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    1. Culluket 9 yrs ago

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"Where did I get what?" she asked, breezing past him into the hall and deliberately obliterating any possibility of their next words being a private conversation. "Where are we going next? Shall we have dinner? It is getting late."

She measured her faint reflection in the window, adjusting her step appropriately, lifting and tightening her wide swordsman's belt. She let her eyes linger on a passing young nobleman in a green longcoat, making sure he noticed and drawing the ire of his ladyfriend when he did. The conflict of emotion was like colored sugar on her tongue. His longing for her form and male vanity at her appreciation contrasted with his sour contempt that she was southern. Her anger spiced with her hatred and her fear and her fragile but heartfelt love.

Yes, she thought. She could make this work.
@God Haha, well, I do enjoy pwwning things.

if 'Arry Baker passes muster, I won't be making an intro until this fight is over, at which point I guess he'll put out one of his famous youtube videos calling for a meet. Wizard style.
If I'm understanding it right, then it's a little confusing because Vol was after Declan, and had no idea Zik was going to crash his party -- even though that hated ZIK always does! But seriously, I'll roll with whatever punches come my way, we don't want to lose flow.

I did have the amusing thought that it might even have been a message from a completely different 'boss' talking about a completely different Salarian -- such as the one Vol was watching on his monitor hacking into an Eclipse terminal. I had this hilarious vision of a Vorcha hit squad being deployed, only to be intercepted by Vol's Turian underling and persuaded to go on the Declan job instead, whereupon they forgot all about the first one, because they're dumb space goblins. Somewhere, an Eclipse bigwig is banging on an engineering table shouting "VOOOOLLLL!!" while this one Salarian Hacker can't believe how easy today's job was.
She was out of the bath the moment she heard his boots on the stair, yanking at the door handle and rattling the latches, cursing in middle Koptic as it refused to budge. Of course he had locked it. She failed to bite back an indignant pout at the realization that he hadn't trusted her, inwardly plugging her fingers in her ears and mentally shouting down the scolding voice that pointed out she was in fact at this very moment proving she couldn't be trusted.

She ran quickly to the window, unfastening it and swinging open the stained-glass pane. The clamorous music of the Imperial capital washed into the bedchamber, carts, bells, birds, a tumult of male and female voices. The wind blew at the curtains, chilling her wet skin. The flagstones sprawled fatally beneath her, filled with foot-traffic and drifting with the dim shadows of passing clouds.

She gnawed at her lip. Too far. She would break like caked sand.

She leaned over the sill, unconcerned with her nakedness, gauging the width of the ledge below. Wide enough to support her small frame.

The wind blew across the streets, throwing her soiled hair into her face again. It stank of stale oil and old fear. She frowned, tugging at it distastefully and wrinkling her nose. Glanced back to the bath. To the ledge again. To the bath.

Yes, she had time. Some things were more important than freedom.




She bathed quickly. Half an hour at most. Perhaps a little more. She felt a small twinge of pride at her determined efficiency as she wrapped a silk bedsheet around her body, knotted it tightly at the back of her waist and got her foot up on the windowsill.

The wind buffetted her as she eased out onto the ledge, setting the silk flapping to one side. Her nails gripped the painted wood behind her and she slid her way toward the corner of the building and the second open window, slowly, carefully and not looking down.

A shrill expression of disbelief rang out from below, and she looked without intending to, alarmed. A pampered-looking, bleary-eyed man had staggered out of a local drinking-house and was now staring up at her, slack-jawed and blinking rapidly. She lifted a finger to her lips, frantically, ducked under a hanging clothesline and redoubled her shuffling race toward the window, finally getting her leg over the sill and slipping inside right as the gawking bastard's friends arrived.

"Callen?" she heard him warbling from below, "Callen, di'jou seeat?"

The room was quiet and uninhabited. Loka ran to the door, took the handle, and pulled.

It rattled, thudded, and refused to budge, with the same obstinate Imperial indifference of its cousin.

She gave a strangled, high-pitched sing-song whine of girlish anger from somewhere in her throat, grabbing a cane, a shoehorn, even a butter knife and trying to work the latches open. None of it worked. The knife snapped as she tried to loosen the screws on the hinges. She sighed, a long, exasperated, pantomime sigh which rose into a feminine growl, pressing her face into her hands and doubling over like a grounded child. It seemed she would be bound to Saer Nykerius's graces a little longer after all.

