71st Spring, 510 A.V. It was night. Outside the winds from the desert carried the memory of Syna's heat, whispering through palm fronds, water fountains, and the gardens of the noble and ignoble alike. Torches flickered, beating back the darkness, but it was a losing game for them. Only the moon and the stars were constant, and their light was dim tonight. Inside, the scions of the House of the North Winds slept, only guards and a few servants still wakeful. Marble floors and silk sheets remained cool. Oil lamps were turned down, the lowest blue flame before nothing, so as not to consume unnecessary fuel. It was quiet. In Ifran's room, he had fallen asleep at his desk at some point, then awoken to hide away the opera he was writing, something that he would not, could not share until he knew which way the winds would blow him, the story of a concubine, a story whose political implications were not lost upon him. And so, after writing for hours, he tucked it away in a private place for him and only him. In Ifran's bed he now slumbered, and if he had a wicked conscience, it didn't keep him from Nysel's embrace. |
She sat, on the floor beside the bed, for quite some time. One of the Eypharian's arms had spillt over the side of the mattress in his slumber, the fingertips of his hand dangling just above the floor. Cyrah settled beside it, watching it. A sniff, once – twice, to be sure of the scent. And then she simply observed. How the fingers twitched as he dreamt. When the pulse in his wrist hastened or slowed. She could not have said what she was looking for, though eventually she unwound to her feet, casting a lean shadow across his face where he slept.
She lifted her hands, carefully untying the veil that kept the lower half of her face hidden, and pulled it aside. A deft twist of her fingers found the veil wrapped prettily about her hair instead, and she looked at the Eypharian without the mask between them. And then scratched at her nose with a fingertip.