Author Topic: Ajri's Ivory Shores: Chapter Thirty-Two (8/25/15)  (Read 59418 times)

Offline Rhoxi

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Re: Ajri's Ivory Shores: Chapter Nineteen - They Know
« Reply #90 on: March 09, 2014, 02:54:42 PM »

Then den'Rhelys palace is so beautiful; it makes me wish I lived there. Of course Lord Radal would want to meet his granddaughter--and probably keep her with the Pembina and never let her go home!

Offline intl_incident

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Re: Ajri's Ivory Shores: Chapter Twenty - The Other Side
« Reply #91 on: March 10, 2014, 08:04:31 PM »
On the Peninsula, the ruins had continued to deteriorate. The sky surrounding them was always dark now, and the grounds were covered in a mist that smelled of rot and decay. The swaying palms had withered into strange, blackened, twisted trees and the once beautiful flowers that had scented the air at Jaffaran and Savna's picnic had dried into weeds and dead leaves. Fish floated limply at the top of the pond, and dark birds circled the spires. It was more clear than ever that this was a place of terrible evil, dominated by the force -- or forces -- behind the root.



Just as the forces had spread their influence over the nearby terrain, they continued to spread their influence over the Pembina.   I'm sure Savna's family didn't know that they were being manipulated.  Cliste, the force of deception and trickery, had so clouded their minds that most of them probably had no idea the root was even there, or at the most had a foggy understanding that something was lurking in the ruins.  The only one who was fully aware of its presence was well within its control, no matter if he thought his will remained his own.



"You've come." The wind whistled around the stones as Stellan stepped down the stairs, his boots echoing on the cold stone. Just as before, the breeze seemed to coax words from the very air, but the guards standing watch behind him didn’t seem to hear.  "We've been waiting."

“What more do you want?” Stellan asked bluntly. “I’ve done whatever you’ve asked.”

”We want what we have always wanted. To be free of this place.”

Stellan’s brows knit together in irritated confusion, as they always did when the root started talking to him.  It was strange enough that such a thing existed, let alone spoke to him using the wind.  Now it was speaking nonsense.  “You want me to re-plant you somewhere?  You should have asked before you grew to the size of the towers.”



The voice swirled around the ruins once again, rustling the nearby leaves and grasses and entering Stellan’s mind.  “We are not speaking of this physical ground you stand upon.  We are not this physical object you are speaking to. We are the forces of— you know what, never mind.” The voice changed its tenor, dropping its sense of mystical import to become more ordinarily annoyed.   “You truly are an idiot.  Come here.” 

“Come where?” Stellan objected. “What are you talking about? What’s happen--“ 



On the other side of the gate, three forces had gathered. They waited, bored and irritated.

“I gave up. We’ll have to do it this way.” 
“This is growing tiresome.”
“I can’t help that we ended up with one of their less perceptive cretins.  You chose the spot for the root.”
“And I’ve grown weary of your excuses.  We should let this one die and find another.”



“You want to let everything die, you miserable, impatient ghoul.  He’ll be here in a moment. Just wait for – ah. There he is. HUMAN!” 

Stellan materialized in what appeared to be a dark room, with a gated starfield in front of him, and an endless expanse of blackness behind.  At the table in front of the gate sat three figures the likes of which he had never seen.  Their skin was so pale it looked blue in the dim light, their clothing was crafted of fabrics he didn’t recognize and their eyes had a strange golden cast.  One looked so twisted and ill that he might have been a corpse.  Another wore a mask that hid his eyes, but couldn’t hide their devious gleam.  And the third, in the middle, had a malevolent, unblinking gaze that sent shivers down Stellan’s spine.



It was the masked man – if he was a man – who had spoken.  His was the voice that had been in the wind.  It was louder here, and seemed to echo from all sides as the man called out again: “HUMAN!  Stop gaping like an addle-brained child and step forward.”

“But what are you? Where is this place?”  Stellan’s eyes darted from side to side, trying to see where the blackness might end, and what was making the strange and frightening noises – shouts and screeches and the sound of leathery wings -- at the edges of his perception.  The room seemed to be spinning around him while also standing still.  It was terrifying, disorienting.  He tried to bargain: “Let me go. I promise you, no harm will come to you if you let me go now.”



