It's in my brain and I'm going to share it || 30yr ♒️ internet art auntie (minors please behave or ill yeet you)
IF YOU ASK/DM ME TO COMMISSION YOU I'M BLOCKING YOU
Okay, long story short, I got sucked into an AU of Free Runner that subsequently consumed my mind, rot and all. I’ve been working on it for about a year now and am planning to make a book series, and because of the nature of the AU I feel it’s necessary to have a separate blog to ensure the two timelines don’t cross over accidentally.
So if you like mafia!AUs, questionable morality and historical revisionism conspiracies, this may be just what you need.
I swear I'm not dead, my blog was just in hibernation for... Reasons. But! I return with news!
Free Runner is on hiatus due to simply not having the time to work on it currently but StarHearts has expanded... Exponentially. I've been pouring all my spare time into the project and come away with a massive bundle of stuff I want to dole out when I sort it out.
StarHearts is going to be a book series, currently sitting at 5 possible novels to make sure everything gets touched on correctly, and I have a prequel comic scripted as well as plans for companion illustrations or a comic to the novels. To that end, I'm going to post non-spoiler content as much as possible.
Accompanying this, I have writing samples and special bonuses on my Kofi! (It also helps me to save up for moving out because holy shit I need to get out of here.) My AO3 has some of the early draft chapters and a special free peek at select Kofi drabbles if you want a taste of what's planned~
Anyway.
Look forward to updates and later, the opening of the Ask Box for the squad! Thanks, all!
I had to move back home because things are getting expensive. My car is borked and expenses keep piling up, so my commissions are on constant open status to help with that.
Idk how much I've mentioned here about my living situation but it's not the best. I'll probably explain more in a proper vent later, just know moving home means moving back to the mental equivalent of the Chernobyl exclusion zone. It's irradiated and slowly killing me the longer I'm here but I have few options anymore.
Sorry I haven't posted in a while, I've been busy working on "StarHearts" over on AO3 and revisiting my yautja story while grappling with commissions and no extra time to draw or world build </3
Even though it had been raining, the weather throughout the day was mild with no wind or torrential downpours flooding the streets—but it was a touch chilly. Nothing bad enough to dissuade customers from coming in to get dry and then get a drink to warm themselves up. If anything, the cold brought more people in for a quick sip of heat. Then they would dance to shake the cold out of their bodies. Then they would drink. And dance. Drink. Dance. Drink again—the rhythm of the club played out as it always did as humans and synths both mingled in and out of view before the bar. Careful hands worked away at drying a highball, inspecting its shine before setting it under the counter and moving to the next.
Last call would be soon, and only then did he expect the sea of bodies to start thinning, the ebb of motion falling to his periphery as the barkeeper turned to his inner catalogue to start inventorying the drinks already sold a bit early. Few things could surprise a bartender on last shift, yet surprised he was when he registered a [NEW PATRON] approaching his station at such a late hour.
She rolled in like a storm cloud, standing tall on the horizon while threatening rain and thunder in her wake.
Chin lifting to attention, the synth took a quick, slightly baffled assessment of his guest, sensory array shifting across his head in a flutter that betrayed his amusement. “Well well welcome to The Calm Before lounge,” he greeted with quiet playfulness.
She smiled, her shawl—soggy and barely retaining any volume at all, not unlike her hair—shifting down her shoulders just a touch as she sat on a stool directly in front of him.
He cracked his own grin, not too wide, before giving the glass in his hands a final wipe so he could spare her his full attention. “Can’t say I’ve seen you in here before?”
“Well, since I’ve never been, I’d be concerned if you had,” she replied, laying her clutch on the polished bartop.
The tone of her voice gave him pause as he made to ask what she wanted to start with. It was playful, yes, but rather than flirtatious and smooth like so many women tried to give him, hers was coarse. Tired, even. The kind of voice better suited to sharing dry wit and rueful sarcasm among friends, not for buttering up a booze dealer right before closing time.
A more genuine crook of his mouth betrayed the curiosity that wrapped through his code. “Long day?”
“Something like that, yeah.” The woman gave a deep sigh that heaved her chest before she clutched her damp shawl closer, attention traveling back toward the door for a moment. “I’m just here for a drink while I wait.”
A few ideas passed through his mind of what she might want, one hand lingering on the neck of a bottle just under the counter expectantly. “Someone comin’ to get you?”
A glitter of her eyes as they turned from the entry back to him kept his hand from grabbing anything, the blue color vibrant as the sky itself and alert despite what he noticed wasn’t some odd makeup trend or the result of rain marring her mascara. Dark circles made deeper by the dim golden lights of the lounge casting their unflattering shadows gave her face an edge of tired danger—or desperation. “Genuinely, I hope not,” she answered plainly, fingers drumming the counter as she shifted in her seat, clearly uncomfortable.
Given she was soaking wet, the bartender mused over how clingy and chaffed her dress was making her. It was already bunching in places that fabric didn’t need to bunch in, and he didn’t doubt if he checked there would be a puddle of water under her feet from the mop of hair that clung to her neck in spirals. Faintly, he thought she was shivering and for a moment, he likened her to a wet cat just brought in from the rain and had to bite back the urge to laugh.
“Anyway.”
His attention snapped back, his array roiling again as he shrugged off the unprofessional urge to tease her if he had any hope of her tipping. Before she could prod him about his silence, the synth let practiced words roll off his tongue, “You look like you need something hot,” while pulling and spinning a pour-stoppered bottle and a glass mug out from below the bar.
A huff of a giggle told him he was right, her red tinted lips thinning with amusement. “Well, the bouncer did say if I got a toddy it was on him.”
Only for a fraction of a second, barely visible to a human’s eye, did his body hiccup and pause before auto-engaging the steps to gather hot water and the other fixings. This at least let him reassess what he’d just experienced with a more critical mind without drawing attention. Voice calm and smooth as he wondered, “Lemon or lime?” toward her, back to his guest, he decided, I’m thinking top shelf, when selecting the whiskey he wanted, barely minding the movement along the bar as another patron came to collect a drink.
“Isn’t it with lemon?” the woman wondered back, his eyes making note of the white button up appearing down the way from him. One of the others had come back from their smoke break finally, giving him a good reason to send a note through the ServerSync network as they punched in on the register at the end of the bar.
“Yeah,” he answered back vocally, barely a second passing as he sent the encrypted equivalent of a sticky note to the staff— the wet one with blue eyes is mine . “I like mine with lime, though. It’s tangier.” Within milliseconds, there were three blips on his note as the servers acknowledged his claim.
“Well, I’m a sucker for tangy so I’ll try it.”
Pleased with himself, the synth turned to grab a kettle only to scowl as he realised the earlier motion of a patron had been someone sidling his way to the blue eyed beauty while his back was turned. This one had been knocking back everything he could tonight, the stink of alcohol thick as he breathed, body swaying on invisible waves far too close to the woman for anyone’s comfort. “I gotta’r drink if’ya make two,” the man warbled, his eyes so heavy lidded and glazed with booze it was a wonder he could see straight enough to make it to the bar, let alone talk to someone.
