1st Winter, 520AV
It had been an uncomfortable few days since she’d found out about the death of her mother. She’d spent several days writing back and forth with one of her mothers friends, trying to demand that they send her her mothers body so that she could at least take care of her funeral. Those demands had fallen on deaf ears and instead it had been decided that her mother would remain in Mura.
Instead her mothers friends had decided to search through her belongings to try to find something to send to her as some form of inheritance. Now it was getting close to her needing to head out to work, but her mind was otherwise occupied.
Today was the day that they were going to send her whatever it was that they had chosen from her mothers belongings, and she was waiting until the last possible second before she would leave for work, just in hopes that she would receive whatever it was before she had to leave for the day.
She had already dressed herself and laced her shoes, and her backpack was packed with everything she might need for the day, and now she was pacing back and forth across the floor of her small home, impatiently waiting.
It wasn’t long before a knock came at the door and hurriedly she answered it, the man making the delivery holding an envelope out to her.
“Thank.” she said as calmly as she could despite her voice shaking before the man turned to leave and she closed the door, hurriedly sitting down and tearing open the envelope to find a small, neatly written note, a bracelet, and what looked like a charm.
‘Dear Ari’Ellin. After much consideration and reading through your mothers journals, this was what she had intended worthy to pass on to you as a gift. This item is now yours as a memory of your mother and what she did for you.’
Ari’Ellin let her eyes look over the note, reading it carefully as she nodded to herself, before finally picking up the bracelet and the charm.
The bracelet was made from mostly delicate, silver coloured links holding it into circle shape. Every so often, the links appeared to be bigger, and hanging from one of these larger links was a charm. The charm was shaped like a small skull, and it was decorated with a variety of small gems, most of which were white in colour, though a couple around the eye area varied from blue to black.
Overall the bracelet and charm didn’t look like anything she’d seen in her mothers possession before, although to her it was incredibly beautiful, and without thinking she opened the clasp, placing it around her wrist and then struggling to close it. Finally she’d managed to close the clasp around her wrist and she held her arm up to examine the bracelet, smiling softly.
Shaking her head, she went to take it off, though it appeared that the clasp had either disappeared, or that it was so similar to the regular links that it was indistinguishable from them.
Ari furrowed her brows at the revelation, before moving as though to slip the bracelet over her hand, finding that she’d clasped it too tightly.
Frowning more, she noticed the time and shook her head, quickly grabbing her back and heading out of her front door towards her place of work.
Instead her mothers friends had decided to search through her belongings to try to find something to send to her as some form of inheritance. Now it was getting close to her needing to head out to work, but her mind was otherwise occupied.
Today was the day that they were going to send her whatever it was that they had chosen from her mothers belongings, and she was waiting until the last possible second before she would leave for work, just in hopes that she would receive whatever it was before she had to leave for the day.
She had already dressed herself and laced her shoes, and her backpack was packed with everything she might need for the day, and now she was pacing back and forth across the floor of her small home, impatiently waiting.
It wasn’t long before a knock came at the door and hurriedly she answered it, the man making the delivery holding an envelope out to her.
“Thank.” she said as calmly as she could despite her voice shaking before the man turned to leave and she closed the door, hurriedly sitting down and tearing open the envelope to find a small, neatly written note, a bracelet, and what looked like a charm.
‘Dear Ari’Ellin. After much consideration and reading through your mothers journals, this was what she had intended worthy to pass on to you as a gift. This item is now yours as a memory of your mother and what she did for you.’
Ari’Ellin let her eyes look over the note, reading it carefully as she nodded to herself, before finally picking up the bracelet and the charm.
The bracelet was made from mostly delicate, silver coloured links holding it into circle shape. Every so often, the links appeared to be bigger, and hanging from one of these larger links was a charm. The charm was shaped like a small skull, and it was decorated with a variety of small gems, most of which were white in colour, though a couple around the eye area varied from blue to black.
Overall the bracelet and charm didn’t look like anything she’d seen in her mothers possession before, although to her it was incredibly beautiful, and without thinking she opened the clasp, placing it around her wrist and then struggling to close it. Finally she’d managed to close the clasp around her wrist and she held her arm up to examine the bracelet, smiling softly.
Shaking her head, she went to take it off, though it appeared that the clasp had either disappeared, or that it was so similar to the regular links that it was indistinguishable from them.
Ari furrowed her brows at the revelation, before moving as though to slip the bracelet over her hand, finding that she’d clasped it too tightly.
Frowning more, she noticed the time and shook her head, quickly grabbing her back and heading out of her front door towards her place of work.