The trickster in the mask rolled his eyes at the words, and pulled his feet off the table to sit up straight.  “You couldn’t harm us if you tried, fool. You're not even here.  We’re merely projections – personifications suitable for your small-sized brain to comprehend.  If we showed you our true form, you would be helpless with horror.  Now step forward. I don’t like yelling.”

The corpse-like ghoul at the end of the table shifted in his seat, picking at the sores on one of his hands.  “He’s not worth our time,” the creature muttered under his breath.  “Let’s just be done with him.”  But the stone-eyed, commanding presence in the center was unmoved.  He simply stared, and Stellan found himself moving forward.



“Better,” said the trickster, with an encouraging smile. “Now... we need you to help us. And in exchange, we’ll help you.”

Stellan couldn’t tear his eyes away from the figure in the center of the table.  He found himself stuttering as he replied. “I don’t – I don’t need help.”

The ghoul simply snorted in derision, and picked at the scabs on his thigh.  The trickster tried to hide a contemptuous smile. “You need more help than you realize, little man.  But the specific help I refer to is with the den’Rhelys.”

The name was picked up by the screeching voices that were hidden in the blackness.  They shouted it back like the cawing of thousands of angry crows. “Den’Rhelys! Den’Rhelys! Den’Rhelys!”  Stellan cringed at the sound, ducking his head away from the noise.  “I don’t need your help with them! They’re nothing to me!”



“They took your sister,” the trickster said. His voice had changed again, this time to a persuasive, soothing drawl.  “They can’t be trusted... Stellan, isn’t it?   We know them of old, Stellan.  They’re arrogant creatures.  They imprisoned us here, and will do the same to you.  They want to rule over you like they rule over us.  We just want our freedom from their tyranny.  And we can offer the same to you, if you just help us.”



“Help us! Help us!”  The voices echoed again, this time as desperate whispers. Unseen fingers plucked at Stellan's clothing. “Help us, Stellan. Help us.”

“I-- I don’t –“  Stellan put a hand to his forehead, his mind whirling, his thoughts scattered.  The only steady thing he could see in the midst of the fear and confusion was the unwavering gaze of the figure in the center of the table. His will was completely gone.  “What is it you want of me?”



At that, the central figure finally leaned forward.  When he spoke, it was in a quiet command, with a deep, rumbling timbre that cut through the darkness. “Find a way in.  And we will tell you what to do.” 



The blackness retreated in an abrupt wash of light, and Stellan found himself in the ruins once more, his head still ringing.  In the emptiness he left behind, two voices echoed in the blackness.

“Will he be able to do it?  Is he the one we need?”

“No. He may find the access, but they will watch him too closely.  There is another.  A little one who will do what we bid, who will go where we want, and whom they will never, ever suspect.”






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Offline intl_incident

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Re: Ajri's Ivory Shores: Chapter Nineteen - They Know
« Reply #92 on: March 10, 2014, 08:25:57 PM »
Then den'Rhelys palace is so beautiful; it makes me wish I lived there. Of course Lord Radal would want to meet his granddaughter--and probably keep her with the Pembina and never let her go home!

Thanks, Rhoxi!  I would love to live there too.  It looks so airy and light and happy. Unlike the most recent post...  And we shall have to see about Lord Radal. *hums cheerily and goes back to plotting everyone's demise* (or maybe a happy ending -- you'll have to wait and see... ;))

Offline Rhoxi

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Re: Ajri's Ivory Shores: Chapter Twenty - The Other Side
« Reply #93 on: March 11, 2014, 06:33:44 PM »

Oh good lord, the child is going to be evil! But . .  but, she seems so sweet!  :-\ I mean, we knew something bad was going to happen as a result of Savna and Jaffaran's marriage, but THIS??

Offline Gwendy

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Re: Ajri's Ivory Shores: Chapter Twenty - The Other Side
« Reply #94 on: March 11, 2014, 11:35:08 PM »
Oh good lord, the child is going to be evil! But . .  but, she seems so sweet!  :-\ I mean, we knew something bad was going to happen as a result of Savna and Jaffaran's marriage, but THIS??
I didn't pick up that Ajiana is going to be evil, just that they think going through a kid is the best way to go, since kids can be gullible and naive, and as such, much more easy to manipulate.
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Offline Rhoxi

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Re: Ajri's Ivory Shores: Chapter Twenty - The Other Side
« Reply #95 on: March 12, 2014, 12:11:59 AM »
I didn't pick up that Ajiana is going to be evil, just that they think going through a kid is the best way to go, since kids can be gullible and naive, and as such, much more easy to manipulate.

