Rook's half-smile and curious expression immediately shifted into a wide grin as the woman facing them spoke. Her words showed she understood and to understand was to know more than the surface and Rook vastly enjoyed when people knew more. It was always exciting! The Admiral matched their patterns, though took a more classical tone that might have fit poets of medieval times and the like. Rook did no such thing. It wasn't a style choice after all, it was whichever words fit best into the space between breaths. The Many didn't have much to say on their peculiar manner of speech, but they knew more than a few had seemed pleased with the titles they had been bestowed. Not one had demanded another or hissed at a spoken untruth. None of their names were lies, after all.
The caster mentally refocused, eyes sharp on the human as they were offered a seat. It would have been horribly rude to ignore such an invitation! The short Velten moved forward smoothly to take the offered seat. Their gaze traveled out through the dark to watch the castle carefully for a moment before they lifted a hand to laugh lightly behind. "Denned deep, but the plane so above weeps. There will be no fire's breath to chase out foxes. They will be pried from out." They snickered to themselves for a moment more, imagining doing so fool as thing as boarding up inside the castle. Even if they thought they could last a century, nothing lasted forever.
Suddenly they turned back to @The Admiral and tilted their head curiously. She had accepted their offer of a reading. It didn't mean she'd believe it to be any sort of truth, but she would hear it. It wasn't as if she'd be doing anything else but chasing circles in her head in the dark of the gatehouse if not. They nodded firmly to themselves and carefully moved the cards to the palm of their left hand. Not a single one shuffled from its place, still as if a single piece of carved stone. "Storm in half-right. Not The Winged Temple here, no nor the plane of it. To be caught in the eye..." they shuddered at the thought of facing the Aeromancy patron in person. It would be a good, and interesting, way to die at least. Maybe that was the cost to see the body beneath the feeling of clouds and static and feathers. If there was one. No matter. The reading.
"In the not-eye of the not-storm. At heart for The Watcher in the Night," they drew the first card with a flick of their right hand. They didn't bother touching the card itself as it floated eerily off the top and drifted down to the table. The painted visage of a man hung by his ankle, but appeared to stand awaited both sets of eyes. A cantrip of Rook's Arcanamancy flicked to life so that a very dim, lavender glow emanated from the revealed cards that they might be read in the dark without giving away their presence here. "The Fool turned afoul. Do you call to move forward, but turn a statue's likeness at knowing one must lose to gain? Does The Watching Knight hesitate at sacrifice, fear it like those that dwell in shadows... or have you already lost. A regret? A fear there is nothing to be gained at all..."
Rook reached out with one finger to trace the edge of the card curiously. "What led you here, Watcher, to the New Man's Folly? What is carried on bent spine to color this day, this night in your eye?" The next card fluttered from the deck to settle at its left side. They nearly cooed in the dark, "Two cups for two serpents to pour of. How the immovable and the unstoppable meet, clash, blur together in heated passion, in deadly game. Things have come as of one in balance, in honor, in respect. A card of sands at the bottom of the timepiece." The next card came without bidding and landed sharply to the right of The Fool. "What comes to color the next dawn's eye's sight in you? What concern will dog The Watcher's heels?" They laughed suddenly as they spoke, nearly cutting off the words. The faint light revealed a perfect circle, arcane might carved into its flanks and ghastly and beautiful hands clutching at the sides. The reversed Wheel of Fortune was a dark awning, surely. "It has all fallen from the reins, gone wild and loose and The Origin of Question is helpless for the world and the wheel turn as they will it. It taints the eyes, the mind, this fear-awaiting of misfortune. A pity." They paused to look at her from the corner of their eyes, face still turned toward the faces of the revealed spread. "There are more who clamor to speak. Bade This One speak for their might?"
Last edited by a moderator: Jul 28, 2017