The synth’s jaw squeezed as he kept his temper down, array raising across his skull warningly, but the woman seemed unbothered by the incursion. Her smile was gone and the light in her eyes dimmed to icy disks, but she was alert nonetheless, her hand coming up to cover her nose; the man’s body swayed which made her lean from him before her hand turned to block his mouth as he rocked back, seemingly pushing him without laying a finger on him. “Juleps aren’t as good without mint in them, maybe have a few before you come talking to someone next time.”
It was harder to fight the laugh back this time, especially as the drunk man’s face reddened with embarrassment, then anger, his expressions too exaggerated to ignore as the emotions slowly picked their way through his alcohol infused brain. “You rude bit—” he started to blurt, getting cut off by the clatter of a glass mug and whiskey bottle landing firmly on the bartop beside him.
Jumping out of his skin nearly, the human man shrank back, the ruddy color of his face draining to white under the flaring halo of the synth barkeeper’s sensory array. Standing at his full height with his shoulders squared, he was larger than the bouncer and even more sturdy, voice a low thrum of thunder on a dark night. “How ‘bout you leave her alone, hm?”
Quaking from his head to his boots, the man only managed a squeak back.
Just then, the other bartender chimed in from an arm’s length away, cutting the fuse threatening to blow the lounge sky high if the idiot didn’t take the warning gracefully. “Sir, I can help you over here.”
Both synth and human were grateful the drunk took the offer to skedaddle away, unharmed.
Danger avoided, the array stopped glowing, settling back into its relaxed position against the synth’s head. He exhaled slowly, attention settling on the woman who still sat, unbothered by anything but her wet minidress and the cold water in her underwear. “Are you alright?” he asked quietly, doing what he could to grab a pot and fill it with hot water from the bar’s coffee maker without having to turn away again.
“Me?” she blurted, confused. “I’m fine.”
Head tilting slightly, the synth’s brow creased. “Wasn’t he bothering you?”
“Well yeah, but it’s fine. He’s drunk and he backed off pretty fast, so there’s no reason to stay mad about it.”
The bartender huffed, Easy for you then , to himself while carefully maneuvering the pot into place without dribbling scalding water everywhere.
Not a beat later, the woman, having been leaning over the counter top somewhat to peer behind the bar, chirped, “So you’re actually that tall? And here I thought there was a riser you were standing on.”
The synth chuckled, feeling the simmer of anger bubble away as he kept his focus on the soggy cat who got her smile back, just slightly. “What can I say?” he mused while running through the steps of crafting the elusive toddy before the water went cold. “I’m built different.”
“Built Old World, you mean?”
Her words made him stop completely, gaze locked on his hands for a moment before slowly creeping upward across the bar to the thin lines of her fingers folded at the edge—one set organic and flesh, the other silicone and fiberglass etched with subtle detail work he wanted to admire for a moment but couldn’t—then onto the rich, dark blue of her dress that still clung to her body in a disheveled and ill fitting way despite her full chest. Against better judgement he lingered on that line of cleavage just a tad longer than intended even as it guided him up her neck to her face, eyes still bright with awareness and just a touch of mischief now. Wary, the synth started moving again, but his focus stayed on her, their gazes locked until he finally managed, “How can you tell?”
Leaning in, that distracting flash of cleavage pressed into her hands at the bar's edge, making it more pronounced—and putting it directly in his line of sight as he mixed her toddy. “You just told me,” her voice cooed, now a perfectly smooth flirtation as he’d expected earlier from her. Was she toying with him?
The notion brought a welcome tension to his back as he considered the time.
But then he remembered the toddy.
Wrapping up the steps, the synth set her drink down and cleaned up his mess in record time, unusually silent though the human wouldn’t know that about him. Sitting back, she took her drink and gave it a gentle puff before sipping.
Her eyes glittered as they widened, making the bartender pause, his gaze stuck watching every small movement now from the way her shawl fell from her shoulder onto the stool to the how she lifted one hand from the mug and covered her mouth in disbelief. “Wait, that’s actually really good!” she blurted, all facade of seduction or confidence melting away under the sour heat of the toddy. For a moment it was as if a completely different person sat on the stool in front of him, still a wet cat of a human but the energy of her presence had shifted abruptly somehow.
It was fascinating to watch someone’s mask fall away, and partly the reason he liked tending the bar in the first place.
Soft cyan eyes drew his attention once more over the rim of the mug as the woman took a longer drink, the tension in her shoulders falling away under the weight of the whiskey. He almost couldn’t keep it up, choosing to wipe his hands down with a rag to avoid staring too much. Somehow, she was captivating even when drowned by the rain.
He found himself wondering if she still would be when she was dry and properly dressed.
Dressed? Sense trickled back abruptly. The toddy. The bouncer. The method. Right, right.
Yet her voice muddled his attempt to follow the steps correctly. “Thank you for the drink…?”
His head tilted. She’d trailed off with a question, which urged him to look her way despite better judgment telling him that was dangerous.
Her gaze flicked down over his chest and back to his face, one brow curled up as if waiting for him to figure out what she wanted. Following her intention, the synth gave himself a once over—then he laughed a bit, pinching the front of his button up between two fingers where there should have been a name tag like the others had. “When I’m on duty, everyone just calls me Z.”
“Okay, Z,” the woman hummed, gaze now roving again but this time he felt a different kind of energy in her appraisal of him—the kind he preferred when being stared at. “Thank you for the lime toddy. My name is Jenyl.”
“And thank you for giving it a try, Jenyl, ” he replied, breaking his unintended silence while returning the hungry gaze that seemed to be deciding if he was worth pouncing on.
She added on, “In all seriousness before,” the hungry look disappearing with her change in topic. “Old World synths are always over six-and-a-half feet tall. I’m not a short person but I know I have to look up at you, so you’re easily past that limit. That’s how I knew.”
All he could do was snort and chuckle. “I forget about that sometimes, I won’t lie. Now drink that while it’s hot.” With a wink, he turned to finish cleaning.
The dark rings under her eyes seemed to lighten just a bit with the camaraderie, a flush crossing her cheeks that made her a little less of a wet cat and a little more of a soggy human for a moment.
It did not change the way her cheeks seemed sunken though.
As he watched her from the corner of his eye, doing some last minute cup arranging and starting the last call, the synth named Z at last found a chance to mull over everything. Though it was not the worst case he’d ever come across, between the ‘drinks on me’ flag, her ill-fitted attire and general look of being unwell, he could only conclude that this human named Jenyl that he’d never seen before was here for a reason.
There was only ever one reason pretty girls like her came into the lounge. He needed to be helping her—not flirting with her.
That was his one rule. His only rule.
They’re brave enough to come in, so you be decent enough to get them out .