Very true--yours is a more precise reading, I think. But the foreshadowing indicates she will at least be used for an evil purpose. Maybe sort of like Stellan? It's still all just horribly sad! Or maybe, like you say, she's just gullible? Not corrupted by an evil influence? Gah! I didn't think of that. So curious to see what happens with her!

Offline Gwendy

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Re: Ajri's Ivory Shores: Chapter Twenty - The Other Side
« Reply #96 on: March 12, 2014, 12:17:30 AM »
Very true--yours is a more precise reading, I think. But the foreshadowing indicates she will at least be used for an evil purpose. Maybe sort of like Stellan? It's still all just horribly sad! Or maybe, like you say, she's just gullible? Not corrupted by an evil influence? Gah! I didn't think of that. So curious to see what happens with her!
Yeah, they could just be all, "Hey, there was this great big misunderstanding, and we'd like to apologize, and we PROMISE we won't do anything bad, so would you mind opening that heavily guarded door for us, please? Kaithnxbai."
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Offline cainspath

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Re: Ajri's Ivory Shores: Chapter Twenty - The Other Side
« Reply #97 on: March 12, 2014, 08:44:26 AM »
I've been a constant lounger of this story and never commented, but this! This is romantic and intricate, and exciting in every way! But with things going on like this, I can't help but assume the worst.
At the end of the day, Life should ask you, "Do you want to save changes?"

How the misc-tery continues:
I, Iridessa: 3rd [What happens at home]

Why not try a misc-stery?
Blood of the Mayfair: 32nd [Hail Rain and Sunshine]

or a Reincarnation Project:
Hawke Revival: 26th [Hale Bonding]

Offline intl_incident

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Re: Ajri's Ivory Shores: Chapter Twenty - The Other Side
« Reply #98 on: March 12, 2014, 12:06:14 PM »
Oh good lord, the child is going to be evil!

Oh, that's an excellent idea. I wonder if that could be what's happening?

I didn't pick up that Ajiana is going to be evil, just that they think going through a kid is the best way to go, since kids can be gullible and naive, and as such, much more easy to manipulate.

Hmm... that might be more likely, you're right...

*continues humming cheerfully and plotting in the corner*  :D

I've been a constant lounger of this story and never commented, but this! This is romantic and intricate, and exciting in every way! But with things going on like this, I can't help but assume the worst.

Yay! Another reader!  Thanks for commenting, and glad you find the story exciting.  It's definitely building up to a big event, which should be coming in about... oh... three more entries or so.  The next chapter is almost ready to post, but I think I need to do a factory reset on my Sims game first, because everytime I try to save a game now, it doesn't just crash the game it actually shuts down my computer.  So there may be a slight delay while I deal with that.  But never fear. Even if the worst happens in real life (i.e., I need to wipe the game out and start over), I have a lot of screenshots already, and the relevant buildings and Sims are all saved.  So the worst will still be able to happen in the story too. 

Er... I mean... that happy ending I keep talking about can still happen.  Yeah.  That's what it will be. ;)

Offline intl_incident

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Re: Ajri's Ivory Shores: Chapter Twenty-One - Market Day
« Reply #99 on: March 14, 2014, 10:09:10 PM »
Back at our palace, my siblings and I were riding out with some of the scholars, on our way to the lands of the jah’Itan.  Once a year, the moon passed through the constellation of the Archer.  And once a year, on the following day, the jah'Itan opened their month-long bazaar, inviting all of the people of Ajri to buy, sell and barter during the day, and to dance and feast at night.  It might finally be the chance for us to meet with the Pembina on neutral ground, or if not, at least we could try to enlist the jah’Itan as agents to arrange for a meeting. It was an easy two-days' ride, through some of the most beautiful hills and fields on Ajri.  Ajiana rode with Jaffaran on his loyal white stallion, Astanal, whom she adored with all of her heart and who pranced and nickered and tossed his mane whenever she approached him. 



