Entry tags:
VI. CLOSED.
WHO: Pel Ashara and Sabine
WHAT: A visit and learning experience.
WHEN: Mid-Solace.
WHERE: The Val Royeaux alienage.
WHAT: A visit and learning experience.
WHEN: Mid-Solace.
WHERE: The Val Royeaux alienage.
[ It isn't like Halamshiral. In fact, it isn't quite like anywhere, not even other alienages.
Ten thousand elves are packed into a space the size of a marketplace. The first time Sabine had seen it, she'd been-- shocked is probably the word, but it hadn't felt like a sudden jolt. More like a tidal wave flooding in, sinking her senses, absorbing this place that made the elven slums of Halamshiral look sprawling, an idyllic example of metropolitan existence. You know, before they were burned to black.
But this isn't her first time, or even her second and third. She is more aware of Pel, as they slip through the gates in the gentle morning hours. Sabine leads the way, not in a rush, but with a destination in mind. It's early, and so the sun is low in the sky, and thus entirely unseen in the dark, shadowed space of the alienage, where impossible walls block off view of the outside world, stained in woodfire smoke run off.
The streets are narrow and dirty and the buildings ugly and pragmatic, but one can sense a life boarded up inside of them.
Sabine doesn't blink as a pack of small, skinny-limbed elven children rush between she and Pel, flowing around them like water breaking, the dirt-black soles of their feet flashing in loping leaps. Sabine swats a hand after one, a natural kind of gesture, a flash of a smile on her face even when that hand wanders back to her hip to check nothing's been stolen from her. ]
Notice anything odd about this place?
[ A little wry in delivery. There's a lot of things to notice about this place. ]

no subject
Without another word, she trots after Sabine, feeling very small indeed, and very guilty at her arrogance that she at any point thought she had ever known hardship in her own life. She has only ever known freedom with no walls. How very privileged she has been, without ever understanding.]
no subject
For sale: peasant vegetables, hard bread, bundles of dried herbs, jars of honey, small tubs of lard.
The street opens like a vein into Sabine's intended destination, and now, beneath the stench of smoke, sewage, and garbage rotting in the sun, a whiff of something else. Something green.
In the high summer, what leaves the massive oak that stands in the centre of the square have turned out are vibrant, if sparse. It bares scars and rot, but it struggles on, and surrounding it is a circle of tribute -- at this hour, none of the candles are burning, but they are well-used and numerous, surrounded by small offerings and tokens, some on the ground, some dangling from the lower branches. The trunk itself is painted as high as someone could comfortably reach, and there are dirty mats and cushions where those that wish to can kneel.
As for Sabine, she lets out a breath, a little relieved. It's not uncommon, sometimes, for alienages to let their tree die, or to cut it down in need of the wood. She wouldn't have been surprised if Val Royeaux had done the same. ]
The vhenadahl, [ she says, drawing to a stop. ] Our heart. I thought, if you saw anything, you should see it.
no subject
She approaches the tree and reaches out to touch the gnarled bark, flattening a hand against it. A silent prayer is sent up to Mythal, asking forgiveness for her arrogance and protection for her People in the city.]
You are also the last elvhen, [she says softly.] My people are wrong. You haven't forgotten. You know exactly who you are.