Mesec
@[Malone] if you wanna join but open to any who might want to come say hi!
Beqanna
Assailant -- Year 226
"But the dream, the echo, slips from him as quickly as he had found it and as consciousness comes to him (a slap and not the gentle waves of oceanic tides), it dissolves entirely. His muscles relax as the cold claims him again, as the numbness sets in, and when his grey eyes open, there’s nothing but the faint after burn of a dream often trod and never remembered." --Brigade, written by Laura
[open] here's to fresh starts and all that
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l e p i s up in the city until the stars lost the war With Kestrell spending the winter night with Altum to watch the meteor shower, Lepis wakes to an unusually chilly morning. There is a moment of stillness, when she reminds herself of why there is no pied body sharing her nest, and another long moment as she savors the rare ability to stretch her wings wide as she rouses more fully. The alcove in which she now stands is just long enough for such an exercise, with a few scant inches between the golden tips of her feathers and the rough red stone. The sun has not yet risen far enough to rouse her – or to warm her – so the dun mare fluffs out her golden wings as she moves toward where the sun touches the sandstone of the stone cliff, pulling her feathered appendages to her sides for warmth. The weak winter sun is enough to warm her face, and she closes her blue-grey eyes for a moment to soak in the quiet world around her. Birds call in the trees below, but the kookaburra that nests in the baobob below is not yet awake. When she reopens her eyes, some of the glowing winterblooms below are just losing their sky blue glow to the grey light of dawn. The air smells of frost and steam, the latter caused by hot spring that gurgles over the ledge and down to the distant earth below. Crystallized salt deposits glitter in the sunlight, and Lepis wishes for the thousandth time that the spring as freshwater rather than brackish. ‘No place is perfect,’ she reminds herself, pointedly not thinking of Fort Hideaway. She takes to the sky without much ado, ignoring the ache of age in her bones as she flies. Her direction is toward the southeast edge of Loess, where a round lake sits amidst a thick (for Loess, anyway) forest. She lands there, and by the time an unfamiliar winged stranger emerges from the woods of the Common lands, the queen has washed the dust from her dun hide and her navy-and-white (and grey) mane has dried all to one side of her neck. This leaves the far side, with its thick navy scars in the shape of hooves and teeth, uncovered. Lepis forgets this the moment she sees the stranger. She moves toward him at a slow walk, but it is direct and purposeful. Her face is set in a welcoming smile, as befitting a greeter, but her eyes do not match it until she is close enough to see his. They are silver – not green and blue. He is not the danger. Well, at least he is not that danger. By the time she is close enough to converse, she is as happy as she looks, the soft buzz of the emotion a comforting warmth in the back of her head. “I’m Lepis,” She tells him. Even standing tall she is not near his height, but the way that she holds herself is confident, and perhaps it might seem as though the scars across her neck are signs of the many battles she has won. Yet she is smiling when she asks: “What's your name?”
08-06-2020, 07:34 AM
l e p i s gave me the blues and then purple pink skies At the sharing of a name she recognizes, many of her suspicions are laid to rest. More still are settled by his apparent desire to make Loess a home, for the dun mare has always been most tender toward those that share her love for her red homeland. Of course, tender for a creature as wary as Lepis does not mean open arms, though she does settle more comfortably, shifting her weight and readjusting her wings idly. Her smile, and the happiness behind it, remain constant. She waits rather than answer immediately, and is rewarded by Mesec’s rather timid smile and an inquiry as to what he must do to be allowed to stay. That Malone had invited him to do so was not surprising – Lepis has asked the other residents to recruit when they can – and there is a certain necessity of trust in her fellow Southerners when it comes to such matters. If Malone thinks Mesec suitable for residency (truly a thing with intangible requirements), then Lepis does as well. Still… “We require a blood sacrifice on the first full moon summer,” she tells him, her brows raising ever so slightly with a twitch at the edge of her smile, “So you’ve come at a rather opportune time, having just missed it.” She should not toy with him, and she knows this in a more empathic part of her heart, but there has been precious little for entertainment for such a long time. Biding one’s time is all well and good, but there are limits even to Lepis’ patience. She has already been forced to make changes, and her dislike of that had soured her mood for several weeks. Mesec’s arrival has coincided with the end of that bitterness, and the dun mare is eager to experience more positive emotions. Even at the expense of others, it seems, though she reassures herself that it is clear she is jesting.
08-09-2020, 07:59 AM
l e p i s gave me the blues and then purple pink skies Mesec seems amused, but before she can congratulate herself on yet another successful jest, the black stallion’s grin dims for a moment. Not as a result of her teasing, Lepis is sure, and indeed his grin returns to its former brightness after only a moment. That he offers, even if in jest, elicits a laugh from the dun mare. It is a short, quick thing, and one that fades back to the just-friendly smile that she has donned to greet a stranger in her land. It is still a strange thing to laugh, she finds, and the burst of true amusement is unexpected. She is not entirely sure it is welcome, or least not entirely sure she should welcome it. Best to not dwell too long on her discomfort, the pegasus decides, at least not in another’s company. So she pushes it aside, and with a casual roll of her shoulders tells him that: “Perhaps I could make an exception.” That she has the authority to make such exceptions is implied, assuming that there is a such a requirement. Lepis pointedly does not clarify. “I’ve done so before, when newcomers have something better than blood they might lend to my kingdom.” Her faux serious tone has taken on a bit of superciliousness as she spoke, but it is belayed by the smile that remains. “What is it Malone saw in you to invite you here, do you think?” She asks, trusting Starsin to have raised an observant son regardless of her husband’s influence. |
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