She was untouched by the concerns that weighed the rest of us down, and for her this was a great adventure -- her first time seeing the lands away from the palace, and her first time to the bazaar.  Whenever we stopped to water the horses, or to gather rare plants and herbs we happened across, she was off and running with all of the energy of her youth, laughing when my brother caught her and swung her around, and laughing when she played with Astanal and the other horses.  It was infectious, and for everyone on the trip, the two days were a brief interlude of the kind of simple happiness that had once filled all of our days, and that we hoped would return again soon.



The bazaar was as crowded as always, no matter what might be happening on the Peninsula.  We found a spot for our carts and horses, and then set off for the main plaza.  Jaffaran was holding tight to Ajiana now, not about to let her run off into the market until he had a better idea of who was here, and what they were doing. 



She was, of course, enthralled with everything she saw.  There were pastries and fruits and treats of all kinds, and everyone, it seemed, wanted to offer her one.  There were bright silks, intricate carpets, gilded baubles, jewelry and crystal, pots and tools, toys and games and books and scrolls -- everything for everyone, and all in one place.  As we walked through the stalls, Savna and Jaffaran were watching for any familiar faces, and listening for news. As the morning turned to afternoon and we still hadn't seen anyone from her family, Savna was doing her best to hide her disappointment and worry, and to rein in her enthusiastic daughter.

"You can't have everything you see, Ajiana."

"But Aunt Nella is trying shoes, and I need shoes."

"You have shoes already."

"So does Aunt Nella!"



Jaffaran was browsing books next door, and I could hear him laughing. "Nella doesn't need them either," he called over.  "Come here, little one, and stop bothering your mother. She may want to look for something of her own instead of listening to your voracious cupidity."

Ajiana darted off, but the reprieve lasted only a moment.  "What's four aces upidity?" her tiny voice asked, mangling the big words.  And then she came up with an example a mere second later, much to my brother's amusement: "OH! Look at this! I need one!"

Savna turned with a tolerant smile at the exclamation, to see what it was that had caught the girl's eye this time.  "You may want it, but you don't 'need' it, Ajiana. You must try to be more..."

"SAVNA!"



She was interrupted by a shout, and there was her brother, running across the plaza with a wave and a wide smile. "Sanni, over here!"

She ran forward, throwing out her arms to meet him with a hug, and clinging to his strong frame for a long moment as she pressed her cheek against his. "Torin! I've missed you!  Where is everyone?  I’ve been looking for you and Stellan, or mother, or father… or anyone, really."

"They didn’t come," her brother replied, talking hold of her shoulders to view her at arm's length. "None of them would come.  But look at you! You're in a dress! What did they do, douse you with a potion and turn you into a proper girl?"

"No! No... Torin they're not like that at all. They've been nothing but kind to me. They've treated me so well, and--"

"Sanni, I'm teasing you," Torin said, kindly and affectionately. "I'm glad to see you're safe and well." 

"Her name's not Sanni," Ajiana piped up, finally ducking out from behind my brother's legs where she'd been watching the scene.  "It's Lady Savna."



"Oh is it?" Torin asked with mock surprise.  "And who might you be?"  He turned a look of astonishment toward Savna, who smiled proudly back.

"This is my daughter," she said, beckoning the girl forward. "Ajiana say hello to your Uncle Torin."

Ajiana walked up with wide and curious eyes, then made a deep bow. "It is my very great honor to meet you, Uncle," she said with practiced formality.



Torin played along for a moment, bowing back and answering just as formally.  Then he scooped her off the ground and over his head as she squealed with laughter. "So little Sanni has a daughter, and I'm an old uncle." 

Jaffaran stepped closer, putting a protective hand on Savna's back and watching the exchange as Ajiana giggled and protested again. "Her name's not Sanni!"



"No," said Torin. "And yours isn't Janni, but I may just call you that."  He put her back down on the ground as he saw my brother, and patted her on the head to send her back to her parents. "Jaffaran," he said with nod of greeting.  It was stiff and formal, but it was the friendliest exchange we'd had with any of the Pembina since Savna had come to live with us.

"Torin," my brother said warily back.

They eyed each other for a long moment, both trying to decide what to say.  It was Savna who broke the impasse. "Come,” she said taking both men’s arms with no chance for them to object. “We have much to discuss."

The four of them headed off to one of the covered pavilions that provided shade from the sun, and exchanged stories, starting with what had happened since Savna's departure and ending with this trip to the market to try to find help with Lord Radal.



