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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She pops a piece of fruit into her mouth and chews with evident enjoyment. "I admit it's a bit unusual, but I like to think that maybe someone here thought I wish Abigail Pent were here and give me an inroad."
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"It might be," he says, cautiously, thinking of Harrow's work in the library, of mentions of a spirit magician's skills. "I have not known others such as yourself who were able to move between the realms as you describe. Nor do I know your River."
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She lights with a scholar's passion, warming to her subject. "What happens to the spirits in your world, do you know?"
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Quiet grief flickers in his glance for an instant, but his tone is ruthlessly calm as he continues. "If a person dies with resentment, they may become an angry ghost. Unless such a spirit can be liberated and set free to rejoin the cycle, they may be lost."
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"The resentfulness is familiar," she says, instead. "As is, I'm sorry to say, the loss. But the rest of it... well, it would be a bit awkward to summon a soul that had been reincarnated, wouldn't it?"
She gestures in the air, tracing an invisible shoreline. "The River is a very real place, if dimensionally complicated. Souls enter the River on death, unless they hang around as a revenant. And that is where most accepted knowledge believes they stay."
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"Most accepted knowledge," he repeats, and looks curiously at her.
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"Then there are those mad heretics who still believe in the place beyond the River," she says, cheerfully. "I'm afraid it's gone quite out of style, but I have to admit that now I'm dead, I believe more fervently than ever."
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It almost feels rude to ask, but she clearly does not seem upset in the slightest at discussing such things, despite her own state.
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"Then I wish you luck. Is there assistance I might offer?"
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She looks pleased and a little amused. "Why, are you a mad heretic, too?"
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(I dare ask you, shufu - who is right? who is wrong?)
"Perhaps," he murmurs. "But I am sure of one thing, and that is that often those who claim absolute knowledge do not wish to hear other possibilities. It does not make them right."
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She says this with perfect sincerity as she dips a biscuit into her tea, before taking a satisfied bite.
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She finishes her biscuit and delicately wipes her lips with a napkin. "And you, Hanguang-jun? Do you have a speciality?"
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"Could I beg a demonstration at some point?"
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"Even now, if you wish."
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He holds one hand in the air above his center. “The strength of a cultivator’s core affects what they are able to do with it.”
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She gestures to the window, the always-recurring death outside. "In our home system, we draw thanergy directly from the planets which host the Houses. Outside Dominicus, in thalergetic systems, necromancers rely on active deaths to bolster their thanergy reserves."
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