} [open post]
17 December 2023 20:46When Susan wakes up, dawn is just cresting and she is alone.
This is not news. She often wakes up alone. But she'd hoped, despite Lucy's insistence that her visit was only for the day, that her sister might return. She hasn't, though, and Susan most continue on with her life.
She bathes, and brushes her hair until it's shining, and braids it into its usual crown. She can still feel the remnants of her brief assignation with Liu Mingyan as she stretches to pin her hair in place, and she presses her fingers to a mark on her collarbone for one thoughtful moment.
Then she goes to her closet and throws open its door -
- and freezes.
Susan has spent several weeks trying, impossibly, to inventory the contents of this mansion from top to bottom. Ever since the undead rose, she's been looking for a bow. There's been nothing. She knows there's been nothing; she's checked in every nook and cranny to determine, without question, that there is absolutely nothing.
There are three bow staves lined up along the wall. Although her eye is unpracticed of late, she can tell at a glance that one is a longbow, one is a recurve, and one is composite. She's drawn to them immediately, lifting each one in turn, feeling the wood and - in the case of the composite - the horn, as well. Each is unstrung, but there are a selection of strings coiled and hanging from a peg above them. When she turns, there's a quiver full of arrows; upon inspection, their fletchings and points are varied, as are their lengths.
She trembles, aching with want. Dressing goes quickly, more quickly than she's used to - her nylons twist, and she struggles to attach the garters. So she discards the lot, and pulls on a strange, newfangled pair of woolen stockings that are made of a stretchy material that joins up at the waist. She pulls a warm dress over it - one with sleeves that hug close to her arms. When she goes to retrieve her favorite boots, she finds a supple leather bracer stored with them.
She forces herself to remain calm. Oh, she doesn't leave the supplies in her closet. After all, what if they disappear again? She places them all carefully on her bed, and then rushes to the kitchen for a light breakfast and to fill a canteen with tea. And then she's half-running back to her room, gathering up the lot, and taking it outside.
As she stands outside, near a shooting range clearly made for muskets, she learns that though her body has lost some muscle mass since her last adulthood, it still remembers how to string a bow. These are not bows for novices: They all have heavy draw weights, and she has to warm the longbow up with her hands before she can wrangle the string into its nocks at both ends of its limbs. Susan knows better than to dry-fire a bow. Still, once each one is strung, she situates the quiver at her hip and gives each bow an experimental draw or two, easing the string back into place once she has a sense of their draw. She is thrilled to find that she will need practice some before she can pull the longbow to full draw.
A fierce, wild grin spreads unchecked over her face as she fits her first arrow to its string.
This is not news. She often wakes up alone. But she'd hoped, despite Lucy's insistence that her visit was only for the day, that her sister might return. She hasn't, though, and Susan most continue on with her life.
She bathes, and brushes her hair until it's shining, and braids it into its usual crown. She can still feel the remnants of her brief assignation with Liu Mingyan as she stretches to pin her hair in place, and she presses her fingers to a mark on her collarbone for one thoughtful moment.
Then she goes to her closet and throws open its door -
- and freezes.
Susan has spent several weeks trying, impossibly, to inventory the contents of this mansion from top to bottom. Ever since the undead rose, she's been looking for a bow. There's been nothing. She knows there's been nothing; she's checked in every nook and cranny to determine, without question, that there is absolutely nothing.
There are three bow staves lined up along the wall. Although her eye is unpracticed of late, she can tell at a glance that one is a longbow, one is a recurve, and one is composite. She's drawn to them immediately, lifting each one in turn, feeling the wood and - in the case of the composite - the horn, as well. Each is unstrung, but there are a selection of strings coiled and hanging from a peg above them. When she turns, there's a quiver full of arrows; upon inspection, their fletchings and points are varied, as are their lengths.
She trembles, aching with want. Dressing goes quickly, more quickly than she's used to - her nylons twist, and she struggles to attach the garters. So she discards the lot, and pulls on a strange, newfangled pair of woolen stockings that are made of a stretchy material that joins up at the waist. She pulls a warm dress over it - one with sleeves that hug close to her arms. When she goes to retrieve her favorite boots, she finds a supple leather bracer stored with them.
She forces herself to remain calm. Oh, she doesn't leave the supplies in her closet. After all, what if they disappear again? She places them all carefully on her bed, and then rushes to the kitchen for a light breakfast and to fill a canteen with tea. And then she's half-running back to her room, gathering up the lot, and taking it outside.
As she stands outside, near a shooting range clearly made for muskets, she learns that though her body has lost some muscle mass since her last adulthood, it still remembers how to string a bow. These are not bows for novices: They all have heavy draw weights, and she has to warm the longbow up with her hands before she can wrangle the string into its nocks at both ends of its limbs. Susan knows better than to dry-fire a bow. Still, once each one is strung, she situates the quiver at her hip and gives each bow an experimental draw or two, easing the string back into place once she has a sense of their draw. She is thrilled to find that she will need practice some before she can pull the longbow to full draw.
A fierce, wild grin spreads unchecked over her face as she fits her first arrow to its string.