"I don't know," Torin finally said, taking a piece of the fruit they'd ordered.  "Savna, you need to understand how much he's changed.  Even more than when you were still home. I know you're telling me it's all got to do with this thing you say is in the ruins, but honestly I don't know that it matters.  Whatever is causing it, he's just so angry now, and so bitter -- I can't see him agreeing to meet with you."

"But you will talk to him.  Won’t you?"



Torin leaned forward, preparing to stand.  “I will,” he said. “Of course, I will.  And I hope he’ll listen.  I hope there’s something we can do to fix all of this.  We do miss you, Sanni. I do, anyway.”

Savna stepped forward to take her brother's hands. "I'm so sorry, Torin.  I'll never apologize for leaving to marry Jaffaran, but I am so sorry for abandoning you to deal with everything that is happening at home.  And I so very much want to help.  And I want mother and father to know that they have a granddaughter."



Torin smiled sadly, but pulled his sister closer for a hug. "I’ll do my best," he said.  "Whatever comes of it, I'm happy I got to see you."
 
"Please be careful," Savna pleaded, as she held her brother in a tight embrace. "And we'll see each other again soon. I just know it."



Offline cainspath

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Re: Ajri's Ivory Shores: Chapter Twenty-One - Market Day
« Reply #100 on: March 15, 2014, 07:23:39 AM »
Oh, that's an excellent idea. I wonder if that could be what's happening?

Even if the worst happens in real life (i.e., I need to wipe the game out and start over), I have a lot of screenshots already, and the relevant buildings and Sims are all saved.  So the worst will still be able to happen in the story too. 

Er... I mean... that happy ending I keep talking about can still happen.  Yeah.  That's what it will be. ;)

I hope nothing that bad happens though, that'll be a real pain.  And Ajiana is adorable, but it sort of hurts to think what she might do in the future.
At the end of the day, Life should ask you, "Do you want to save changes?"

How the misc-tery continues:
I, Iridessa: 3rd [What happens at home]

Why not try a misc-stery?
Blood of the Mayfair: 32nd [Hail Rain and Sunshine]

or a Reincarnation Project:
Hawke Revival: 26th [Hale Bonding]

Offline Rhoxi

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Re: Ajri's Ivory Shores: Chapter Twenty-One - Market Day
« Reply #101 on: March 15, 2014, 02:22:10 PM »

Oh no, those last words seem so ominous! Evil or not, Aijana is so adorable. It's easy to see why everyone loves her so.

Another beautiful update! Love the little covered area by the pool where they sit and chat.

Offline intl_incident

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Re: Ajri's Ivory Shores: Chapter Twenty-Two: Laying the Groundwork
« Reply #102 on: March 16, 2014, 07:15:57 PM »
"But I don't understand why not," Torin continued.  He had been trying for days to convince his father to let Savna and Jaffaran come to the house.  But his father was increasingly indecisive, unbalanced and angry, and was suspicious of anything that he saw as a threat to either his authority or his reputation.  Most days he was found in his study, which used to be a warm, elegant room, and which had shown off all of the best of the Pembina's skills with wood, glass and stone.  Now it was filthy and dark, full of empty bottles, broken dishes and dusty spiderwebs.  Lord Radal wouldn't let anyone in to clean it.  Only his sons were allowed, and even Torin needed permission.  Stellan was almost always there, lounging on one of the couches.  He was there again, listening to the argument.



"I've told you why not," Radal spat back. "Your sister is a traitor.  Her husband is a liar and a thief.  I won't have them in this house, and you would do well to leave this matter alone, or go find yourself a place with those snakes you seem to like so much better than your own family."

"Father, I am just trying to put an end to all of this fighting.  Savna wants to see you.  She wants to come home and explain things to you."

"I don't want to hear anything she has to say."
 
"Don't you want to see her child?  You have a granddaughter that she wants you to meet, and--"

"I don't care what she wants. Now get out, before I--"

"So it's true!"  The door was open to the lighted hallway, and Lady Mara, Savna's mother, was silhouetted in the bright frame.  She had suffered much of the same unhappy decline as the rest of the Pembina.  Her sumptuous gowns were traded for a robe, her jewelry sat unused in the boxes on her dresser, her eyes were surrounded by dark circles and her hair was left to hang around her face in a nest of tangled curls.  She advanced on her husband, pointing at him with an accusatory shout.  "Our daughter has a child, and she wants to see us, and you won't let her come home!"



