. But that goes right over your silly little head.)
“If you don’t steal him away,” Anat says, and places one hand on your shoulder with a squeeze, “I just might~”