The venue crowd began to thin at last, security dipping through the back door to the dance floor to check for stragglers and waitresses clearing tables from the sitting area in front of the bar itself with no sense of urgency. Content with the evening, Z meandered back to the human and her toddy, throwing a dishrag over his shoulder for no other reason than to get her attention. “Got about twenty minutes,” he told her, kneeling down to put the bottles underneath back in alphabetical order even though they wouldn’t stay that way. “The last bus leaves in five.”
Jenyl set the mug down, having been busy swirling the last swig of toddy around the bottom but unwilling to finish it. Unbothered, she said, “I was told the last bus leaves at closing,” which prompted a slow breath as the synth let go of any ideas about booking a last minute room around the corner.
“You’re right,” he agreed, standing up and offering only a gentle, knowing smile. “How about I walk you to the stop myself once I clock out?”
A similarly kind smile returned his way. “I think I’d appreciate that, Z.”
Pretty girls like her only came to the lounge for one reason.
Because they knew that if they were brave enough to rip the chains from their ankles and dare to hope they could beat the storm, they would find a special bus that only ran after closing time at the end of the alley behind The Calm Before lounge, paid by the hand of the owner, Ven Oriz, himself to run them across the city of New Calda as far as they could get.
All they had to do was ask for the last bus before the storm hit.
Of course, not everyone knew how to ask for that, but the bartenders were all smooth talkers and under strict orders to assess any possible flags no matter how small. One such being if the bouncers offered to buy a drink, as they were the first line to see who may or may not be there for fun. Yes, there were false positives on occasion, but it always got easier once the pattern was established and a false positive was always better than a missed one.
Girls that needed help—that wanted help—had ways of letting them know once they felt safe enough to ask about the last bus.
It was his job to get them on it.
As he pondered the time it would take to walk her through the alley, the synth felt a tug of disappointment in his code. Had she actually been flirting earlier or was it a reflex? Was he making it up entirely because he thought she was fuckable and his shift was nearly over? Snorting quietly, he made himself accept the blue eyed beauty wasn’t his to ravish—and he was being a jackass for even considering it, given the circumstances. Well, no one’s perfect, he assured himself, shoulders shrugging absently while he wrung the towel through his fingers, eyes peering at the back of his right hand for a moment.
Nestled deep into the plane of his hand sat a perfectly smooth, round gemstone just a bit bigger than a duck egg the color of butter and starlight. It had been some time since he last pondered this odd feature, having gotten so used to it he’d come to see it as a natural part of his design—even though it was far from.
“That’s quite a fancy thing on your hand there,” Jenyl commented, sending a surge of panic through his circuits.
Moving quickly, Z wrapped the towel around his hand, hiding the stone—why? He wasn’t certain. He only barked, “What thing?” like a criminal caught red handed.
The woman seemed baffled by his reaction, her gaze flicking from his face to his hands and back quickly. “That?” she uttered, gesturing towards him. “Your watch?”
Relief tinged with the taste of ‘dumbass’ swept through on the heels of the panic, clearing out his system and allowing him to speak normally again. “Oh, this?” Holding up his left arm, he stepped closer to let her look at the wristwatch encircling his forearm, the inner gears and coils visible through a small window in the face. “A gift from my boss.”
“Your boss?” Jenyl’s brow raised skeptically.
“Well, the owner actually,” he grinned, winking. “I’m really good at my job.”
“I didn’t think one of The Four would be that generous. Money tends to make people selfish.”
Z’s hand twitched, grin falling as he fumbled for a reply. “What, do you know them personally or something?”
She shrugged. “No, of course not. People like that don’t show up in…” A moment of hesitation caught her, her gaze breaking away from him for a moment. “Either way, it’s not like it’s a secret or anything. The dons of this city aren’t known for being generous, regardless of their placement on the ladder of power.”
Jaw tensing again, Z tried to find something to rebuttal. To defend what he knew to be the truth–but he was blank. So he tried a different angle. “Who do you think pays for that bus you want to take?”
But frigid blue stopped his temper cold. “One generous act does not make up for a lifetime of wasted opportunity.”
What?
“It doesn’t matter anyway.”
Again, it was like a different person now sat in the chair before him, the energy drained from her body like water in a downspout. It was getting hard to keep up with, even for a synth. “What?”
Tired blue once more, Jenyl muttered, “I don’t plan to meet with any of them anyway. I’m very much done with dons, and gangs, and… everything.”
Oh. Somehow, it was too easy to forget this woman was in trouble. That he was supposed to be helping her. At least she still has her spirit, he thought deciding that a bit of snark and bad attitude was worth knowing she wasn’t a husk on her last legs. That strength would make a difference when the time came. Still, he couldn’t help a bit of teasing to try and lighten the mood, leaning on the bartop a bit and crossing his ankles. “Then what would you do if you did happen across one of The Four? Would you still call them lazy and selfish?”
“To their face?” she asked back, already continuing with the answer without a reply. “Oh, I’d say a lot more than that, but it’ll never happen. People like that don’t mingle in circles where I’m from, and I’ll be long gone before that ever changes.”
“Bold words for someone who can’t follow through. You sure you’d stay honest if given a chance?”
Jenyl scowled. “I’m always honest. It’s why I’m telling you now you’re being an ass-kissing jackhole because your boss got you a fancy watch.”
“Hey,” he snapped lightly, trying to err on humor with his tone, “I said I earned this!”
She didn’t seem to believe him but chose not to call him on it, instead scoffing as Z pulled out a small glass from the shelf that wasn’t supposed to be there among the highballs and tankards. Eventually, she settled down but her tone stayed sharp. “Better than what my boss gave me.” Turning the bourbon cup over in his hand, the synth tipped his head, indicating he was listening. Jenyl brought her right arm up, resting her forearm on the bartop to better show off the detailwork of the machinery that served to replace her original limb. Starting at her fingers, Z’s eyes roamed while he listened as the human grumbled, “Have an accident, get told not to worry about it, ‘I’ve got it covered, Jen, get better first’ and guess what?” She squeezes her hand into a fist, the mechanisms within shifting under the semi-translucent fiberglass like sheer satin. “I should have been worrying. Paycheck? What’s that? No, I get an allowance off of my tips because I ‘owe him’. I didn’t ask for this fancy ass–”
Z rocked back, hands coming up as the woman’s voice picked up and her cheeks reddened, the glimmer in her eyes now coming from tears rather than inner energy. If he had a heart, it would ache. “Hey,” his voice soothed, daring to set the glass down to wrap her delicate fingers in his for a moment—she was puny compared to him. Fragile. He only needed one to cover both of hers but there was no trying to be powerful here, so he used both hands, guilt be damned, to try and settle her. “The whiskey’s got you talking,” he chuckled, catching her turn to hide any errant tears, “but you don’t have to yell. I’m right here, I can hear you.”
He could hear her. He understood, more than she realized.
“I’m sorry,” she mumbled, hands squeezing in his grip. “I’m being such a bitch. I know I don’t sound it, but it’s not like I’m ungrateful for don Oriz’s help… I’m just… I’m mad.”
“I know.” He didn’t like how boney her wrist was in his grip, but medical debt was only one way girls like her were controlled. If she’d said she hadn’t eaten for a few days, he’d believe her instantly.
