Lady Abigail Pent (
for_tradition) wrote2022-09-13 11:21 am
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{ pfsb } by the fireside
A fireside – the proper kind, with the scent and crackle of flames as they transmogrify the passive energy of wood into heat and light – is something one just really can't have without wood to burn.
The swimming fish are an added bonus, but really don't lend much to the ambience beyond novelty.
It's very pleasant to sit by this fireside, real or magicked up as it might be, while ferociously taking notes. The warm, flickering light of the flames reflects off Abigail Pent's smooth brown hair and the silk of her skirts – the rich brown of excellent milk chocolate, struck through with gold – and illuminates her neat, slightly cramped handwriting. So engrossed is she that when the waitrat arrives with her ordered tea, she doesn't notice until the creature gives a polite half-cough, half-squeak.
Glancing up, she peers myopically at the proffered tea set. (She is wearing two sets of spectacles, but forgotten to put either over her eyes. One sits lightly on her hair, the other hangs around her neck off a cord of brown silk.)
"That doesn't look right," she tells the waitrat. It certainly is tea, but the stunted white pot and small, handle-less cups don't look at all like the bone china she'd expected.
She looks about, searching – ah. Getting to her feet in a rustle of fabric, she accepts the tray from the waitrat and makes her way over to the table she'd spotted, where a tall, slim young man has received a bone china tea service and plate of iced biscuits. "Pardon me," Abigail says, smiling as she approaches him. "I believe our orders were switched."
The swimming fish are an added bonus, but really don't lend much to the ambience beyond novelty.
It's very pleasant to sit by this fireside, real or magicked up as it might be, while ferociously taking notes. The warm, flickering light of the flames reflects off Abigail Pent's smooth brown hair and the silk of her skirts – the rich brown of excellent milk chocolate, struck through with gold – and illuminates her neat, slightly cramped handwriting. So engrossed is she that when the waitrat arrives with her ordered tea, she doesn't notice until the creature gives a polite half-cough, half-squeak.
Glancing up, she peers myopically at the proffered tea set. (She is wearing two sets of spectacles, but forgotten to put either over her eyes. One sits lightly on her hair, the other hangs around her neck off a cord of brown silk.)
"That doesn't look right," she tells the waitrat. It certainly is tea, but the stunted white pot and small, handle-less cups don't look at all like the bone china she'd expected.
She looks about, searching – ah. Getting to her feet in a rustle of fabric, she accepts the tray from the waitrat and makes her way over to the table she'd spotted, where a tall, slim young man has received a bone china tea service and plate of iced biscuits. "Pardon me," Abigail says, smiling as she approaches him. "I believe our orders were switched."
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"And it's not that Silas is a bad person, exactly. The Eight's methods are a little... well... they find it beneficial to instill a sense of, shall we say, personal distance. And Silas is still very young, and under far more pressure than he has realized, I'm sorry to say."
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It slowly begins to sink in, finally. How the heirs of all the Houses were assembled at Canaan House. Lady Pent describing herself as a scion of her House. The tragic loss of the children of the Fourth.
His mouth snaps shut.
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“At Canaan House, in pursuit of Lyctorhood. Murdered summarily by…”
Her words drift off and shakes her head. “You know, I still can’t remember.”
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"I am sorry," he says, as gently as he can. "It is not uncommon, not to recall, from what I have seen."
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“They are soul-siphoners. A dangerous and tasteless practice, if you ask me.”
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"Soul-siphoners?"
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"They separate a person's spirit from the body and force a possession?"
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"In this case – usually – nothing sentient takes the place of the cavalier's soul. It is pure thanergy."
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"You see?" she says. "You are nothing like Silas Octakiseron."
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His ears flush pink.
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"How are those biscuits?" she asks, to give him a way out.
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"You are very clever, Lady Pent," he adds, after a moment.
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"How did you know?"
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"Or if you mean: how did I know you'd despise soul-siphoning?" She shrugs, delicately, and sips at her tea. "Call it an educated guess."
Her warm brown glance flicks to the layout before them, then back at him. "You have shown several kindnesses and a good deal of humility in the short time we've been acquainted, despite being in a position of power in a sect not unlike my own. No one with those characteristics is likely to condone the wholesale dehumanization of soul-siphoning."
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"Most people do not realize," he offers, after another moment. "What I feel."
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