Alvadas glittered beneath the afternoon sun that shone down upon the city with a skeptical light, uncertain whether such a sparkling spectacle might be enough to rival her own redolent rays. She continued to stay aloft, her face still gracing the shimmering city of glass as if, in her indecision, she might as well admire the world below for a time more. A gentle breeze drifted in on the currents of the sea, a slight tang of brine in the air in spite of the distance the city sat away from the rocking waves of the azure expanse. People dotted the streets, some stopping to stare while others carried on; such was the way with the people of Alvadas.
A spectacle, however slight, could hold one's attention for only so long before another cropped up, then another. They lived, constantly, in a world where everything was nothing and nothing was everything. To hear an Alvad speak of surprises, it would have to be quite the surprise indeed, and that surprise sat with easel before her and pencil in hand. Wings, tail, and a melancholy sigh in her eyes, the Akvatari was certainly quite the illusion. While rumors of the child of sky and sea had begun to spread through the city so intrigued by novelties and paraphernalia of the paranormal, such things often circulate at such a rate it was difficult to tell fact from fiction. That fact might be so one day and fiction the next, an ever changing set of laws that governed every Alvad's thoughts with a suggested command: what you see is not always what is there, but what is there is often what you see.
Though some of the people stop to stare and chat with little reason to hide their words about the concentrated artist who sat quite snuggly on the corner of a street, tucked between a scintillating pair of shrubs, only one approached her. If the Akvatari was considered a foreign oddity, the woman who strode with both confidence and a lilting fluidity was a local eccentricity. The skin about her eyes were coated in silvery hues of blue and green, a mirror of her lips that sat lush and azure emerald beneath the most peculiar of mustaches: a curl of rusty tentacles that languidly stretched from side to side, occasionally playing with her chin or ear as she moved. Her head was completely bald, and her eyebrows small cousins to her mustache, skin smooth and creamy like a yellow ivory. She wore a tight fitting camise, deep blue in hue, with a knee high skirt that hung at an angle from her hips, reminiscent of the great tendrils of weed that grew beneath the ocean's surface.
She stopped before the Akvatari, her wriggling brows rising in a pensive contemplation as she tapped a tentacled finger against her chest in thought, her elbow supported by a shelled claw of similar tone as her more aquatic appendages. The woman did not speak for a time, her bright blue eyes gazing with a hungry perusal at the work the Akvatari continued, lost in her concentration. When words did find their way into the open air between them, it was several ticks after Trista had glanced up and halted her work. Her voice was deep, rolling, and heady. The baritone timbre was, perhaps, a surprising sort coming from so slight a woman, but in Alvadas, it was expected to expect the unexpected.
"A half familiar and a half not... I cannot place you." Her tentacled hand extended, the writhing skin sizzling into the shape of a jelly fish's tendrils, gently weaving through the Akvatari's ruddy locks. "My attentions are not often captured, I ask you forgive my intrusion." The woman stepped back then, her feet having, at some point, shrunk into two pointed tips of a crab's leg, the shell wrapping up over the once smooth skin to disappear into her skirt's folds. With a flowing curtsy, the woman introduced herself. "I am she who is called The Sea; a Speaker, a dreamer, and one who is quite curious who you might be." Her brows raised again, though this time in question and with the spiky spines of an urchin's armor. "I have heard whispers, but so many voices in a city such as this often carry with them a hint of fallacy." A smile broke across her face, pointed teeth, though well groomed, bore shark like in the afternoon's light, "But true you are, at least so far."
Those who had stopped to regard the Akvatari had been joined by others. Where ever a Speaker was to be found, there was almost never a reason; and that lack of purpose, in and of itself, was an alluring draw to a people so fascinated by the spontaneous nature of their beloved city. Voices had fallen to whispers of speculation and intrigue as Trista began to respond, and the glittering reflections of those gathered dotted the various gleam of the buildings and street around them. What had once been a point of passing had grown into a spectacle in and of itself, as was the way of Alvadas.