She sighed again, pacing. If only he had been younger, at least. Perhaps a little more cheerful.

"No. No. no, no, I swear t'yer, I'm no' makig thissup--"

She drew in a heavy, defeated breath and blew it out. She frowned, looking around the room. A lady's chamber, there was no mistaking it. She knew the scents, the hallmarks of false modesties. She sat down at the curving wooden table set against the longest wall, prodding at its contents and eyeing herself critically in the inset mirror. A little box inlaid with rippling seashells gave up a treasure trove of brushes, pencils and colored powders, and she scooped them up without a second thought, as though they were little bulbs of water in the desert. Another box held jewels, rings and necklaces of precious metals and stones. Tacky and unwieldy things, valued because they were valuable. Loka rifled through them as though they were garbage before a little flash of color caught her eye. Two tiny, dangling earrings of modest silver, set with deep blue opals from the pits of the Amber Sea, shimmering with insubstantial, flickering rainbows.

She hooked them through her earlobes, turning her head this way and that, letting the light catch them as it shone through her hair from behind. She felt that small glow of vanity, the unnameable feeling deep inside her. The faint, familiar tremor that heralded the shaking of that beautiful, terrible tail across the stars. A small golden trickle of power welled within her belly, warming her blood.

Loka leaned toward the mirror, slowly tracing black lines across her eyelids, thickening them and tapering them to sharp points, tracing a small, half-spiral curve from one lower lid to above her cheekbone. The woman would not miss them. She had more than she required. The earrings were not valuable anyway. Opals were common in the expanse. That is why they had named it so. And if Loka could not have her freedom.... Well. At least she could have this.




The box slid into the room right as Loka was dragging herself back in through the window, cursing as the wind blew the sheet up her inconveniently-positioned backside. She heard a woman squeal from somewhere below right as she slammed the window shut.

"Yes!" she shouted through the door in a shrill, desperately friendly tone, "Thank you! This will not be a moment!"

She pulled off the lid, dragging out the clothing. It was drab and practical. Gregor was not used to shopping for women. Loka frowned. Did he even have a woman? Did he even like women? Perhaps he preferred monks. A bitter, vindictive snarl shifted in her heart. Perhaps he preferred young boys in holy robes, it said.

Her brow creased a little further. No. He was not that sort. She would smell it on him even in the cathedral's prison.

She held up the garments, one after the other. There was a short robe in dull red-brown velvet, appropriate rather than indulgent. The rest was a smaller version of what the Inquisitor himself wore. How unimaginative. The leather at least she might make fetching. The riding boots would make her stride more impressive. But still. Improvements would have to be made. Many, many improvements.

An angry voice in the back of her head reminded her that she was supposed to be planning her escape. She inwardly plugged her ears again and set about getting dressed.




She opened the door and posed in the frame, having taken just enough longer than Gregor might care to wait to irritate him, but stopping just shy of riling his temper. Loka, like all her kind, had a sense for these things. She smiled, giving her hat a showy quarter turn with a leather-gloved hand, her riding coat creaking, the dark color adding warmth to her brown skin. Tiny flecks of color caught the light and sparkled beneath her earlobes. She was never going to pass muster as the church's secret police. But then, perhaps that was the point.

"Well?" she said, expectantly.
She laughed again, a nervous, breathy laugh that immediately caught in her throat.

"That is... a very interesting answer." But I think perhaps you need to travel more. "Maybe I will see it?"

The passage had begun to slope upward, curving like a spiral staircase, a dim twilight haze of sunlight beginning to creep into the dank, dusty air. With each step, shadows began to deepen in the carven alcoves, strange religious iconography and the eyeless skulls of dead clerics. Loka's breath came thicker and harder as the ascent went on. She mentally bit back against the possibility that the luxury of the Peacock temple had perhaps made her soft.

"For me..." she said, trying to mask her exertion, "He, is. I was to ask you also what the most frightening thing you had seen was, but I think maybe it is best..." her eyes flitted over the skulls set into the walls, "...not to know.

