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Erasmus
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#1

As dusk falls in the streets of Denocte, the sounds and smells of the Night Markets dimly climb to a roar, a gradual sort of glee that lifts from a dull hum along the cobblestone. The rats disperse and congregate in their otherwise dens, long slipped from underfoot of the many who fall in line to traipse the gilded paths. Twilight passes along the corridor and slips between the crags – the alleys, dotted with the unknown, slip quiet breaths beneath the pretense of shadows. They pass on like smoke, lifted and weary, as fickle eyes scatter the retreating daylight and settle easily upon the patrons who litter those roads pleasantly unaware. It is a variety in tow – the rich, the poor, the orphaned and the privileged, where between them a penny or a bushel spared sets them apart in their griefs; and their value. Those webbing breaths sigh then to find a heavy purse or satchel, and from sigh come quivering lips and twitching fingertips deft and nimble, steps light and sweeping until they are a faerie sprint between unsuspecting bodies, all equally warm and well fed and ever so clueless. 

But it wasn't him that strayed from the alleys that afternoon, zig-zagging the enterpreted throng of wealthies that all chattered and chuckled and carried on as if nothing phased them. This evening, he felt, was well enough to be enjoyed from the perspective of one satisfied with himself in whole, however falsified the image was. There was always more, a need for more, a hunger for more, endless want, tameless desire, more, more, more, screaming into the void with frothing lips that were chapped with ravenous craving.

This relief was short lived for the not-prince of the Wilds, (as it should be, relief was an unattainable splendor for the wicked) but he did not know until he was well into the deep of the marketplace. There was no reason for him, he of all ghosts who loomed in the paved streets, to be singled amongst the many. In a sea of ingenuine royalties, he is a shadow among them, a far cry from their decadent showcases of extravagance – he was invisible. Of sorts – surely a gaze or two strayed to where he walked, their tedious eyes falling over the strains of gold that he naturally beheld, stricken over his shoulders and veining from his chest like cracked marble inlaid with precious glimmering stone. Their eyes carried to his sharp features – regal, handsome, youthful virile whose tenacity was matched with a darker tone. Indeed, shadows clung to the sharpest points, so that when his eyes met theirs they could not help but feel the chill of his disdain wash over in a subtle wave. Despite his anonymity and lack of such flamboyant expression, there was a magnetism of one set of eyes that did not find him simply easy to look at.

Those eyes did not pass briefly. They clung to him, like a hawk clings to a mouse. 
And Erasmus is no mouse.

For a while he strayed, aware of the feeling – that unsettling heat that rides his spine and creeps up the curve of his neck, whispering in his ear. you do not belong. You should be dead. it calls to him, and suddenly the blood in his veins too, call to him. The superficiality of the world around him suddenly is deadened to that particular gaze he feels, and in his peripheral he drinks in the spectator without visible concern, while his flesh is ignited with the deluded thousand pinpricks of beetle bites, prickling like a wolf's hackles. And then - “You,” it calls louder than his mind, but not loud enough to turn his head. “You!” Louder now, it matches the uproar that rises in his skull and the fury that tears through to meet it. He is aware of a few other other eyes now, eyes that turn to snatch the source of the yelling and then singled to its subject – but surely not him? They pass back to the markets, and Erasmus is invisible again to all except one. And yet, “Erasmus!” He does not look, but he cannot stop his ear as it snaps back to catch the desperation called in his name – and it is as though his eye has grown wider, or perhaps he has actually turned his head, or he has grown a miraculous set of eyes that behold all from behind his horns – but he can see this spectator better now. He is roan, dusty but not disheveled, as though the sheen of dusk marks him nicely, holographic and cool. The man is severe, dressed well but not with the regality of those who surround him, disgusted with his proximity. His choice of fashion is remarkable to none but Erasmus. He is of the Wilds.

Erasmus's gait is smoother now, he suddenly realizes – a canter, but not nearly fast enough to cause concern of those around him. The man is still calling – his name follows him over and over, but it is just a whisper now, thrown beneath the furious blood that boils to the surface and pounds in his ears. The wind bursts against his chest and the night asks if he would like wings? It is a jest, some part of him half laughs while the rest screams. No dagger, no bow, poor child. A soldier without a weapon is as good as dead. You should be dead. You should have drowned. He turned his head finally, escaped from the collection of witnesses in the Markets, and a dagger scrapes against the bridge of his nose. Searing pain – hot and sudden and petty as a papercut, the blood dribbles down and collects at the corner of his lips. The hunger returns. 

His mind catches the dagger as it slips past him, and his hooves skid into the grasses, upturning the damp soils. Like clockwork the moment is broken down for him, as all his battles are: he pivots, and with him pivots the dagger, rough and new and horrible in his grasp, it is some artless piece of work that he assumes could have only been carved by the poorest blacksmith who dared call himself one in all the Wilds. It was nothing like his dagger that was swallowed by the sea, smooth and beautiful and sharper than a gryphon's claw. But it moves with him still, however reluctant it is, and as he turns he watches the man too, skid but feet from him. He can see him fully now. All arrogance and brawn and brut-ish grins that surpass the immediate tinge of terror that slip into his eyes now as he watches his dagger turn against him. Erasmus does not miss the bounty paper strapped to his side, he knows it well. And as he brings his gaze from that bounty picture to the face of the hunter, he plunges the dagger into the man's chest as deep as it will allow. It is not deep enough – it is blunt and poorly made, and seems to cause nothing but discomfort and awe. 

The hunger crawls up from his gut and rises like fire in his throat, and as he clenches his jaw, he can feel the rage tunneling through like a massive current. He is a spectre, a wild creature of conjured shadows that shift and swim in the dying light – and nestled beneath their shade unclench his fangs, caught in the glint of the moon. He digs deep, deep enough to stifle the hunter's agonized cry, deep enough to feel his pulse between his jaws and pounding in his skull. And he drinks. And drinks. And drinks. And there is nothing, then. The body becomes too heavy, and he releases as it collapses to the ground with a solemn thunk. His tongue lapped where the blood remained, pooled against the softness of his lips and dribbling down his chin as he admires the dead. The initial shock is a cool high – it moves over his body with a shiver, and the consolation that rises to greet him is bittersweet. For a long moment, his mind is quiet for once in a long time, and he revels in it. But the dark creeps in through the cracks and edges, and bids his wares with a cold touch. Habit calls him again, and he loots the limp body, shredding the bounty paper to pieces.