He knew far too well what she was dealing with.
“Well, joke’s on him,” she went on, voice wavering but firm. Pulling a hand free, Jenyl turned to face her prosthetic shoulder toward him and gestured to a large duck-egg-sized stone that glimmered like opal and crystal embedded in the shell.
Z’s entire body stilled.
“He’s the idiot that decided to put this stupid rock in my arm, so he can have it back when I sell it and use the money to buy a house somewhere far, far away from here.”
Electricity.
It ran through his body in an instant, leaving the taste of ozone and lime behind with repeating thoughts of No, she can’t, thrumming around with no way of finishing themselves. Somehow, the human didn’t notice his unexpected distress as she dabbed at her face, pushing away the tears that kept fighting to be free. There’s no fucking way. Thinking quickly, Z stepped back, forcing a sympathetic look onto his face before he lost all pretense of kindness. “Tell you what.” I need to double check this, now. He thumbed toward the kitchen door, stepping slowly back from the woman. “There’s maybe a dozen people left in here, I’m gonna see if I can dip early and take you to the bus now, alright?”
This seemed to lift her spirits and her head, her eyes regaining some amount of glimmer. “Um, okay? Yeah. I’d… appreciate that.”
“Wait right here.” Pointing to the floor, Z elbowed his way out of sight, his massive frame disappearing easily behind the white swinging door as he pulled up a neural call from his priority contact list.
Unaware of the reason for the odd shift in the synth’s demeanor, Jenyl did the polite thing by waiting in her seat, trying not to pick at her nails. What a hell of a night, she mused to herself. Footsteps passed behind her, a group of five exiting with little fanfare aside from a drunken giggle that was a bit too loud. It hasn’t even been an hour either.
Absently, the human ran her hand across her cheek, finding it still cold from the rain. The toddy had been nice, but she needed dry clothes. And a nap.
Gripping her clutch and the wad of bills smashed inside it, she huffed. It would be a long while before she got anything of her own.
I wish I’d had a chance to change. Jeans would itch but they’re better than this old thing.
More footsteps behind her, milling about. A waiter with a bag of trash whisked by at the edge of her vision.
She waited politely, thinking about the night. About the handsome synth that gave her a lime toddy and lamenting that he bought into the bullshit that Ven Oriz was anything but another criminal exploiting the vulnerable and having more money than any one person should. If he wasn’t a dope, he’d be cuter. But she knew it wasn’t his fault.
That’s just how they worked.
Ven Oriz.
Locke Tyro.
Kilais Nossun.
Ambere Anterre.
Their statuses and reputations hardly mattered when it was an open secret they each had hands in the criminal underbelly of New Calda but being powerful and influential in and out of those circles somehow felt worse, as they could—and did—hide their activities from the regular citizens so well it seemed like those who knew were being gaslit. Then again, she knew she was jaded due to the unfortunate reality that Jenyl was one of the ones who did know—far too much about way too many people and the things they shouldn’t be doing because of a simple lapse in judgement when she was at her lowest point. Or at least the lowest she’d yet to be before he came along and pushed her further and further down with every promise, every request—every warning.
Carlo Valdez thought himself wealthy and influential. The kind that would turn heads and get favors by name alone—he thought himself worthy of the power wielded by those far above his station but in truth he was a fraud. Jenyl knew this. Other crimelords knew this.
He’d inherited his racket from the previous boss—not by nepotism, but pure luck and he’d squandered it horrifically on things that made him look powerful but amounted to very little.
Allegedly, the rock stuck in her arm was one of those grand money sinks he was known for, though this one came in the form of a pending payout that would make up for all of his spending. One day.
Allegedly.
He never fully explained what it was that his goons found among the old boss’s hoarded treasures, but Jenyl knew he not only thought it would bail his ass out of debt, but that he cared for that rock more than he did her.
It would be nice to give it back, with interest.
More footsteps.
Jenyl pulled her clutch to her chest, waiting for them to pass. For Z to come back. If I had time, I wouldn’t mind a ride on something else before the bus, she mused, legs tensing. He might be a dope but he’s handsome so it’s enough for one night. She sighed, knowing it wouldn't happen.
At least the next time she got the chance, it would still be on her terms. The idea was enough to turn her mouth up ever-so-slightly at the corners.
The footsteps came closer, the air shifting around her on either side. Jenyl stilled, eyes locked on the bartop. A distinct cologne wafted across her nose, a burnt wood and old brandy kind of odor that she knew terribly well. “Dammit,” she muttered, feeling both of her elbows being seized by the black-suited men on either side of her.
“D’you really think you’d slip out unnoticed?” the one on her right rumbled, his grip jerking her slightly to force her from her seat. “Every pimp in the lower quarter has eyes on this place. They all know tramps like you come through here tryin’ to run an’ they love ta talk. You ain’t the first of the boss’s girls to make a break for it.”
At her left, the other snapped while yanking her clutch from her grip, “Just come quietly an’ you’ll get out of this mostly unharmed.”
“Mostly?” she coughed, wanting to grab at her clutch but knowing better. “Yeah, I doubt that.”
“The boss is a forgiving man,” the first assured with no sense of genuine care in his voice. “As long as ya apologize properly that is.”
“Like hell—”
The kitchen door swung open with a creak.
Z stopped dead in the entryway.
Jenyl’s heart thrummed into her throat—she wanted to tell him to go back. To stay in the kitchen.
She could feel the men reaching for their weapons, even if she couldn’t see them. They wouldn’t draw them yet unless they intended to fire.
Don’t give them a reason to fire.
“Uh,” Z’s voice warbled, face twisted in a moment of deep confusion as he took in the strangers in black and the empty, resigned mask Jenyl put on the moment she felt them approach. “Gentlemen… is there a problem?”
She watched him step near the bar but the two flanking her warned against that very quickly. “Don’t worry ‘bout it. A friend’a ours wants to meet with the lil lady, that’s all. Don’t go pushin’ any buttons and alertin’ no cops now or we’ll have a problem, alright?”
“Oh, no, nothing like that.” Z kept his hands up and off the bar, that charming grin returning–Jenyl’s brow creased. What the hell was he smiling about? “But see, I had a deal with the lil miss,” he nodded toward Jenyl, making her heart sink as his array fluttered across his head to full attention. The goons shifted, seeming aware he was doing something . “I’m not much fond of breaking deals.”
It didn’t surprise her at all that the idiots Valdez hired couldn’t read a room. “Tell ya what, let us make this quick an’ ya can have what’s left of her to do whatever ya want.”
Z hummed a low, warning tone. “See… I don’t really like that option either.”
The lights of the lounge wavered, dimming out and returning in sporadic waves. The goons in black both flinched as they looked around for the source of the surge, each pulling their guns free in defensive positions—they let Jenyl go, nearly smashing her between them as they went to stand back-to-back. Stumbling out from them, Jenyl managed to look up for a second, planning to beg Z to let it go before someone got hurt—
Fear sealed her throat from making any noise.