"But imagine, that the most beautiful thing and the most frightening thing were the same. He is like that. Like looking down from a high tower until you are dizzy with fear. Gazing into the sun until your eyes are burned from your head. He is beauty so great that we are too small to behold it, that the gods would tremble at it. Think of something so beautiful it makes you want to scream. That is what He is."

"Only girls worship him," she went on, huffing a little, "Males do not, for He is... in them, if they seek Him there. When men are beautiful, when they are powerful, so that other men drop their blades in awe and even the strongest woman longs only to be his plaything, then the blue god is there, even if he does not know Him. Shining with his light--"

She threw up a hand as the bright glare of daylight blinded her and a cool wind blew her lank, greasy hair across her face. She blinked, wincing inwardly as her eyes adjusted. They stood in a wide, immaculately-maintained garden of hedges, flowers, rosebushes and rhododendrons, a perfect path of flagstones meandering across the flattened green grasses. The huge, hazy shape of the cathedral loomed like a blue shadow beneath wispy, drifting clouds, and an orchard of apple trees rustled to either side in the slow and gentle wind, robed shapes climbing ladders and carrying baskets beneath the shady eaves.

A cowled monk tended to the bushes, trimming stray branches with an iron sickle. He turned, meeting her eyes deliberately, and smiled at her, a gentle, practiced smile. She turned behind her, her mouth hanging open, and saw only a humble altar house, its gate already beginning to creak slowly shut in the soft spring breeze.

Loka stared in horror. She looked at Gregor, trying to speak and finding no words.

Somewhere, a church bell began to toll, echoing across the serene, silent distance.
Supreme Leader Smokes.

Loka considered the questions, eyes darting around the black corridor. She kept looking over her shoulder, as though her own shadow might lay its hand on her and drag her back down into that terrible darkness.

"Bright." she said. "Loud. Deep shadows." She frowned slightly in another moment of thought "...Crowded. The towers can go no higher. People have begun to spill into the inner ring of the maze. Living there. Even the inside of the city is like a labyrinth itself, now. And there are many, many people, from everywhere. Some like you, even. Montegardi, who did not leave when the princes claimed the city. Sometimes I think the whole world is in there, somewhere."

She half-smiled, for just a moment, throwing small, sideways glances at Gregor. "There is a flower, in the Amber Sea, that only grows from the bones of dead men," she said. "I suppose Kopt is like that."

They slowed and stopped a moment, as she rubbed at her calves.

"...Many claim it is theirs of old, but I think nobody remembers who it truly belongs to, anymore. Everyone, perhaps. Or no one. The roads that lead to it are littered with rusting swords. You attack the brazen princes. The brazen princes attack you. There is always war. Everyone wants the city. Well," she straightened up and shrugged, thinly, "Let them take it, if they can. From what I have seen, Kopt will flourish in the ashes."

They went on, the woman stealing one last glance over her shoulder.

"Of the Blue God..." she broke off a moment, half-sighing, half choking back some other emotion, "I do not know if I can make you understand. The others did not ask of him, much. When they did, my answers made them angry. In time, I... gave them different ones."

She took hesitant little breaths as they walked, staring down at her feet, repeatedly going to speak and then silently cutting herself off. Finally, she looked up, framing the question tentatively.

"...Tell me: What is the most beautiful thing you have ever seen?"
@Culluket I will get to reviewing this in a bit!

I think it's safe to say there's no hurry. Meanwhile:

Oh, bollocks. He’d forgotten it was roleplay night...

A mistake as fatal as it is common.
THOUGHT YOU GOT RID OF ME, N'WAH?





Here we are, Nyssa 1.1. The early access version was pretty rushed, so I actually kind of appreciated the chance to think her over a little more. It's now... much longer. Possibly even on the verge of TMI. Hopefully passing muster to sit on the reserve bench, in any case.

How did Nyssa, an isolated and presumably frail girl with no travel or survival experience, make it out of the Reach and the Forsworn’s grasp, and where did she go?

Actually thought this was a pretty decent question, so I reinstalled Skyrim and assorted realism/survival mods and tried to get a level 1 destruction-only mage from Dead Crone Rock to either of the nearest Dwemer ruins in the middle of the night without dying, just to get a feel for what it was like. And it was fun.

Went over the falls every single time, too, so that's canon.




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