He withdrew the blade, though it didn't seem much use to him, it was worth pawning to the shops that bothered to scrape the barrel enough to barter for it. It was still hand-crafted, and he had a silver-tongued way of glorifying things far beyond their own expectations. He also selected a sun talisman from his person, whether it was his own or something he found off another hapless bounty, another item of no more use to him than a bartering chip. Even finer were the coins he rattled from the satchel and stuffed in his own, pleased with the winnings. But the most curious of all – he carried an odd card, one that didn't seem to quite suit him. Erasmus flipped it back and forth, admiring the art on it, his brows furrowed as he analyzed it. The stakes are high, but the pot is full. Will you try your hand tonight? The inscription was cryptic, and moreso the words beneath it, but what appealed to him the most was the insignia of a scarab on the front. As he stared at it, he remembered seeing a dark stone scarab placed somewhere in the marketplace, but the memory was brief and insignificant, some image stolen from time in one of his wanderings.

----------------------- THE WHITE SCARAB -----------------------


The moon was high in the sky when he found the doors of the White Scarab. It was waxing and half full, gleaming down with a grin that smiled fondly upon fortune – and upon his own fortunes, he was sure. It flowed against the knocker, pooled in the round semblance of the beetle's wings, glimmered in a soft reflection of the alleyway lit in the lunar pallor. His gold struck from the dark, webbing and distorted in the mirrored stone. This, this, he recalled passing while he traipsed the quiet corridors during his frequent meanderings through the streets of Denocte, eager for explorative conquests, eager for food and drink and whatever pleasure awaited him in its stead. How odd it was, that he had never cared to linger his thoughts on such a place then, long enough to truly see – as he now observed those spiraling towers, windowless and intimidating, exotic. His gaze flowed over their height before resettling over the knocker, and he is underwhelmed to find that there is – in fact – no true knocker. There is nothing for him to grab onto, no knob or ledge or lever that he can see, and so for a moment he only stands and considers.

It is quiet. Too quiet for any place of particular circumstance, unless it was a trap or abandoned stead. The vague description on the card could leave that determination on either, and he wasn't all that interested in discovering the former. And if it was abandoned, then why? The door was clean and the knocker polished, the street's dust clapped with what looked like many hooves other than his that both led in and out. But how? 

He slid the card back out of its keep and flipped it once more, but the way in which it blocked the beams from the moon revealed a slot he hadn't noticed. Erasmus paused, considering his first two assumptions and the grave possibilities of one, and looked back to the card. It displayed no note of aging, the edges were as sharp and unfolded as any mint card, and it seemed as though a pretty care was placed in its conception. Not too old to be owned by an abandoned lot, and far too quality to be in the possession of a measley gang for their lure and holding. A few quiet breaths rose and fell with his chest as he thought, the gold scythes of his eyes running over the card a minute more before he slipped it into the slit.

A soft click, and he drew back as wings struck out from the knocker's sides, and the doors gaped wide.

Calculative eyes peered in through the darkness, and his lungs readily breathed in the perfume of incense that enveloped him at once. “Come in,” bid softness from the dark, or the breeze itself – that as he stood, caressed past him in loving stroke, slipping from the roll of his chin that was still faintly stained with the taste of blood. Against his better nature, his body moved without his knowing – his muscles flexed and strode, his hooves plodded against the stone tile beneath him and shirked of reluctance even as the doors clattered shut behind him.

The corridor was dark, dimly lit by the cascade of a few candles, and through the darkness he could see that the place was far from abandoned – and if it was a trap, it was a wealthy one, well decorated. And somewhere within he could hear the hum of conversation, not whispers but true conversing, casual syllables that he could barely make out until he found his way into the den. He paused, and he thought that he had felt someone brush past him – but when he looked there was nothing, only the candlelit corridor that seemed to move with the dancing light from the burning wicks. Before him lay extravagance, one sort of luxuries that he had never encountered before – and he thought, this may have been something he would have known, if he cared for the lavish lifestyle of royalty. But the Wilds could never have afforded such gallantry as this, they were a small tribe in a realm of vast nothing. They knew nothing but the warring tribes and the brushlands that went on for as far as you could see. Even the deep of the woods were scarcely traversed, and it was a wonder to them that Erasmus could have ever survived.

At his left, a slender woman arrived, dressed tastefully ornate, and he almost expected to see a look of disdain in her gaze as she looked him up and down – as he didn't care much for fancy 'drobe, and he didn't have the mind to even braid his long mane except when he needed it out of his way – but nothing changed, and her expression was effortlessly delighted. “Your pleasure tonight?” he almost couldn't figure out whether it was a question or an offer, but he supposed it was the first. A brow raised, as did his chin, regarding her from above with scrupulous inspection. “what is this?" And almost directly – “Follow me.” a quaint grin, and she turned from him through the den. He followed her, admiring the architecture and playing his eyes over those who enjoyed their stay. Many seemed to occupied to acknowledge him, which pleased him well enough, whether in their drink or food or gambling or romance. She led him through the Floor, through the Lounge, and briefly exhibited the Rooms and their manners, detailed their expectations for his stay and clarified that wealth was to be had where wealth would roam. The coins in his pocket jingled merrily, and the girl was pleased. With no further questions he bid her off and took his time to wander freely, though secured his sights on the risks of the Floor.

The Floor---------------------------

Erasmus found an open table and pried the Dealer for an explanation of the rules – each player is drawn five cards. You bid your fortunes. And you hope for a good hand. Satisfied, he seated himself at the table and laid down the antler-hilt dagger and a few gold coins. That provided, he waited for more players and offers, his half-moon eyes warily scraping from silhouette to silhouette as they passed through the room. At his side he clutched the bag tight, well full with fellow coins and the gold sun pendant that were hungry for the table.










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Aghavni
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#2



i feel small, but so are stars from a distance



S
he normally kept her acquaintance with the new patrons she escorted to the Floor as merely that — an escorter, seen once and rarely again.

To that effect, Aghavni was little more than a pretty smile to ease the apprehension all newcomers wore to varying degrees. The extravagance and ominous darkness of the Scarab was… an experience to behold at first, as one of their older patrons had recalled with a fond smile. Of course, none ever regretted entering. The Scarab’s retention rate was as impressive as its upholstery.

