Board Thread:Roleplaying/@comment-5583506-20150708222546/@comment-5583506-20150713133728

Sithfanjedi wrote:

Why couldn't I have been placed with her...some lucky bastard might be. (That made me snicker. xD)

Anjhari couldn't help but fall into a soft slumber. She had wanted to get to work as soon as possible, but she had stayed awake now for both day and night. She needed to rest. Though the place gave her no comfort. It was quiet in her room and the town seemed altogether completely silent, as if it was waiting for something to happen.

Probably in mourning, she thought and turned on her bed to watch the wall.

A huge black spider skittered along the surface and Anjhari flinched in shock and disgust. She wasn't afraid of spiders, but she had no love for them either. Just the thought of them running wild in her room made her skin crawl. She grabbed her pillow and threw it as hard as she can against the wall in the hopes to squash the nasty creature. That was a mistake. The pillow broke against the wall, spreading feathers and fluff around everywhere. And as it slided to the floor she could see the nest of insect life crawling out from inside.

She turned pale and gave out a terrified squeak, pulling her feet up from the cold wooden floor as the creatures sought to take refuge underneath the darkness of the bed.

Back to the darkness from where they were born...

She suddenly reminded herself that she was in no need for a good night's rest anyway. There was work to be done. She reckoned that it was expected of her to go to the Office of the City Watch and hopefully, just hopefully, her room wouldn't have been turned into a hive of wasps or other critters when she came back. And so she exited the room... but not before locking the room door thoroughly behind her...

When Kay and Viktor approached the Office of the City Watch they became aware of at least one building well-lit on the outside. The colour of the walls were light brown with a reddish hue. And it seemed that in Leyawiin they preferred to construct their buildings tall rather than wide, thus the Office had many stories.