The Tome of Stygia
Posted: 26 Jul 2013, 08:38
[[OOC Note: The events depicted here actually took place in Mid-June, 2011. They illustrate reasoning for character traits that have been part of the portrayed character since that time. If anything depicted affects anything associated with any other character, please let me know and I'll work around it. No infringement on other plotlines is intended.]]
"Excuse me? Excuse me, sir? Do you have any books? I'm just...I'm looking for a book..."
The voice was thin and meek, and even the walls seemed more obliged to focus their effort on holding up the shelves and shelves of odd, mismatched items than bother to echo them back to the shopkeeper teetering on a five-foot stepladder filling the shelves even further. They didn't need it, of course. The dust coating every bauble and tchotchke belied any illusion of sales that the place might have had. To be blunt, the shop was where the decorations of yesteryear went to die. And, quite paradoxically, it was where the dead went to further their lives.
The shopkeeper realized the part that the voice's bearer played in this cycle once he filed away his porcelain burden and set foot on the ancient wooden floor once again. She was of medium height, build, with nothing to set her apart from any other girl barely out of her teens. Nothing to tip off the brain to the utter foreignness of her existence. Nothing the shopkeeper could point at, specifically. But he knew. Something about the pallor of her skin, already pale in life but brought to a new level in the incandescent glow of the shop bulbs. Something about the grace with which she moved, completely out of place in a person so obviously accustomed to awkwardness. True, her body seemed to disobey her at times, stumbling over a crack or catching on the corner of a table, but in between it managed to elude countless obstacles with an almost ghostly ease.
Primarily, though, as cliche as it was, what really gave it away was the barely-healed puncture wounds on her neck.
"Excuse me? Excuse me, sir? Do you have any books? I'm just...I'm looking for a book..."
The voice was thin and meek, and even the walls seemed more obliged to focus their effort on holding up the shelves and shelves of odd, mismatched items than bother to echo them back to the shopkeeper teetering on a five-foot stepladder filling the shelves even further. They didn't need it, of course. The dust coating every bauble and tchotchke belied any illusion of sales that the place might have had. To be blunt, the shop was where the decorations of yesteryear went to die. And, quite paradoxically, it was where the dead went to further their lives.
The shopkeeper realized the part that the voice's bearer played in this cycle once he filed away his porcelain burden and set foot on the ancient wooden floor once again. She was of medium height, build, with nothing to set her apart from any other girl barely out of her teens. Nothing to tip off the brain to the utter foreignness of her existence. Nothing the shopkeeper could point at, specifically. But he knew. Something about the pallor of her skin, already pale in life but brought to a new level in the incandescent glow of the shop bulbs. Something about the grace with which she moved, completely out of place in a person so obviously accustomed to awkwardness. True, her body seemed to disobey her at times, stumbling over a crack or catching on the corner of a table, but in between it managed to elude countless obstacles with an almost ghostly ease.
Primarily, though, as cliche as it was, what really gave it away was the barely-healed puncture wounds on her neck.