As the one responsible for luring most of the new blood to the Scarab door — her cards were slipped into only the most promising of pockets — Aghavni took pains to erase all traces of judgement or, Solis forbid, scorn from her eyes that could discourage the potential gold. (‘Gold’ was slang for patrons, as walking purses of gold were really all they were. She thanked Solis twice daily for them.) She curtsied at the right time and sparingly, to keep its effect enchanting, and her speech was brief yet unfailingly polite.

She was good at it, concealing her judgement. Charon would never have let her onto the Floor if she hadn’t mastered it, because when she was younger she had been unapologetically bold in voicing her opinions about the fussy highborn heirs House Hajakha received more frequently than their twice weekly shipment of cakes.

Sometimes, however, Aghavni’s attention would become fixated on a new patron to an inexplicable degree. Oftentimes it was because she longed to spirit away their jewelry, but other times it was because she felt something distinctly wrong about them. She couldn’t explain it. She never tried. Instead, she troubled herself with approaching them.

The moment the boy had entered, she had sensed it. The wrongness. And, perhaps more disarming — it had been faint, but she knew she had not been mistaken. He had smelled of blood.

He had arrived late, even by the Scarab’s standards, and the table he had wandered to after she’d curtsied and left him to the Floor was hosting its last run of the night. Aghavni’s eyes skimmed over the three women and two men who had joined him at the table — either drunk or determined to win back their losses, she could never tell — and a smile settled primly on her lips when she spotted the open chair to the boy’s right.

She motioned for a passing server to take over her role, which he accepted with a pleased nod. There would be no more new arrivals for the night, which meant that he was relieved from closing duties to instead nurse a glass of liquor while he meandered at the entrance and waited to lock the doors.

After some consideration, Aghavni tugged the spikes from her hair and tucked them inside her scarf. Her curls tumbled around her shoulders, and before she could lose her nerve she made her way to the table and slipped into the open chair.

The white-suited dealer gave her little attention, only an imperceptible nod. Most of the staff knew the young director set herself at the cards almost nightly to keep her formidable skills polished. Silently, she watched as he shuffled and cut the deck to deal them each a hand. The gold began to flow.

Without hesitation Aghavni unclasped a rose shaped hairpin from her tail, each petal bursting with rubies, and placed it delicately on the table. She had taken it ages ago from a doe-eyed daughter of House Ieshan (always easy marks, Ieshan’s children — they were raised on adoration and religious piety, and were such snobs that they rarely troubled themselves with keeping track of their own belongings) and wouldn’t miss it if she lost it tonight. Which she rarely did.

Casually, she looked over at the boy’s offerings. A dagger and a few coins glinted dully on the black velvet tabletop. “I’ve never seen a dagger with an antler hilt.” Her emerald eyes went large with curiosity, and she leaned just a touch closer to him as she smiled, brighter than when she had greeted him at the door.

Her smile wavered not even a little as she confirmed her suspicions. This close to him, she could almost taste the metallic tang of blood. It sickened her. She drew away, flicking a curl from her eyes. The rich and the powerful were no stranger to perpetrating violence, but they took care to wash it out of their skin. This boy was neither of those things, and he hadn't taken care. 

So how had he ended up with a card?



@Erasmus | super excited for this thread!










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Erasmus
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#3

SOMETHING HERE DRAWS HIM IN THE DEEP, EYES HIM WARILY, AND SCOWLS WITH A TEETHING GRIN. HE INVITES IT, THIS TENSION. JUST AS MUCH AS HE IS REPULSED BY IT. IT IS SUFFOCATING, CLOTTING, LIKE THE MATTED WEIGHT OF AN ANXIOUS BREAKDOWN LINGERING LIKE THE SWORD OF DAMOCLES. FOR A MOMENT, HE WONDERS IF IT IS THE LACK OF WINDOWS – OR THE LACK OF DOORS – THE LACK OF ESCAPE ROUTES, OF ANONYMITY, THE BREEZE OF UNKNOWING HE WIELDS LIKE A CLOAK ON THE DUSKY STREETS OF THE NIGHT MARKETS. PERHAPS IT IS THE EXPRESSIONS OF CURIOUS ONLOOKERS, CONSCIOUS THAT THIS RUFFIAN IS AN OUTSIDER, SOME VAGABOND OF CHOSEN GOODS PLUCKED FROM THE COLD, DEAD HANDS OF WEALTHIER MEN. FOR A TENDER SECOND THE FEELING OF MISPLACEMENT WASHES OVER HIM IN A WAVE OF DISCONTENT BEFORE HE IS FLOODED WITH AN ALMOST-SATISFACTION. 

THE DISSONANCE IS RIVETING. HE IS SO UNLIKE THEM. AND YET,

HE IS MORE WOLF THAN MAN, AND MORE SHADE THAN WOLF. A VIPEROUS, WRITHING CADAVER BRIMMED WITH PERNICIOUS PURPOSE. THERE ARE LEVELS TO HIS MIS-BELONGING THAT NONE OF THEM COULD EVER PERCEIVE. AND HE REVELS IN IT. HE BATHES IN IT, DONS IT AS THEY DONNED THEIR JEWELS AND PRECIOUS FABRICS. WHERE THEIR CONFIDENCE CAME TO THEM IN ALCOHOLIC STUPOR, IN THE GLUTTONY OF RICHES AND THE ESTEEM OF REGALITY, HIS WAS DOUBLED IN THE ACHE OF THE TABOO. INDEED, THERE WAS NO QUESTION THAT HE BELONGED HERE. IF EVER, NONE A TIME MORE THAN THIS VERY MOMENT. 

