by C S » Sat Jul 02, 2016 5:52 am
With a laugh, the cook began to assemble the flatcakes, sausages and eggs, lining up ten plates and humming a jig to himself. He did a little step-to dance as he rode this unexpected boom in business. Today was going to be a good day, no matter how many strange and grating people came his way. Syria shook her head and took Septimus' hands in hers. "Nothing much I can say to that. Wait, yes. Don't have late dinners, Septimus; they make you dream loopy."
It was just like she'd seen, really.
First you go really fast, then you go faster. But not too fast, because that was how someone hurt their bottom. After falling. Really far.
"She's taken to calling my armor weird..." Evisa began, sharing the stories of her chance encounters with the shapeshifter.
Dahnae bolted on the precipices of the inner city's ledges, gables, parapets and windowsills high above the busy, cluttered streets. The blowing air and her speed ruffled her coat and threw her bag around frenetically as she sped along by the literal tips of her toes, arms held out to either side for balance and, most importantly, to pretend that she was a bird in flight. She went from rooftops to the sides of the tall stone towers and back again with ease, doing harrowing cartwheels and flips to grab onto handholds so that she could shimmy across walls before springing off onto another path, be it higher or lower. She ran across the triangular ridges of shingled roofs, leaning from one side to the next with each footstep she took, before grabbing onto the decorative metalwork at the end of the buildings to lift herself clear of them in a grand handstand.
It was a good thing she had finished her deliveries some time before. No worries of her letters getting free and floating away on the wind. This was just practice, whenever she pushed off and let herself fall tens of feet only to latch onto the sheer walls, skid down the bricks and then drop onto another break in architecture that was not even wide enough to let her sidestep along with her back pressed up against the structure. She grappled these tiny bevels with her hands and let the rest of herself dangle, using the momentum of her body's swinging to propel her to the next route suspended far above the roads of Brodudika.
First you go fast, then you go faster, right onto a balcony overlooking one of the connecting buttresses that bridged the gap between towers. Disregard the lady in the frumpy dress that you just startled when you thumped down on the railing, no time for that. Spin around, grab the railing, kick off of the balcony and drop onto the bridge. Land in a crouch and twist your back around so that your hands were on the ground, and let your legs follow after so that you waste no time getting into a sprinting stance.
Sprint across the buttress, but don't head for the entrance on the other side. Jump over the railing, again, disregarding everyone else nearby who just gasped, they don't know a thing. Grab onto a windowsill and climb, leaping in between handholds to save some time. Keep doing this until you get near to your school, at which point you want to kick off really hard so that you're flying over the street between it and you, huddled into yourself as you do this death-defying somersault.
You stick the landing outside of the big window on the seventh story, standing on the tips of your toes while your arm are thrown against the glass. Then you tap against the window so that he other elves inside will let you in.
It was a step by step process that only made sense to Dahnae, who, despite her ordeal, did not seem fazed at all. If anything, she just seemed perturbed by the finely decorated obstacle.
"And then-- well would you look at that." Evisa crossed her arms.
"Golly, gee. What's up with you, little Friend?"
Solaurn inquired to her little strange friend. Little, though they weren't too far apart in terms of height. They were quite a ways apart when it came to appearance, though. Solaurn was a dwarven woman of darker complexion than most of her kind, being one of few that ventured beyond the mighty holds and fortresses built into the earth. She also lacked the toned appearance that most dwarves had, even those whose jobs were not so physically demanding. Solaurn, as her light blue dress and red sash would attest, was more magically inclined. She did not look like the spitting image of the average enterprising dwarf, but even she was hard-pressed to part ways with the earth completely. In a simple pouch on her back, she carried a slab of pale stone that was fairly sizable when compared to her small stature. To one of a taller sort, its dimensions were close to that of a grimoire.
Her pale blonde ponytail swished about as her blue eyes tracked the hurried movements of her travel companion of some time now. A little creature endowed in fur that still wore clothing made from weaves of plant fibers, a straw-colored dress that was dyed various colors to make patterns of stripes and triangles. She had a most peculiar -- and large -- feather stuck in the back of her dress, this friend who did not speak as others did. Solaurn didn't have much of a name for her past 'Friend', but the unusual companion had crossed paths with her one day upon the heartlands and they had been together since.
Solaurn did not know why she was acting so distressed. Like many others, she didn't have much reason to look up on a regular basis. She didn't see what Gwenviere did, the image of a girl careening through the air and smacking against a window.
