by Guest 22nd August 2018, 1:01 pm
Vulcan rescue, rabid bunny elimination, flowering picking. None of these jobs paid high enough for her to be interested in. What kind of jobs were these supposed to be? She could have sworn that Vulcan rescue jobs paid higher in guilds. She remembered going on that job with Lucius and Caelum. When they were in a guild, it was basically double the jewel. Were these bias against guildless mages or something? How could the magic council allow such a thing to happen? Of all days she missed being a guild mage, this was defiantly one of them. The elf let out a sigh. Tired of searching through these ridiculous jobs the little thump upon the top of her head was almost missed if the small bird had not began letting out light chirps. The saint blinked, tearing her gaze away from the board and gazing upwards. A small smile graced her lips when she looked upon the pale colored creature, amused that it took a liking to her head. "Are you looking for a job too, mister birdy?" she mused to herself, mostly since she knew the creature wouldn't understand her. As weird as it was, the bird's presence did bring a weird sort of comfort to the girl, being the animal lover she was. She missed the days in Peace Village when she was younger where she could go exploring in the woods. She always did like to hear the morning songs of the birds from outside her window, and now she was back in the village it was a familiarly she welcomed back greatly.
But, as much as she wished the bird could give her some sort of advice on which job to take, it couldn't. So, back to the board it was. A little less nervous now due to the presence of her avian friend she looked back, trying to see if there was maybe one good one she had missed.
It was during her searching, that she couldn't help but overhear a few people's conversations. This town was full of guildless mages, all looking for work. And with this being one of the only places you can get it, it was only obvious that it was rather crowded. Not to the point where it was suffocating, rather just a mild nuisance. Some of these rowdy conversations she could have done without having to listen to. But one in particular, was one she could have done without having to hear the most. Two chipper mages talking about a subject she was rather sensitive to. Sinners. Rather, her brother. The sinner of sloth. As soon as they even mentioned his name her heart dropped instantly, her gaze freezing onto the last paper she had scanned, her mouth agape.
... Killed? By a cat? Lucius... Killed. Her skin grew cold, her head feeling light and fuzzy. She wasn't even sure how she was still standing right now, but she was, frozen in place. He had been killed? Just after she finally found him again?...
Her hand flexed, unsure of how to react, before she sped off towards his cramped apartment. To those in front of the board the light mage would look as though she had just teleported out of there, and to a few others they would get knocked down by the blinding light running into them. The bird atop her head? Could possibly hang on if it chose to. But Astrid wasn't thinking about that right now. She just needed to check on him, to see if what they said were true. Rumors may be that, rumors. But to every lie they was a grain of truth. The silvernette wasn't taking any chances.
Though unsure of where exactly his apartment was again she had managed to sense some of his soul wavelength remnants throughout the city and followed the trail they created. They were fresh, which was promising to the saint. A few twists, a few turns, and she was there in only but a split second. She skidded to a halt when she reached the front of the tall and shabby building, gazing upwards towards the floor he was on. Even from here, she could sense his soul. He was alive, and well. Not even a scratch or wounded.
Filled with relief the girl's legs gave out and she plopped onto the cold pavement below, not disconnecting her eyes away from the room. She let out a sigh, clutching her hand to her heart as it raced a million miles per hour. That was close, too close. She couldn't take another relative's death, not right now. Then again, how did such a horrid rumor start anyway?
A red eye looked up to the bird perched on her head. "You heard what i heard, right?" Don't tell her she was going crazy. She couldn't live with herself if she ended up being that crazy old lady with twenty cats living on the street corner with kids throwing rocks and toilet paper at her windows. She couldn't afford to keep replacing those.