IT DID NOT TAKE LONG FOR THE BOOTHS AROUND HIM TO FIND PATRONS AT THEIR SEAT, SOME HARDLY EVEN TAKING A NOTICE TO HIS PRESENCE. WHILE OTHERS – HE WAS ELBOWED BY A DRUNKEN MAN STUMBLING TO THE TABLE, GIGGLING DAME IN TOW, AND WHILE A GLANCE WAS SEEMINGLY LOST TO THE OFFENSE A DOUBLE TAKE WAS QUICK TO OBSERVE THE FANGED SCOWL AND LOOSEN. A LAUGH, A COIN TOSS, AND A BOISTEROUS BELLOW FOR ERASMUS TO TAKE HIS CHOICE IN APOLOGETIC ALCOHOL. HE PAUSED FOR A MOMENT, NOT MUCH A DRINKER, BEFORE SUPPOSING SOME SMALL TOKEN LOST FROM THE MAN'S PURSE INTO ERASMUS'S CUP WAS PUNISHMENT ENOUGH FOR A CLUMSY ENGAGEMENT. HIS CHIN ROSE ABOVE THE MAN'S, GOLDEN GLINT PEERING FROM THE DEEP OF HIS FACE TO ROVE OVER HIS FEATURES BEFORE HE NODDED SLIGHTLY, CROOKED GRIN EMPTILY CRAWLING TO ONE CORNER OF HIS LIPS. “bourbon."

THE MAN HESITATED A MINUTE, THOUGH HIS LOOK EXPRESSED MORE SURPRISE THAT ERASMUS KNEW A WORD MORE THAN AT THE DEMAND ITSELF, AND HE CAST A SIDEWAYS GLANCE TO HIS ESCORT. “top shelf for the man, would you?” AND SHE WAS OFF INTO THE DARK OF THE LOUNGE, DISAPPEARING INTO THE SHIFTING SHADOWS THAT DWINDLED IN THE INCENSE SMOKE. MORE COINS STRUCK THE TABLE. JEWELS. PRECIOUS STONES. THE DAGGER LAY POISED AMONG THEM, JUST AS MISPLACED AS ITS PROPRIETOR. HIS EYE FELL UPON A SMALL SPECK OF DRIED BLOOD THAT DOTTED WHERE THE HILT MET THE BLADE, AND WONDERED HOW HE HAD MISSED IT BEFORE. OR PERHAPS IT WAS A REFLECTION OF SOMETHING IN THE ROOM? NONE SEEMED TO NOTICE IT, CONSUMED IN BETS AND CONVERSATIONS THAT FELL BEYOND HIS INTEREST.

HE REMAINED FOCUSED ON THAT CARMINE SPECK UNTIL A BODY FILLED THE EMPTY SEAT TO HIS OTHER SIDE. HIS EYES MOVED, BUT HIS HEAD DID NOT FOLLOW, DRINKING HER IN HIS PERIPHERAL. SMALL TREMORS, SMOOTH MOVEMENTS, AND A ROSE PIN SECURED ITS SPOT BESIDE HIS (NOT HIS, NOT AT ALL) DAGGER. HE FELT HER EYES SEAR PAST HIS SHOULDER UPON THAT BLADE, AND HE WONDERED – ALWAYS WONDERING, GRECIAN DREAMER – IF SHE TOO SAW THE RUBY DROPLET. IT WAS UNCERTAIN HOW LONG IT TOOK BETWEEN THAT MOMENT AND THE NEXT, TICKING SECONDS THAT CLUNG INSIDE HIS LUNGS GROPING FOR BREATH – HE IS NEVER THAT MESSY, NEVER SO DISORGANIZED – BEFORE HER WORDS WASH OVER HIM LIKE PINS AND NEEDLES. 

SHE DOES NOT CALL FOR GUARDS. SHE – WHAT IS THIS – ADMIRES THE AWFUL MARK OF POOR BLACKSMITHING.

FINALLY HE ALLOWS HIS CHIN TO FOLLOW HIS SIGHT, AND BEFORE HE CAN SPEAK, HE IS INTERRUPTED BY HIS ARRIVING GLASS OF BOURBON. HIS WORDS ARE STIFLED, A MUFFLED GRUNT AND ANOTHER GLARE IN THE DRUNK'S DIRECTION BEFORE HE THANKED THE GESTURE WITH A CURT NOD. HE HADN'T MENTIONED ICE, AND SO THE BOURBON POOLED FLATLY IN THE GLASS, WHAT HE ASSUMED WAS MEANT TO BE A DOUBLE SHOT APPEARED A TRIPLE – OR PERHAPS, QUADRUPLE – HELPING THAT TEMPTED THE BRIM OF THE DIAMOND-ETCHED GLASS. HE TOSSED A QUICK SIP, DOWNING HALF OF ITS CONTENTS WITH A TWITCH-LIDDED GRIN THAT BURNED TO THE BACK OF HIS TEETH, AND RETURNED HIS ATTENTIONS ON HER. 

SHE WAS PECULIAR. 

SOMETHING ABOUT THE WAY HER GREEN EYES SHONE LIKE A JADE IN THE LAMPLIGHT AND THE WAY HER FLAXEN HAIRS FELL PALE AS MOONLIGHT AGAINST HER NECK SEEMED OUTRIGHT ODD, UNNATURAL. HE DRANK IN THE VELVET SMOOTH COAGULATION OF COLOR MATCHED WITH THE PALLOR OF HER FACE, AND IT WAS UNEARTHLY COOL, GRACIOUS, EXOTIC AND – BUT SOMETHING ABOUT THE EYES, SOMETHING UNSETTLING THERE. THE GREEN, THEY PEERED, THEY DOVE, DEEP AND DEEPLY. CHILLING AND BURNING AND WARPED AND FULL AND WILD, NOT PREDATORY AND NOT TIMID; UNREACHABLE. OTHERWORLDLY. SHE WAS PECULIAR. THE WAY THE BREEZE THROUGH THE LOUNGE FOUND IT IN ITS WHIM TO TOUSLE THE BLONDE HAIRS AND SWEEPING TENDRILS TENDERLY ACROSS THE SOFTNESS OF HER NAPE – AND HOW STRANGE, HOW OUTLANDISH. 

ERASMUS DID NOT CARE FOR MOST THINGS THAT BREATHED. WHEN THIRST OR HUNGER FOUND HIM CRAVING THINGS MORE THAN GREENS OR POPPY WINE THEN HE CARED FOR THINGS THAT WERE BENEATH THE BREATHING, YES. FOR WHAT CAUSED THEIR WARMTH, BUT NOT FOR IT. FOR THE TENDER MACHINATIONS THAT SWAYED BENEATH THE SKIN, A SHALLOW CONSTRUCT, FLESH. SOMETHING THAT BROKE TOO EASILY. AND THEIR INTERESTS, SO MUCH SOFTNESS, SO MUCH WANTON GLEE IN SIMPLE THINGS, MATERIAL THINGS, WEATHER THINGS, HOW WAS YOUR DAY THINGS. MORTALITY WAS WRETCHED.