Beautiful, pure crimson.
That had been the color of the synth’s eyes when she first looked into them. An unusual color, unfriendly even, but so very eye-catching as she watched his face and the way his expression lines creased when he smiled. They were still that brilliant color as he stared down don Valdez’s lackeys but where they had been set into calm, white scleras just moments before, she now found herself peering into furious darkness which fed the red until they shined with malicious intent.
It was the same synth as before, but Z was nowhere to be found.
Chairs clattered to the floor.
Someone shouted.
Jenyl stumbled, falling against the bar—she ducked, hearing heavy feet land next to her.
“HEY!”
She whirled, barely recognizing the synth beside her as one of the goons flipped around, gun aimed their way—but Z was faster, hurling a barstool at the man before he could think to pull the trigger. In the same motion, the red-eyed bot turned and—still somehow grinning—chirped, “‘Scuse me, milady,” before wrapping his arms around her knees and hauling.
Jenyl, her throat burning with fear and bile, yelped. Everything moved so quickly—security was descending like ants on honey, the goons firing blindly into the lounge bathed in back up light and little else. Somehow, the power had gone out, leaving them blind. They shouted again. At her? She couldn’t tell. She pressed her palms to the synth’s back, trying not to knock herself out from the rough handling he gave her while booking it through a service exit at the back of the main room.
“My purse?!” she shouted as the door buckled under Z’s heavy foot, his hand going to her ass to keep her in place.
“No time!” he snapped back, pushing through into a dark hallway that swallowed the sound of gunfire and fighting.
“But–”
“Later!”
My ID—my money! She knew he was right but what was she going to do after the bus?
Another door, heavier and metallic, blocked their progress. Faintly, she thought she heard footsteps coming down the hall; the toddy in her empty stomach wanted to leave the premises, post-haste.
The lock clicked—apparently Z didn’t want to kick this one down—and it swung wide. Cold, fresh air swept over them both, Jenyl’s stomach settling as she took in the sweet scent of rain—and less sweet after taste of trash and mildew. Spilling into the vacant alleyway, Z’s machine body pivoted and began a rough jog to the right, hand firmly squeezing her against his shoulder so she couldn’t wiggle free.
Eyes peeled for followers, the human squinted through the mist and her own nausea to the far end of the gap between the lounge and the next door building. There at the mouth sat a white and navy transporter, steam and smog wafting from its hot engine as it idled, unbothered. “Th-the bus?” she barked, helplessly pointing in the opposite direction from where Z was going.
He only offered a short, “Nope,” until she balled her fist and whacked him square between the shoulders. “Too risky!”
“The fuck you mean too risky—” As she snapped, Jenyl blinked against the damp and saw figures spill out from the door they had just come from, their black suits disheveled and torn. “Oh—shit.”
“Yep.”
Taking a hard left, Z skirted off the line of the alleyway under the protection of a parking garage that served the entire block’s employee parking needs, the security arm merely a hop for the massive synth whose stride carried him over with little issue. It did offer at least a chance for Jenyl, jostled from place as he shifted his weight over the bar, to sit up which forced Z’s grip to change. Cradling her in the crook of his arm, he didn’t pause to acknowledge her nor their followers, but the pressure against her body said enough for her to know she wasn’t going anywhere.
He marched up to the second floor, eyes locked forward even when she tried to get his attention. It was frustrating enough being manhandled, she at least wanted him to say something! Instead, they approached a sleek, black car—a very expensive looking car—that flashed and clicked with a silent unlock command despite Z having no keys in his hand.
“How the fuck—”
With precision, the synth snapped open the back door and flipped her into the back seat, barely missing the frame with her head. The unfamiliar red eyes and empty smile finally settled on her as Z’s mass filled the doorway, making it impossible for her to worm out. “Buckle up and be quiet,” he told her calmly but coldly. “And keep your head down.”
The door shut and locked before she could sit up, the pull-pin disappearing entirely into the mold of the door.
Trapped.
The driver’s side door opened, Z siding into the seat perfectly, no need to adjust anything except the rearview—which he tweaked to get a full image of Jenyl, his eyes still cold and brilliant red in the reflection. He could only spare a narrowed glance as the car started up, the rumble shaking her entire body—
—she whipped into the opposite door, barely managing to catch herself. Burnt rubber stung her nose, the squeal of the tires setting her teeth on edge as Z flipped a bitch toward the exit.
“I told you to buckle up,” the synth chided, seeming completely unbothered by the situation now.
“Fuck off,” Jenyl snapped back, catching a rueful grin on his face as he let out a breathy chuckle.
“Then get down.”
“What—”
Tires squealed again, Z’s foot pressing the accelerator flat to the floor. They launched forward, the twig of the security arm snapping against the hood of the car and shattering into pieces. Just barely, the human spied a few darkly-clothed bodies diving out of the way past the windows.
As they flew out of the parking garage, she dared to peer through the rear window. Two figures sprinted into the alley—the same men from before—their arms raised.
Jenyl felt a firm hand catch the underside of her dress and yank, pulling her down into the seat.
Something hard cracked against the window, a large crack forming from one corner to another.
“I said GET DOWN!”
Jenyl flinched, covering her ears as Z’s voice boomed like thunder in the enclosed space.
This time, she didn’t catch herself as he turned once more, her body sinking between the seats so her leg folded painfully under herself.
Face burning, she glared directly through the gap in the seats, meeting a level, red gaze devoid of amusement. His voice, however, still held a touch of sarcasm. “I told you to buckle up.”
It took a moment to unfold from the crevasse but once she managed to get up, Jenyl pulled herself through the center console to keep him in focus, her lip stain smeared at the edges from biting her lip. “How about you fucking talk to me, asshole! Where are you taking me?!”
“I’ll explain when we get there—”
“No, you’ll explain NOW—”
Z hit another sharp turn, Jenyl sliding back into the seat. A strap on her shoe snapped, leaving it to dangle off her toes uselessly. The smug look on the synth’s face in the mirror made her skin burn.
“Who the fuck are you?”
The grin lessened, Z’s brow raising. “‘Chu mean?”
“The watch, the car—shut up, I know this is yours, I didn’t see you use keys so it’s tuned into your personal access code. Don’t tell me it's another ‘gift’.”
“Why not?”
“No one is that good at their job, unless you’re someone's sugar baby.”
Z bellowed a laugh, the car coasting to a controlled stop at a red light that let the girl finally settle into the seat properly.
She didn’t see what was so funny. “If it’s that ridiculous then tell me who you are. None of the other cars in the garage were this nice, and the servers didn’t have watches like yours. I know both of those brands, I know they’re worth more than most people make in a year.”
“Yeah,” the synth mused, laughter subsiding. His gaze lingered in the mirror, even as he started driving again. “I suppose you’re not wrong there.”
“So who are you ‘Z’?”
Puffing playfully, he shrugged, grin widening in a way that made the hairs on her arms stand up. “Guess I’m not on shift anymore, am I?”
“Clearly.”
“Well then, you can call me Ven.”
