"Oh!"
Her expression was mixed parts surprise and delight as the man's palm burst into a ball of radiant color. The purple was magnificent, slicing through the suffocating darkness as if it hardly existed at all. The light danced in her wide, awe-struck eyes. Most likely, it was a low-level trick that required little skill or energy to accomplish. But to the brand new and easily excitable Magdalyn, it was spectacular. Just incredible, came her first thought. Her second was, I wonder if that could light a fire.
With each step she took, the chandelier swung precariously on its old chain, the creak accompanying the sharp clip-clop of her boots on the wood floor. His magic bathed the room in a light purple that reminded her of the lilacs on Mackinac Island. She thought of that, and him, as she took his hand her own.
"It's a pleasure, Mr. Darlite." She gave his hand a firm shake, then released it. With her now-freed hand, she motioned to herself. "I"m Magdalyn Rose, but most people call me Mags. I don't really have any other titles yet, I guess. I was in a storm, though I definitely wasn't dancing in it. Storm Runner?" The smile she offered him was crooked, and she could hold it for only a beat before shaking her head. On a laugh, she admitted, "Wow, bad joke."
She was not mocking his name, by any stretch of the imagination, and she hoped that was understood. On the contrary, she was quite charmed by the man's theatrics. He oozed drama, from his gestures to his introduction. A beam of white light in the very real, very literal, stormy darkness.
"And I am, yeah. I'd say it was a bad day to go adventuring, but I'm not too upset by the storm. Kind of adds some excitement, truthfully, and I've always been fond of bad weather."
Thunder cracked, then, an explosion of sound, followed by a more muted rumble. It was as if even the storm itself was offering its approval of her take on the situation. Lena or Mags, real -life or virtual, the woman found herself drifting toward the glass-half-empty line of thinking more often than not.
"It's a bit cold," she confessed, looking the man up and down. Though he was soaked-through as well, he appeared better equipped for the cold in more than one layer. She, on the other hand, still wore only her vanity shirt and pants. Thank god the shirt isn't white, some part of her mused, humorlessly. "But at least we're dry. And as long as there are no monsters lurking, and whatever ghosts we have are friendly, I'm sure we'll be alright."
Last edited: Nov 21, 2017