BUT SHE WAS PECULIAR, YES. SO PECULIAR, HE WANTED TO KNOW MORE.

SHE LEANED CLOSER TO HIM AND HIS BREATH LOCKED TIGHT IN HIS CHEST. HER WARMTH ROSE FROM HER LIKE PERFUME, CARESSING HIS SHOULDER WITH THE LURE OF VEINING SWEETNESS ENTANGLED WITH – WHAT, WHAT, SOMETHING SHE KEPT FROM HIM. HE LOATHED THE LIVING, THEIR BREATHS, THEIR WARMTH. BUT HERS, HE KNEW HERS WAS THE SUCCOR OF PULSING VITALITY, HOT BLUSHING ICHOR THAT ROSE TO MEET HIS WITH A SUFFERING CURIOSITY. HE CRAVED IT SILENTLY, THAT SHE MAY LEAN CLOSER AGAIN. HE HIMSELF, RELENTED NOT. HIS EVERY ATTEMPT TO LOOSEN HIS MUSCLES WAS MET WITH THE RISE OF MORE PINS AND NEEDLES, THE RUMMAGING OF TENSION THAT ROARED THROUGH HIM LIKE A STORM. IT ROSE TO HIS TEMPLE, SETTLED IN HIS TIGHT JAW, BREAKING AGAINST THE BACK OF HIS FANGS AS HIS TONGUE SOUGHT THE SPACES BETWEEN.

DESPITE THIS, HE REMAINED HIS OWN FORM OF CASUAL – THIS SUAVE, SOMEWHAT BRUSQUE DISPLAY OF SMOOTH VIRILITY THAT WASHED OVER HIM IN EVERY WORD AND GESTURE. THE SHADOWS FELL ACROSS THE SHARPNESS OF HIS FEATURES, POOLED IN THE PORTIONS THAT STRETCHED AND RELENTED A GRIN, WOLFISH AND WICKED IN THE DIM LIGHT, ALBEIT TENACIOUSLY POLISHED FROM TOOTH TO TOOTH. HIS FACE IS FULL OF ANGLES, RUGGED EDGES GILDED IN GOLD. HIS OWN EYES LIMITLESS AS THEY DAWN OVER EMERALD. “does it appeal you?" his eyes passed back over the dagger, taking care not to focus on what may or may not have been a speck of blood glimmering against the hilt, and observes the knobby handle and small blemish in the blade. he takes care not to discredit its craftmanship however, not while it is a bargaining chip into the means of riches. “i've seen too many of them." HE DOES NOT NOTICE THAT SHE SHIES SLIGHTLY FROM HIM, NOR THAT THE SMELL OF BLOOD LINGERS FAINTLY OVER HIS SKIN. WHEN HE RETURNS HIS ATTENTION TO HER, SHE IS BACK WHERE SHE HAD BEEN, GRIN IN PLACE.

A CALL OF CARDS AND THE FLUTTERING FACES ARE BROUGHT TO THE TABLE. SIGHS ALL AROUND. TWO OF THE WOMEN LEAVE, BITTER EXPRESSIONS THAT MELT AWAY AS THEY TURN TO THE FINER FILIGREE OF THE SURROUNDING CLUB. THE MAN BESIDE HIM IS ALREADY THUMBING COINS TO THE TABLE IN BETWEEN SIPS, UNCERTAIN OF HOW MUCH IS TOO MUCH TO PLACE, OR PERHAPS CONFUSED WHETHER THE TWO COINS HE PLACED WERE THREE, OR IF THE FOUR HE PLACED WERE ONE, OR IF THE TWELVE THAT SEATED THEMSELVES WERE THE ACTUAL TWENTY THAT MOUNDED. THE WOMAN ACROSS THE TABLE PURSED HER BROWS IN AMUSEMENT, AND THE MAN BESIDE HIM SILENTLY PRESSED HIS WAGERS TO THE TABLE. IT WAS A LOSS – AND THE STRANGER SEATED BESIDE HIM WAS BID TO COLLECT HER WINNINGS. “i suppose it's yours, now." BUT THE TIMBRE OF HIS VOICE IS NOT BITTER WHERE IT FALLS, A HUM BENEATH THE PLEASANT DAZE OF THE SCARAB. HE CONSIDERED LEAVING AT HIS FIRST LOSS, BUT HE RESOLVED HIS INTRIGUE TO PLACE MORE COINS ON THE TABLE.

HE PLUCKED THE SUN SIGIL FROM HIS SATCHEL HESITANTLY, EYING IT QUIETLY AND PASSING IT OVER TO ADMIRE BOTH SIDES. ITS GOLD SHONE BENEATH THE HOVERING LAMPS, A GLITTERING GLIMMER CASCADING IN A RIPPLE OVER ITS FACE. A PART OF HIM LOATHED TO RELINQUISH IT, BUT WHAT GOOD WOULD IT SERVE HIM MORE THAN A BARGAINING CHIP? HE PLACED IT ON THE TABLE ALONGSIDE THE COINS, THEIR FACES SEEMING LESSER WHEN PITTED AGAINST THE GLINT OF THE SIGIL, HIS OFFERING FOR THEIR NEXT ROUND. THE TABLE CLOSED TO ALL BUT THE FIVE THAT REMAINED, DEALER SHUFFLING CARDS FOR THE NEXT HANDS WHILE PRYING EYES SWEPT BY IN THE SHADOWS.

IF THE INTENSITY STILL LINGERED IN PLACE OF HIS UN-BELONGING, IT WAS DISCARDED FOR THE PLEASURE OF THE WOMAN'S COMPANY, HOWEVER ALOOF TO HER MOTIVES HE WAS. HIS WAGERS WERE PALTRY, SIMPLE MATERIAL THINGS THAT COULD BE REPLACED WITH A LITTLE EFFORT. HER TIME WAS MORE PRECIOUS TO HIM – THE WANT, THE NEED TO KNOW MORE THAT SOUGHT HIS ATTENTIONS AFTER HER, THAT BID HIM STAY AND WAIT. SECRETS WERE HIS FAVORED CURRENCY, AND THERE WAS MUCH TO BE DISCOVERED IN THE PIT OF THOSE VIRIDESCENT EYES. 