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💬 0 🔁 2 ❤️ 2 · Part 1: Darkened Horizon · StarHearts
Chapter 1: The Storm Approaching
There was no more fitting scene to set than a wet
There was no more fitting scene to set than a wet street lit up by lamps and traffic lights that slowly shifted between red, yellow and green, a pulse of life between gray facades and darkened windows. The rain itself was a cold drizzle, the kind that seeped into the bones and lingered long after drying off, smearing makeup and flattening hair into an unrecognizable mess. Not that she cared how bad she looked at the moment.
Jenyl waited, eyes lingering on the reflections of the street lights as her heart drowned out the misting roar of distant traffic and raindrops. I’m doing this, she told herself, waiting for her feet to take a step off the curb on their own. I’m doing this.
A faint echo of frantic instructions hummed in her mind, the voice not her own and far less calm. “Go there. Talk to the bartender, but be subtle. Everyone that knows, knows, and there are eyes everywhere.”
Despite the damp weather, she found her throat to be very dry when swallowing, taking her pride with it. Lifting her gaze, the human followed the lamp lights as they wiggled in the puddles to the large spotlight of color across from her. Up, up, up she slowly panned her gaze, water rolling down her temples into her eyes-–the mascara burned a bit, mixing her tears with the rain until they couldn’t be told apart. What is this, a movie? she wondered but with no sense of humor to ease how pathetic she felt, standing in the rain alone, waiting for something to happen so she wouldn’t have to act on her own accord.
Blazing bright as lightning with navy lettering, she read the sign of the only building open and operating at this insane hour of night.
The Calm Before Lounge.
The irony was not lost on her as her breath shook–-from cold or nerves, she couldn’t tell-–but her time to wait had run out. Standing under the awning between her and possible safety was a large man, bald, also human though only just. Even from across the street, she’d managed to catch a glint on his left arm that told her it was mechanical, the color of charcoal and ice; it made her gaze at her right hand for a moment, the seams and joints criss crossed with beautiful inlays and filigree marks, color matched to her own skin so it would blend in at a distance–-subtle, but no less artificial. Might be a good talking point if he won’t let me in, she mused, knowing it was very nearly the last hour and many places stopped admitting newcomers then. He’d already spotted her some minutes ago, so any more delay would only increase her suspiciousness–and her odds of being stopped.
It had to be now.
I have to do this.
Taking a long, deep breath, Jenyl squared her shoulders, slicked her hair back from her face, checked the road, and stepped forward. The drop from the curb was barely anything but her gut churned nonetheless, threatening to empty itself despite there being nothing inside to evacuate. There was no way she’d have been able to eat, had she thought to. Not with the anxiety burning her veins.
The bouncer’s gaze, hidden by black lenses she assumed had a screen behind them, followed her with a slow turn of his head. Now safely under the awning herself, Jenyl paused to wring out her hair, tousseling it into some semblance of style as she settled into her decision. Once she flipped her ‘do into place, making effort to dig out her only compact from the clutch gripped in her left hand to clean up the awful coon eye the rain had given her, the bouncer spoke, which she hadn’t expected.
“‘Bout time you came over,” he said with a deep but shockingly gentle tone. “Started to think you were a ghost.”
Letting herself laugh, Jenyl gave her best disappointed smile–-smiles make the lies go down easy. “It starts to feel like it. My friends said they’d meet me here for a last crawl but now I’m thinking they went to bed without me.”
“Lousy friends then,” the tall man uttered, giving his new arrival a proper once-over-–both for door keeping reasons and his own curiosity.
A human woman, just shy of six feet, soaking wet and barely hiding her shivering. Hair flocked on the sides but grown long down the middle, past her shoulders, of a dark blond or light brown color too sodden by rain to get a clear idea of the texture for. Her makeup was ruined by waiting, but she didn’t seem to have much to begin with-–not that she needed it with the intense cyan irises she had. Any extra anything would be overwhelming if it had to compete with those beauties-–though he found her lip stain to be just enough, a touch of deep pinkish red that had his eyes jumping between her eyes and mouth when she spoke or blinked.
Under other circumstances, he’d be keen to let her in for free just for being nice to look at even if it was close to closing, but he hesitated. Something felt off. Five years in the business gave him insight, whether he knew it or not, and when he didn’t feel right he listened.
So the bouncer took another moment to assess this late comer. Just enough that her smile wavered–-she knew he was checking for something and she shifted her weight from one leg to the other to shake the unease. “Is there something wrong?” her voice wondered softly, still trying to be playful. “Am I too late to go in?”
It was there in the way her clothes shifted on her body, where they sagged and crinkled when they should cling and stretch as if the outfit was just a bit too large for her. In the way he realized the shadow of her cheekbones was not a clever use of bronzer but a genuine gauntness, as if she ate only saltines and tonic water for a long period. In the way he understood why she was there an hour before closing, waiting in the rain.
He’d seen it all before.
“Nothing of the sort, miss,” the man finally said, Jenyl’s shoulders relaxing as he stepped aside and lifted the rope in front of the door. “Go ahead in, no cover.” He nodded to the entrance, Jenyl’s hands pausing as she made to pull out the cash for the fee, her heart thrumming where it sank into her gut. “Go talk to the bartender, get yourself a hot toddy and warm up. On me.”
It was casual, done from behind a playful tilt of his sunglasses, but the wink he offered spoke volumes as the soggy girl entered the dim lounge and felt swallowed by its red, gold and navy interior. He knew she lied. She knew he knew.
She’d have to thank him if she ever found a way back safely.
StarHearts is an alternate timeline of the Azil multiverse where millennia passed and new civilizations rose, but some things never changed--including human and synth conflict. When fate decreed the Old World's time had passed and its relics woke to find themselves lost in a sea of unfamiliar faces, how would they survive when no one was there to show them kindness between the fear? Faced with taking survival into their own hands for decades, what could one human hope to achieve when competing with the pain left to fester under the metal and wire?
Playlist
(there's a lot of overlap with Free Runner's main playlist due to shared themes but the character songs are also mixed into the list if they're different from the individual lists seen above, which now have songs from both timelines)
The light glow of lanterns slowly became more noticeable as the fleeting rays of evening dimmed in the sky. As if to be a signal of its own, the great gates of the inner palace open wide as servants once again line the entry with polite bows to greet the visiting king and his companions. Sir Grent and his servant lead the march before their king, walking proudly past the serving humans, Grent heads to the waiting tables only to notice a single human standing in front of them on the path.
“You there, step aside. A servant should not stand in the way of a guest.”
Grent’s words were stern as he looked at the unphased human with ice in his eyes. The human looked past Grent to await the king before giving a bow of their own.
“Great golden king of Maritza, your radiance graces us at the palace. Please, we offer you and yours seats of honor with our emperor.”
Lun’s voice was calm and poised as they gestured to a large wooden table with cushions on one side. The king’s smile grew as he took in the view of such seating before following direction and taking a seat just off center of the table, Grent sitting just beside him to the right.
