When evening falls on Silvermoon in muted colors (gold, scarlet, subtle auburn), he remembers home. Trisfal autumns, the parched scent of leaves, cool dusk. He wonders briefly if he’s grown tired, and knows she must have. Clair Laurent’s deep, chartreuse-green gaze flits sidelong, regarding the fragile girl at his side.
Nearly the entire day has been spent in the Bazaar. A morning at several clothiers (A-line dresses and Empire silhouettes) was followed by a brief brasserie lunch on a balcony overlooking the Royal Exchange; and as the afternoon wore hot into evening he’d chosen a rosewood vanity to be delivered (via the clanking mindless strength of a fel-driven automaton) to a quiet set of quarters that (little by little) has begun to appear less like a wayfarer’s temporary stop, and more like proper accommodations. Still—it isn’t home, Clair thinks, and he wonders vaguely whether it ever will be.
“For the young lady?” the shopkeeper had asked, looking up from the coins Clair had offered as payment to scrutinize his wordless companion. Undoubtedly, yes, the dressing table was fashioned for a Sin’dorei woman (or a very young girl): a fanciful affair, elaborate, exquisite, very much like——But the man had become suddenly aware of the distant hardness on Clair’s features. He had noted more closely, too, the Blood Knight initiate’s simple scarlet livery, and the sheathed blade girded pragmatically on his right hip. The rest of the transaction had been conducted in silence.
Now, in the shade of evening, the palm of his broad hand is dry and fever-hot when he reaches for hers. He takes unhurried, measured steps as he guides the girl toward the Bazaar’s southern end. There are delicate notes of splashing, and he watches for a moment as the Bazaar’s fountain spouts thin streams of water in impossible shapes before falling to the stone basin: whorls and loops and spirals, a prettily fanciful sort of magic. The spray cools the air here, and he stops when they reach the wrought golden benches in the fountain’s shadow.
“Are you tired, Prisca?” he asks. A low, rough-edged voice. Aristocratic pronunciation, but with a certain (decidedly unmusical) hoarseness. He orders her gently: “Sit.”
Among the Children of the Blood, this Sin’dorei towers a hand’s span (and occasionally two) above other men. Broad-shouldered, hard-boned, there’s a strange stalwart quality to Clair Laurent’s frame belying the slenderness of his kindred. But somehow, improbably, he retains every modicum of elfin grace in even the simplest motion—like the act of kneeling, as he does now, before her. Clair lifts his face upward toward the girl. His preternaturally-lit stare rests on her, soft but steady.
“Did you have fun?” Smiling isn’t something he manages often. There’s a thin, delicate little quirk at the corner of his mouth.
Along the periphery of the Bazaar’s walls, a series of lampposts and lanterns flicker to life with pale blue witchfire. Several of the merchant carts lie closed for the evening, and he can almost sense a hush begin to descend as the last lingering traces of sunset continue to fade toward night. A relief. The hint of a smile on his mouth deepens more easily.
Nearly the entire day has been spent in the Bazaar. A morning at several clothiers (A-line dresses and Empire silhouettes) was followed by a brief brasserie lunch on a balcony overlooking the Royal Exchange; and as the afternoon wore hot into evening he’d chosen a rosewood vanity to be delivered (via the clanking mindless strength of a fel-driven automaton) to a quiet set of quarters that (little by little) has begun to appear less like a wayfarer’s temporary stop, and more like proper accommodations. Still—it isn’t home, Clair thinks, and he wonders vaguely whether it ever will be.
“For the young lady?” the shopkeeper had asked, looking up from the coins Clair had offered as payment to scrutinize his wordless companion. Undoubtedly, yes, the dressing table was fashioned for a Sin’dorei woman (or a very young girl): a fanciful affair, elaborate, exquisite, very much like——But the man had become suddenly aware of the distant hardness on Clair’s features. He had noted more closely, too, the Blood Knight initiate’s simple scarlet livery, and the sheathed blade girded pragmatically on his right hip. The rest of the transaction had been conducted in silence.
Now, in the shade of evening, the palm of his broad hand is dry and fever-hot when he reaches for hers. He takes unhurried, measured steps as he guides the girl toward the Bazaar’s southern end. There are delicate notes of splashing, and he watches for a moment as the Bazaar’s fountain spouts thin streams of water in impossible shapes before falling to the stone basin: whorls and loops and spirals, a prettily fanciful sort of magic. The spray cools the air here, and he stops when they reach the wrought golden benches in the fountain’s shadow.
“Are you tired, Prisca?” he asks. A low, rough-edged voice. Aristocratic pronunciation, but with a certain (decidedly unmusical) hoarseness. He orders her gently: “Sit.”
Among the Children of the Blood, this Sin’dorei towers a hand’s span (and occasionally two) above other men. Broad-shouldered, hard-boned, there’s a strange stalwart quality to Clair Laurent’s frame belying the slenderness of his kindred. But somehow, improbably, he retains every modicum of elfin grace in even the simplest motion—like the act of kneeling, as he does now, before her. Clair lifts his face upward toward the girl. His preternaturally-lit stare rests on her, soft but steady.
“Did you have fun?” Smiling isn’t something he manages often. There’s a thin, delicate little quirk at the corner of his mouth.
Along the periphery of the Bazaar’s walls, a series of lampposts and lanterns flicker to life with pale blue witchfire. Several of the merchant carts lie closed for the evening, and he can almost sense a hush begin to descend as the last lingering traces of sunset continue to fade toward night. A relief. The hint of a smile on his mouth deepens more easily.
Edited by Clair on 1/15/2015 6:17 AM PST