Searing 62, 122
Imogen wasn’t a particularly boastful woman, but she was proud enough to hide her exhaustion until the Every Waking Moment had disappeared from sight.
This was a pretty stupid idea, in truth- Anton would undoubtedly have let her ride out of the city limits, where she could have rested her aching limbs and let her store of aether replenish. It wasn’t as though she had anything to be ashamed about. A Sunsinger could go their entire career without ever managing a Pact manifestation of that magnitude. Indeed, it would be one more thing Imogen felt obliged not to bring up to her superiors, lest they finally force her to take a higher rank.
But there was a sentimentality in the Ork which, if pressed, she would surely have denied- a feeling of quiet mourning for the city which had spurned her, and her family, and her race, and her friends, but which she had dedicated herself to protecting all the same. It did not feel right to come back to the High City for only a few hours, so she resolved to find some safe place to spend the night.
A few options presented themselves:
She could go back to the boarding-house where she had rented a bed for so many years. This struck her as profoundly unwise. Though she would very much like to know if old Mrs. Leonie had escaped Zaichaer safely, there was nothing back in her old rented room which she particularly cherished. Perhaps she would ask about, if she ran into any groups of survivors; but given Mrs. Leonie’s unblemished disdain for the “pidgies” of Kalzasi, she doubted very much the woman would have fled north.
”Alas,” she observed to the empty theater, ”Life is a series of meetings and partings. Fare well, Mrs. Leonie, and may we meet in a better land.”
Imogen wasn’t a particularly boastful woman, but she was proud enough to hide her exhaustion until the Every Waking Moment had disappeared from sight.
This was a pretty stupid idea, in truth- Anton would undoubtedly have let her ride out of the city limits, where she could have rested her aching limbs and let her store of aether replenish. It wasn’t as though she had anything to be ashamed about. A Sunsinger could go their entire career without ever managing a Pact manifestation of that magnitude. Indeed, it would be one more thing Imogen felt obliged not to bring up to her superiors, lest they finally force her to take a higher rank.
But there was a sentimentality in the Ork which, if pressed, she would surely have denied- a feeling of quiet mourning for the city which had spurned her, and her family, and her race, and her friends, but which she had dedicated herself to protecting all the same. It did not feel right to come back to the High City for only a few hours, so she resolved to find some safe place to spend the night.
A few options presented themselves:
She could go back to the boarding-house where she had rented a bed for so many years. This struck her as profoundly unwise. Though she would very much like to know if old Mrs. Leonie had escaped Zaichaer safely, there was nothing back in her old rented room which she particularly cherished. Perhaps she would ask about, if she ran into any groups of survivors; but given Mrs. Leonie’s unblemished disdain for the “pidgies” of Kalzasi, she doubted very much the woman would have fled north.
”Alas,” she observed to the empty theater, ”Life is a series of meetings and partings. Fare well, Mrs. Leonie, and may we meet in a better land.”