“Not bad at all, a bit of freedom to sit on pillows instead of a chair but this is a weird little country.”
The king’s voice carried true amusement, as well as some arrogance, not really caring for his own manners or decorum. Lun resisted rolling their eyes as they made their way across the way to the gong near a small arch on the east of the courtyard. With a small smile, Lun picked up the soft mallet, and swung at the gong, a ringing echoed the entire palace for a good few seconds before Lun bowed to the gate and stood again.
Silence befell the court as one by one, the Ladies of the palace arrived with their hand maidens behind them, each one to sit at their designated tables sling side the emperors. Five Ladies of unique design and dressed in silks, walked with the grace of falling snow as they moved to their places, among them Lady Syra looking up for a moment to see Sir Grent and his servant again before returning her gaze forward as she took her place.
Lun watched with pride as everyone took a seat before ringing the gong once more and looking toward the palace stairs to watch the emperor appear and begin his descent to the gathering. As he walked to his seat beside the king, the emperor gave a nod of his head to the visiting guests and gestures for Lun to come closer.
“Lun, let everyone know to begin, and fetch our guests drinks for their travels.”
Lun bowed happily as they left the emperor’s side and began taking charge of the servants and proceeding the feast and entertainment of the evening. As music played, food was served and drinks were had the emperor watched the golden king for a bit before turning to him.
“I admit, the stories don't really prepare one for your arrival.”
The king turned his attention to the emperor with an inquisitive gaze, almost challenging him to his next words.
“And what has you saying that?”
“They seem to leave out that your golden appearance isn't just armor, but your entirety. I admit, to see one entirely made of gold is quite a sight to behold, and very rare in one's life to see around here.”
The emperor spoke simply as he looked over the king's mechanical body, size alone the golden king was already built broader than most in the land, but to see the coloring so vibrant and almost intrusive to the eye is something else. The king however, took in the emperor’s words as pure praise as a wide smile planted itself on his face and a deep chuckle vibrated through his body.
“I see, and yes I agree with you there. This isn't the first time I’ve turned heads with my sun-like radiant appearance, though they refuse to change my introductions at risk of intimidating more, simple, people in their homes. After all, intimidation doesn't make for good parties or peace trades.”
The king’s attention changed back to the center court stage as the music changed and women with draped scarves walked on together and began to move gracefully in dance. The emperor watched closely as the king and his right hand Grent both seemed to stare intently at the dancers. Their gazes made him feel uneasy as he looked among his courtesans noticing Lady Syra sharing a look of concern herself with him, the other ladies seeming to either look away from the guests uncomfortable, or looking to their handmaidens for conversation and council.
“Tell me, emperor, are all these ladies here part of your service? If so I have to admit I’ve never seen court ladies or slave keepers dance with such, interesting movements. How do you get them to do such hobbies, in our land they act like tea parties and garden sitting takes too much energy.”
The king once again let another deep chuckle at his own humor before taking a drink from his glass.
“Right you are my king, perhaps the emperor really is the perfect person to help with your.. dilemma?”
Grent’s voice was lined with the same hunger as a cat finding its prey, his eyes moved to focus on Syra at her table several feet away, he was locked on and Syra could feel it in her circuits. She held back her disgust and a shudder as she lifted a hand to summon Lun to her.
“Yes my lady, how might I..”
Lun’s voice trailed as they noticed how tense Syra sat, their eyes scanning the area inconspicuously before noticing the gaze of Grent.
“I see your distress my Lady. Do you wish for me to stage an escape for you?”
“If I leave I fear who else might catch the attention, but I do thank you for your concern. Truely, I wanted to see if you noticed it as well, or if I was going mad.”
“Madness would never be in your programing my Lady, you are the light on many who always sees the smallest bit of shine. If you out of anyone is nervous, then that alone is more than enough for us to take this seriously. Permit me on your behalf to carry your concerns to the emperor.”
Lun held out their hand gently as Lady Syra reached to her dress collar and pulled a small pin from it and placed it in Lun’s palm. With a bow, Lun stood straight and began a walk back toward the emperor. Grent’s gaze was still fixed, only now his target had changed, the exchange of the human and beauty caught him as suspicious, as he waited for the human to get closer. In a swift movement, Grent swiveled from his cushioned seat to grab Lun’s throat as the servant walked behind him.
“Hand over what you stole, slave. I saw you take something from your master.”
Everyone looked in terror at the sudden trapping of Lun by Grent, seeing the human lifted by the throat sent panic among everyone. Lun tried to grab Grent’s arm out of instinct and desperation as they felt pain and darkness taking them, the slick metal however made it near impossible to get a good hold.
“Let Lun go.”
The words were deep and deliberate as the Emperor himself stood and grabbed the knights wrist and looking him in the eye. Grent looked ready to start to argue before taking notice of the emperor’s gaze, a new level of fear filled his coding as the deep void od pure rage met his eyes. Grent’s hand opened quickly, dropping Lun to the ground, hearing them gasp and cough for air.
“If you ever, touch a member of my palace again..”
“Its a slave its..”
“If you ever touch a member of my palace again. Your casing will be stripped from you faster than acid. You forget yourself here.”
The emperor stood at full height over Grent and his King, looking down on them as a god passing judgement.
“You are guests in my domain. Far from your homes and your laws. Give me one good reason I shouldn't take this action as a decoration of war and slay you both now?”
Grent’s eyes widened as realization kicked in, not only did he react impulsively but in front of another king like his own. His eyes scanned the area, how had he not noticed before? Along the many high walls, guards were all standing, watching, they were ready to do as their emperor commanded at any moment and he was foolish to think it was peaceful without law enforcement. The king refused to move an inch other than to look at Grent with anger and disdain, he let out a deep breath before kneeling fully and lowering his body to bow on the ground to the emperor.
“I have no excuse for this one, and I also will not fight you in your own kingdom, that's a fool's tactic if anything. I ask your forgiveness for this transgression and also ask that we both discuss a solution to this incident and find peace once more.”
His voice was clear as he spoke, grateful to know the sign of submission in the culture, though not seeking to be the one displaying it. The king slowly raised his head and looked to Lun being helped up from the ground.
“You there, I am sorry for his foolishness and I hope you are alright.”
“Your highness! Why would you?”
“Enough Grent, you”ve done more than enough damage here. As your king, do you dare question why I am apologizing on your behalf?”
Grent resisted clicking his tongue to the absurdity before taking notice again of the now sea of glares from not only the two leaders beside him, but the entire court of ladies and servants alike. Begrudgingly Grent changed his position to match the same floor bow as his own king to the emperor.
“My king shouldnt be apologizing for my own stupidity, I ask you, permit me a way to atone for my actions against your home.”
The hastened sound of footsteps racing echo off the building walls as two servants quickly approach the laundry building, only to stop short as the service head steps out in front of them. With arms crossed and a tired look, they gaze down at the two as they catch their breath looking at the lead nervously.
“Late again I see.”
The two flinch slightly at the words before looking at each other then back to the head with nervousness. As one opens their mouth in an attempt to speak, the head raises their hand to stop before a sound is uttered.