@Aghavni









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Aghavni
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#4



i feel small, but so are stars from a distance



T
he woman across the table was giggling.
 
Giggling in that high-pitched, indulgent sort of way, the telltale sign that a first-timer was finding the Scarab exceedingly to her taste. Either for the gambling — though the five card spread in front of her disagreed; laid bare, anyone could see just how much gold she was going to lose next round — or, thought Aghavni, for the company. It was always one of the two.

A sapphire suit drifted silently up to the woman’s now-empty decanter of merlot, accepted the handful of coins she pressed into his palm — one coin too much, but who was the wiser? — and filled it up to the fluted neck. After corking the bottle, he turned to bow to her, tucked the coins into a black pouch secured around his leg, and stepped around the table.

Aghavni’s eyes followed him, curious. She hadn’t called for a drink.

And it wasn’t for her. “A refill, sir,” the server murmured as he tipped another bottle, amber-red this time, to the half-empty glass belonging to the bay besides her. She arched a brow, watching as the gold stream curved smoothly into the crystal glass. Was that...

Every crate of alcohol that came off the twice-weekly caravans passed under her nose for inspection. They had gotten that one in just last night — Denoctian brewed, aged to perfection, five crowns a bottle. They didn’t sell them by the glass, but by the bottle, which explained the server’s unsignaled visit. 

How, then, had this boy, with his fading blood-smell and mercenary’s smile, spared such an extravagance?

Before the server could melt back into the milling swathe of silks and amorous laughter, Aghavni tugged lightly on his trailing sleeve. His grey eyes fixed on her, before a look of recognition bloomed across his face. 

“I’ll have what he has.” She swept her eyes to the gold-streaked bay and smiled. “Charged to the Proprietor’s tab.” Father won’t mind. I’ll pay him back. 

The glass was placed just to the left of her cards, a bead of bourbon sliding down the crystal like a drop of petrified amber. She raised it to her lips and sipped slowly, languidly. It washed down her throat like fire. She'd made her position clear to him. Nobleman's daughter, at the least. Director, if he knew more than he was letting on. 

"Does it appeal you?"

She tilted her face towards him, intrigued. She pursed her lips as she spun his question around and around in her head, ignoring the attentive, raking gaze he swept over her, one that lingered too long, she thought, on the curve of her throat. She’d arranged her curls to cascade over half of her face, shadowing the nervous fluttering of her eyes from view. They were forever the part of her she could never fully control. 

Finally, she settled for a simple, innocuous, “Yes.” It wasn’t a lie — she’d never seen a style like that sold at Denoctian market, nor carried by any of the patrons. And ever since childhood, she’d always fancied herself a collector of sorts. Did it matter how an item came to be in a collector's collection?

The dagger would look pretty atop her shelf.

“Have you? Then you are not Denoctian, I gather. It’s not a style commonly seen here.” She kept her voice light enough, though somewhere in the middle of her sentence she’d unconsciously brushed her hair back, and now her eyes stared much too keen, much too bright, into his. 

Her heart thudded in her chest, as rapid as a hunted rabbit’s. She tried to tell herself that she was far from prey. She’d approached him for a reason and he didn’t know that, for one; and for another, she doubted he saw past her looks. Knowing all of that, and repeating it in her head like a chant, her heart still refused to settle. She was not Minya, nor — her heart jerked again — August. She wasn't like them; couldn't carve hearts out onto a platter, couldn't ply secrets with a promise of a kiss. 

But it wasn't too late for her to learn.

The round ended with the triumph of her hand confirmed. Gold was dealt or swept away, new bets laid at the sacrificial altar. Aghavni merely pushed half of her winnings forward, her mind an ocean away from calculating odds. The giggling woman and her new acquaintance had sauntered away in the hubbub, waved politely aside by the thin-lipped dealer when their purses came up empty. She suspected that they hadn’t minded much. One moment longer and one would’ve devoured the other.

The antler dagger gleamed like a sunbaked bone in front of her. She’d won it, and its previous owner had barely spared a glance of remorse for his loss when she’d slid it smilingly over to her side. "I suppose it's yours now."

“I suppose it is,” she replied, before a peal of gasps ripped through the Floor like a tsunami. Someone had spilled half their wine all over their white cape. It looked like a bloodstain, and the cape was ripped off with a cry. 

The real tragedy, however, was that the other half of that wine was, at present, soaking into the carpet. 

The fool, Aghavni cursed, before dragging her eyes reluctantly from the offense. It wasn’t her business — servers had already descended upon the mess like a flock of sapphire vultures. Besides, it wasn’t a memorable night at the Scarab if an incident like that didn’t happen with clockwork regularity. 

There was an hour left until closing. An hour to — to do what? Aghavni's glass sat half-empty besides her, and she dared not move too quickly lest her limbs betray their wobbliness. She was a terrible drinker, yet every time she couldn't help but test her hypothesis. Sighing, she rummaged through her mind, banishing the fog from it (to no avail), before she remembered. 

She was investigating him, the boy with the pretty golden eyes. 

She hadn’t called them — him — pretty before. Though, with only a cursory glance it was obvious he was. In a rugged, wolfish way, the gold streaking through his dark pelt as brilliant and regal as the livery of the king's guard. Different, so different, from the silk-slathered types she usually saw. And the way he looked at her... her skin suddenly tingled. 

When she turned back, biting her tongue to fight the dizzying effects of the liquor, a gleam of gold on the table where there hadn't been anything before snagged her attention. It looked like a medallion. But of what?

Her eyes widened when she recognized it.

A sun sigil. That looks just like... she sucked in a breath. The sigil of the Solterran monarchy, burned into her left eye. Or — something similar? Sun symbolism was popular in far more places than Solterra, no matter how much the monarchs had tried to claim the sun as their heavenly dominion. She couldn’t be sure of its authenticity, and she hadn’t drunk enough bourbon yet to jump foolishly to conclusions. 

But she’d drunk enough to do something else. Golden sigil shifted slowly into golden eyes. He was so tall, and she so far from his ear. The commotion hadn't died down, and speaking was like shouting into a cavern that screamed back. Irritation flooded through her, thick as syrup; it was also becoming a chore looking up at him. She was left with little choice. 

Her telekinesis reached out and alighted like a sparrow upon his horn. She smiled when she felt her grip tighten, and, leaning towards him, gave a smart little tug to drag his head down. Just a little — he wouldn't mind, would he? Her lips blew softly into his ear as she looked down at the sigil. “Now where," she murmured, "did you get that?”