"Get out of here, woman.  Go back to your room and hide there, as you've done since all of this started." Lord Radal stood up, reaching for his discarded glass, but Lady Mara knocked it away. 

"She's our daughter!"

"She's not!"

"That's YOUR FAULT!  You threw her out!  Our beautiful daughter, and you threw her away!"

She reached out to grab at her husband, but he backed up to dodge her. "Take her out of here," he snapped at Torin.  "Your mother is tired, and she needs her rest."



"Father--"

"TAKE HER OUT."

Torin took hold of his mother as gently as he could, walking her back toward the door. She was crying, and pulling at her hair. "Come on," he murmured to her.  "I'll try again."

"Let her come home," she cried sadly as she went. "Please. I want to see my granddaughter... I want to see--"



The door shut behind her with a heavy thud, leaving the study in darkness again.  "I suspect you have something to say to me as well," Radal snarled at Stellan, righting his glass and pouring himself another drink.

"Me?" Stellan drawled. "Not at all."

"Good." Radal drained the glass and slammed it to the table.  "I'm tired of your brother's rebellion and your mother's insufferable whining. I don't want to hear it from you."

"But I agree with you," Stellan said smoothly. "You can't let her back in the house.  She left of her own free will, defying you in front of our family and the whole island. You can't condone that, and you can't forgive it."

"I'm glad someone understands," Radal grumbled, sinking back into his usual place on the velvet sofa.



"On the other hand," Stellan started, still slouching against the back of the couch.

"Here it comes," Radal groaned.

"No, Father. Hear me out.  You can't let her come to you, but we can go to her."

"WHAT? I should go crawling to her? Up those marble steps to kiss her sandaled feet? What purpose would that serve, other than to make me look like a fool?"

"Not you," Stellan said.  He leaned forward, and his voice took on a strange sound, like there was a more urgent echo of his quiet words whispering at the back of Radal's consciousness.  "You should stay here.  But I should go with mother.  She'll see the child, and stop whining.  You won't look weak in front of the den'Rhelys.  And I -- I will see what they're up to, and report back to you on their treachery."

"Treachery?"  Radal's eyebrow went up, and he turned his full attention on his oldest son.



"Of course," Stellan said.  His own voice was almost lost in the sound of the whispered echo. "You saw how one of them stole your daughter.  Think what the group of them can do.  They don't care about anyone but themselves.  They'll destroy the Pembina.  They'll take your power, your lands..."

Radal wavered, his voice shaking as he considered the possibility. "They've no reason to do that."

"They don't need a reason," Stellan said, leaning forward to stare unblinking into his father's eyes. Though the windows were tightly closed, the few lit candles in the room flickered as if blown by a sudden breeze.  "They'll take your house from you," the two voices said in unison. "You'll be the last Lord of the Pembina, and that will be the legacy you take to the stars.  Your ancestors will despise you, and the den'Rheys will be laughing."



"Enough!" Radal cried, putting his head in his hands. "Enough.  You go.  Take your mother and go. My only good child. Protect your family, and find out what they're planning."
 

Offline intl_incident

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Re: Ajri's Ivory Shores: Chapter Twenty-One - Market Day
« Reply #103 on: March 16, 2014, 07:26:52 PM »
I hope nothing that bad happens though, that'll be a real pain.  And Ajiana is adorable, but it sort of hurts to think what she might do in the future.

Oh no, those last words seem so ominous! Evil or not, Aijana is so adorable. It's easy to see why everyone loves her so.

Don't you hate it when authors make you like a character, and then do terrible things with them? But that may or may not be what I'm up to.  I mean, I love Game of Thrones, but I didn't bump anyone off anyone at the wedding. ;)

As you can see in the update above, though, all will become clear soon, for better or worse!

Offline cainspath

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Re: Ajri's Ivory Shores: Chapter Twenty-Two - Laying the Groundwork
« Reply #104 on: March 22, 2014, 05:09:30 AM »
Betrayal ensuing? But towards who?
At the end of the day, Life should ask you, "Do you want to save changes?"

How the misc-tery continues:
I, Iridessa: 3rd [What happens at home]

Why not try a misc-stery?
Blood of the Mayfair: 32nd [Hail Rain and Sunshine]

or a Reincarnation Project:
Hawke Revival: 26th [Hale Bonding]

 

anything