“I don’t… want to hear it. There is too much going on right now for me to deal with this.”
They let out a reluctant sigh before rubbing the bridge of their nose in frustration and looking back to the two.
“Just, go find the gardeners at the north gate and do as they ask for the day. We have enough bodies here tending to the laundry, and please try not to break anything.”
The two give quick bows and turn to head toward the north gate as another servant walks out from the laundry building. Her wrinkled hands holding a basket of folded silks as she gives a small laugh watching the two flee.
“Those two will find their place soon enough, I remember when you joined the servant quarter all those years ago.”
Her voice was like spiced honey, sweet to the ear but with a bite of knowing sarcasm in it. The service leader shook their head with a small grin, thinking back on their own arrival and how complicated almost every task seemed back then.
“True, it wasn’t easy Nora, but it was worth it all to finally feel like I belonged somewhere. If I recall correctly, you didn't exactly try to make my welcoming very kind either.”
A sly smile crossed the old woman’s face as she set the basket down and took a fan from her sleeve to catch her breath.
“Not by a long shot, Jun. You were too quiet and scrawny that you needed a swift kick in the pride to get you to stand up for yourself and your work. I do admit though, you’re still one of my favorite brats.”
The two shared a small laugh before looking toward the main palace, Lun’s gaze fixed on the tall walls that covered everything that wasn't the open sky. Nora let out one final sigh of dismissal before returning to the basket of silks and continuing her chores, leaving Lun to their thoughts.
The palace was filled with busy bodies, servants and guards alike running to and fro to complete tasks quickly and efficiently. The inner palace and its courtyard were particularly busy, different servant leaders as well as imperial staff were all overseeing the decorations and meticulous arrangements of everything, from flowers to table runners; it all needed to be perfect.
Hour by hour, time moved swiftly as the sun reached its highest point, tension was felt among the staff as they knew the time of the festivities was drawing closer. It was only a matter of time before the Emperor’s invited guests would arrive and everyone would be on watch.
Out of nowhere, several people left their posts and ran toward the main gate of the inner palace. Murmuring began quickly, voices talking of one of the envoys arriving before the guest to make sure the emperor was prepared and everything was ready for this important person. The large doors opened as servants lined up hastfully to bow with respect, each one knowing better than to look up as they heard two sets of footsteps walk past them all.
“So, this is the great palace our lord was invited to see?”
The voice was low and unimpressed by the scene of the palace courtyard, s click of the tongue slipped him as he looked back towards the lines of servants still bowing behind him.
“What’s wrong with those humans? Is there something they find entertaining about the ground compared to their guests?”
“I can speak with them if you desire Sir Grent, before his highness shows allow be to be of any assistance.”
The small human excused himself after speaking to find a single servant with which to speak of the situation. The discussion was a swift and quiet exchange before he nodded his head in gratitude and returned to his master.
“Great Sir Grent, these humans show you the most respect and honor as an envoy to our king by bowing in your presence. It seems in this palace the bow they do is the same as the kneeling in our homeland to the king.”
The one called Grent smiled with a pride that could blind the sightless as he stood straighter and taller before placing a hand on the head of his servant with a rough pet.
“Good, good. It's nice to know humans understand their place well around here.”
His voice carried an unneeded level of volume as he began laughing to himself at his words, making his small companion flinch at the sudden sound before clearing his throat softly to his master.
“Sir Grent, I apologize for interrupting, but I believe we still need to meet with the coordinator in charge of the meeting to make sure they have properly met the requests of..”
Grent waved his hand dismissively to his servant as he looked around the grounds once again. Like a cat’s eyes fixing onto prey, the envoy’s gaze locked onto a female form dressed in silks near the head table, calmly arranging flowers.
“She must be the woman in charge of all these slaves. She’ll have the report we need.”
The servant shrinks back slightly, struggling to hold back an expression on his face as he follows his master across the courtyard to the person of interest. Quickly the servant walks in front of the envoy and takes a quick knee to stop him.
“Please my master, let me assist in your introduction by getting this maiden’s name for you and present you to her. It's only fitting one as high of honor as you is given a true greeting.”
Grent’s face again beamed with pride as he waved off the servant, taking the opportunity for himself to make sure his attire is fir to be seen.
The small male walked calmly toward the silk draped woman, she was dressed in such a way it looked as if the wind itself was making sure her every movement was like a dance of pure grace. He swallowed nervously as he walked closer and gave a small bow toward her.
“Please excuse my boldness madam, but might I have you for a moment? I am the servant of Sir Grent, of the kingdom of Maritza. If I might ask, are you the one in charge of overseeing the festivities of the day?”
The woman stopped her arrangements and looked to the small human a few feet from her, her eyes were like crystal as she stepped closer and placed two fingers under his chin to make him lift his head. The moment he locked eyes on her face and those eyes reflecting everything about his life back at him, he couldn't help but treble slightly.
“You’re an interesting little one.”
If lilies were silk they still wouldn't carry the gentle, sweet, and calm of her voice in his ear, especially as she giggled light as a summer breeze before standing full again.
“I am lady Syra, the lady of the Aqua Pavillion, and to answer your question you are correct in your assumption. The Emperor wanted me to lead the set up for the meeting with your king.”
“I knew a woman as well put together as you would be the one in charge of all these humans. So tell me, how is everything coming along, or do I need to tell my king you need more time?”
Grent’s voice cut the peace like a fire alarm, startling his servant into jumping near out of his shoes. Before he could recover properly Grent pushed him behind his body to have a clear path to the lady in front of him. Lady Syra looked at the bold newcomer with a questionable glance before a small and empty smile returned to her face.
“Actually, everything should be all set for your king whenever you choose to arrive with him. Our staff has been working diligently to make sure everything is to his requests. The cooks have prepared the dishes with the recipes you have sent as well and will be served at the appropriate time.”
Her voice was just as gentle but those who knew her could hear the sweetness vanish around the bold male that kept stepping closer.
“Perhaps you could join me at my table while we dine, it would make for a more unified meeting.”
“As kind as the offer is, I’m afraid I must decline.”
As Grent’s face dropped slightly in annoyance at her rejection, once again his servant stepped between them and again took a knee before him.
“Sir Grent, forgive me master, but we were told for this meeting that there were customs to sitting that we were not to tamper with, the king himself agreed to the terms sir.”
“Right, I apologize, my lady please forgive my forgetfulness. You must already have a place to sit, and I wouldn't be much of a gentleman if I got a lovely maiden like you in trouble with your emperor.”
As he recovered himself ice could be felt in his eyes toward his servant as he spoke warmly to lady Syra before giving a small gentleman's bow and turning on his heel snapping his fingers to call his servant to follow him back out the main doors.
“We will return this evening with our King to enjoy the festivities.”
With that final declaration, they were out the inner gate doors and gone. The servants all looked between each other before attention moved to Lady Syra in concern. Quickly her handmaidens approached to make sure everything was alright and their lady was not stressed from the stranger.