Her grip was gone as quickly as it came. And with their distance just shy of touching, the lighting just enough, the emerald edges of a sun arose as a pale phantom in Aghavni’s pupil. 



@Erasmus | oooooh










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Erasmus
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#5

A devil could not marvel in the nuances of fate and the winds that melded, ever so softly, what tides fortune may bring. Indeed, he could have thought of himself a gifted individual if he had cared to suppose all things were lacking in coincidence, but such would be a celestial suggestion, one of which he couldn't be bothered to consider. His luck was that of a thief's luck – menial, just in scraping by, the gilded fortunes of a cunning grin and a swift hand that cheated, if only, the leagues of those whose footsteps were shadowed in death. Never greater a feat – it came to him in waves, in a mockery of destiny, the parody of such pleasurable happenstances that found him never wanting less than the next row of treasures. Erasmus could not be disturbed enough to think of godly intervention, much less to consider his own titan blood that in its whim sought each golden titter of gluttony with a fervent mastery. It was luck to him as much as it was instinct, and neither brought any small epiphany as a man of accepting (though lacking of his own) patience that thwarted superstition. 

It was, for a moment of wonder, that the sanctity in the word of coincidence began to leap and bound from the well of curiosity, slopping itself across the casino table with an impetuous grin that beamed over the subtle whisper, “charged to the proprietor's tab” and melted softly into conniving shadows of the skeptical mind. His brow raised, but when her glance passed back to him his was an expression of otherwise neutrality, save for the tense way his eyes focused on everything in the room all at once in graceful sweeping, their calculative measure delving and diving for each candle flicker with hardly a suspicious twitch. At once the table was labored with an imbalance of fortunes, or so he thought, but it wasn't something that made him uneasy as it was something that tugged even harder at his interests. Perhaps, after all, the dealer was sufficient enough in his honesty and fairplay. And perhaps, at a jaunt of that mysterious happenstance that seems to clamber all too swiftly to gather him up in their fortunes, a right-time-at-the-right-place knack of things, she too was a clever fate grasping at golden threads with a thief's timely hands.

Whatever their favors sorted for them in equal or unequal parts, the dagger was now in her possession and it was of little loss to him. If he were honest, all of what he placed on the table were of little loss to him – as it was almost an effortless charade in ownership, each one founded by their own petty means. Erasmus was a king of a nothing empire here on this odd continent, and his opportune engagements found him a simple means by acquiring what others owned. Most were blissfully ignorant. The Night Markets were all too pleasant with its smells and sights and sounds that few felt a need to clutch tightly on their belongings. No doubt they may upon realization later in their dens be more quick to check their peripherals the next time they visited the markets, but that was of no consequence to him. Their grief would find another thief, probably a youth who was not so dexterous. That her newest prize was acquired by means a little more violent than a street-urchin's quick work was an unnecessary detail. The grin that slid across his face as she examined the dagger now as her own was humble, as if he had provided it to her as a gift and not a misfortune. Truly, he marveled that a creature of such hygienic, soft-handed and gentle-voiced luxury found her entertainment with sharp things. It was a cruel misjudgment on his part, considering he had already garnered the feeling that mystery arc'd and spiraled about her like plenty more oddities looming as their own entities, he didn't doubt that there were more than antler-hilt daggers that tuned her appetites.

It was when the startling green-ness of her eyes caught him suddenly that he realized he had been looking at that arterial shadow where her hair once lay in a perfect, manicured row, enthused in the way a vein had quivered in a thin line along the curvature of her neck. Each shade in slope gathered against itself as she turned, and his eyes were quick to meet her own with no less heavy of a glance. They perplexed him more however, the way the dim-lit room couldn't be reflected in them as much as the candlelight did dance in the silhouette of her lashes, and in that mirror shined unnaturally bright. It wasn't the space of color that unnerved him the most, he deduced, but that they were near impossible to read. They were two forged doors through which he couldn't even reach his thief's hands – not for anything tangible, just empty fistfuls of ambiguities and secrecies that kept him rattling the bars like a ravening loon. Surely, if he stared too long, he may resemble that of a paling horror – onesuch vagary that wastes to time in searching and searching, or something darker that makes a man volatile in his thirsts. 

To ultimate dismay, an uproar erupted with discourteous fashion – that hobbling rise of gasps that meant to him some event much more dire than spilled wine. In dramatic woe, a cape went a-fluttering, and where its weighted fetters bore back against the carpet there dripped purplish sanguine, its rich scent wafted briefly over the onlookers of this parodied tragedy. It meant little to him. Alcohol was made by renewable means, and one wine bottle was certain to be replaced by another easily in a place so wealthy as this. He returned to the table, but quickly noted the way those green eyes were turned still, sharp as the dagger at her side, to the scene. So wrathful in fact, that he couldn't help but look back to see what it was that stirred her discontent. The offended bottle still spun on its side until it curtsied to a stop, the flow pouring lazily from its mouth. At once a flock of waiters came to assuage the scene, all of an amiable placidity that claimed no foul, and all remiss workings were languidly returned to their former ease. He chuckled, a small pop of humor in his throat as he witnessed the reprieve. A lacquered clockwork of hushed conversations, the clinking crystal china, the distant sound of sinking leather in the lounge as all the club seemed returned to its mettle. At this he realized how the group had thinned since his initial arrival, and he had never thought to question what time they closed. Or had even considered that they closed at all.

When he returned his attentions to the table he too noticed her half-glass and remembered his own, downing it with a quick click of his teeth. The fire water burned smoothly down his throat, sloshing numbingly first against the pockets of his cheeks before its pilgrimage. He was aware of the slight vertigo, a buzz more than a drunken stupor, but it wasn't enough of a fright. It wasn't often he drank, but he couldn't be humbled to consider himself chaste. All too quickly yet, perhaps by waiters that were left embarrassed and interested in letting the prior event fade into forgotten history through an abundance of congeniality and hospitality, (or by letting their clients drink themselves out of the memory, so as not to seek out the stain in the carpet in future ventures) the glass was refilled. He waited a moment that he did not feel loomed over by the apt swiftness and feigned graciousness of passing waiters, passing his offerings onto the table (those signos that looked pitiful beside the brilliance of the sun sigil) and downed another gulp.

He felt her eyes on him, but he couldn't help the way the liquor toyed with his vision and made the sigil glow under the light like a small sun itself. It glimmered in each quiver (was that him moving his eyes or did the table shake?) and sparkled like a thousand reflecting grains of desert sand. For a small moment he almost regretted placing it on the table, for its sheer beauty in person. But his detachment for the material was swift and redeeming, and with a quick shudder he shed his cares for its possession. His attention returned to him, shrugging off the pendant and returning the surrounding world. Each part carried on its own path, trudging with uncertainty into the dark of the club. Some eyes passed over the table and locked, if only for a second, on the sigil before following their mark into other rooms. The sound of the dealer shuffling cards grounded him again, but he became aware of some disturbance. Somewhere on the other side of the table, a silhouette had stopped in their roaming just beyond, and the sun sigil reflected dimly in their eyes. Slowly, those eyes clambered to meet Erasmus. Something about their nature disgruntled him. They were accusatory, disgusted. Or he was left to his whiskey-drawn imagination, but there was a certainty that the curious onlooker was at least looking at him. He made no notion to challenge this new audience, but his tongue rolled in his mouth with the taste of bourbon and the formation of unkind words that were too lazy to trace his lips. 

Even before they could manifest in his voice had he wanted, he was aware of a curious tit-tat like light fingertips brushing against the tip of his horn. He was almost numb to it, and his delayed reactions left him to simply muse its nature before he could bother seeing what it was –

a sudden jolt and his ear flicked to his companion's lips, his disarray obvious in the spectral width of his glance, their shock that shifted to frustration, and then to a soft realization as they rolled back over into the green. Hazy and dim, he observed the urgency in her stare as an outright sort of beauty that came to him as a new vision, a new door he hadn't tried. They were severe, penetrative, and the golden rinds of his own sharp eyes bore back into them with a challenge. A grin tread across his lips and he tried her grip teasingly, though enjoyed too well the way her hot breath tickled against the curve of his ear and the way he could almost – too near almost, so excruciatingly almost – feel what her skin felt like against his. Was it soft? Was it warm and pliable softness, the sort that felt too like the welcome of plush and possession that you felt you couldn't have enough? Was it hard as tack backs, needle-sharp as those eyes and grating with a roughness that hurt like pleasure? He felt her grip loosen, but he didn't move more than for a slight twitch from the relieved pressure. The warmth rose and beat against his skin, urging him onward – but he is too much a gentleman yet, yet we must earnestly reiterate. There is the small stirrings of a savagery in him that beckons him on, and as his lips rake against his fangs the motion feels almost too natural. But he does not reach out to her, and the tense fingers of that savagery claw at his insides and recoil back into the deep of his hunger. Though it scowls at him from the dark, the grin remains, and his words are a taunt. “family heirloom."

But a snort comes from across the table, and when he turns he sees that the silhouette from before has materialized in horse-flesh and pride. The man is sun-kissed bronze, a rugged nobility that denotes some nature of royal roughness – if Erasmus had known more of Novus, he would have known the man was a Solterran soldier. Following the snort, a gesture of humor that reached in response to the suggestion that it was a family heirloom, a purse of coins clinked and clattered into his bounty. The way the signos bounced and knotted against the burlap, and the way they laughed to themselves in a way money knows best, the offering came as a summons. 

Erasmus knew his words were a bold faced lie. So did the man who joined them across the table. So would the poor drunken sod beside him, if he was well enough. The other man at the table didn't seem like he could be bothered either way. And he wouldn't be so foolish as to think that Aghavni, in all her charm and sharpness even with the dulling of the drink, had been otherwise fooled by the jest. Of all the royalties that Erasmus could have come from in the scrape of The Wilds, none owned something quite so precious as the sigil that shone brightly against the mound of signos. If they had come across it, the primal bastards might have pawned it in an act of worship, not knowing that the mountain clans were the ones double fisting their offerings instead of the gods. Which led him to wonder, though to avoid self-incrimination it couldn't be wondered aloud – where had the bounty hunter found it? The hunter was undoubtedly from the rolling, roving nothingness of The Wilds and couldn't have come across it himself except if by chance or force. Why was it so important that it stirred some disquiet from his companion, and prompted a roughhewn collector to the table?

He looked to the wealth that weighed the table. The man who had joined had almost doubled the former offerings in order to make a late arrival into the game, and Erasmus counted his dues. He never placed an offer for any gamble unless he knew the value was appropriate and this – the sack was plenty, in his opinion more valuable, and for what? What good was a simple medallion that sparkled like a hundred suns? A conversation piece? A shining pendant for vanity's sake? 

Another grounding of shuffling cards slicked its way into his focus, and there was a clap to each face as they clicked against the table before each of them. 

I think it would be wise to remember that mentioned instance of gratification he endured in his odd sort of luck – a luck of a devil, of a laughing heathen, so uncontested by destiny. It was more than a faith or coincidence. It simply was, as every single fiber of his being was. And as he looked at his cards, their bold faces marked singularly with a scarab that seemed too small, too less, he realized that he again did not have the winning hand. He looked over to the woman's at his side, his eyes briefly glancing over those scarabs as well. Something about them seemed right, more right than his own, but still not quite right enough. He turned back to his glass and found it full again, and must have missed the passing waiter who had murmured something to the effect of an almost empty bottle just a minute before. With a trace of condemnation, he downed the glass again and pushed a card (without turning it over to see what it was) out of his deck. The way it shined seemed right, but he couldn't quite explain how it was right. He looked over at her deck again, the last card clicking into place. wait." He whispered against her ear, and slipped a card from her deck that didn't seem to quite fit. “Sir, you can't –” “i didn't look." erasmus's harsh voice silenced the dealer, who looked complainantly to Aghavni. "The man's drunk." the new player scoffed, but scowled again when erasmus shrugged meekly and continued trading his card for hers. just trust me, a minute. simple trade." He looked to her eyes once more, and though they were filled with the constant looming of dread and mischief, in them glistened something like a conniving honesty and a small glimmer of drunken pride concerning his instincts. Once he slipped his card in her deck, he observed it quickly once more and was satisfied in the way the beetle backs gleamed in the chandelier light. With a small half wink, he returned to his own cards and waited for the call to reveal their decks. 

One day, his luck would run out.




@Aghavni









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