((I'm opening this up to anyone who wishes to post stories of pre-calamity Ishgard. Write your mournful tales of rolling hills and green pastures))
12 Years before the Calamity
“Father is gone again.â€
“Father is gone with the whore.â€
Evangeline sunk further into the overstuffed chair, those two sentences repeating in her mind. There was a book spread over her skirt, a weighty leather tome plucked from the walls of the study. “ELEMENTARY LOGIC FOR THE DISCERNING†was printed along the thick spine. Adults laughed, when they saw her reading such things, and she was old enough to know when she was being mocked.
It was true though, the books were often filled with strange words, and stranger concepts, and she often needed help to understand. Fortunately, there were more books for this. Books that explained words, names, times, concepts…
Though each asked more questions than it answered, leading her to new books, onto new books, each leaving her wanting more. Each diversion a new branch, each book a new leaf. The messy pile against her chair showed this was a particularly long one, riven with twists and turns.
It had started with an argument, raised voices and red faces. Her parents were fighting again, though she did not understand why. She and her classmates fought, but over obvious things. If your favorite rock was stolen, or someone put a bug in your hair. Yet her parents were as coiled springs, days, weeks would go by normally, then suddenly it would erupt into anger and shouting, and try as she might, Evangeline could never figure out the reason. Perhaps if she read more of the books, she would understand.
Perhaps if she understood, she could make it stop.
This time ended as the others. Her father leaving, storming off into the night, her mother retreating to the bedchambers, where the soft sound of crying could be heard.
“Why do they fight?†She had asked Leopold, her older brother, who seemed to understand more than she, despite reading less books. Perhaps he was simply reading better ones.
Leopold growled and stormed off, “Because of that whore.â€
Finding out what this meant was more complicated than she thought. The dictionary only told her it was a prostitute. She found a few entries about prostitution in a tome of law, but the concept confused her. They were mentioned again in a mystery, one had been murdered, and a bright eyed investigator had to determine who did it. He used something called logic. Pursuing this track had led to the large tome spread upon her lap.
Unlike the others, this book did not seem to explain how something was true, but why it was true. Or why it was not. The process was more important than the result.
“Father goes out sometimes, but mother does not always cry when he does.â€
“Mother always cries when he goes to see the whore.â€
“Father is out, and mother is crying.â€
“So father is with the whore.â€
Evangeline rolls this over in her mind for a few minutes, it still does not seem quite the same as the examples in the book.
Could her mother be crying for a different reason? She had seen her cry once before, when Leopold was accepted as a squire for the temple knights. Father had not been gone then though…
She fidgets, before closing the large tome, going by the rules in the book, her Brother could not be certain that Father was with the whore. Satisfied, she goes back to try and figure out what exactly a whore is.
12 Years before the Calamity
“Father is gone again.â€
“Father is gone with the whore.â€
Evangeline sunk further into the overstuffed chair, those two sentences repeating in her mind. There was a book spread over her skirt, a weighty leather tome plucked from the walls of the study. “ELEMENTARY LOGIC FOR THE DISCERNING†was printed along the thick spine. Adults laughed, when they saw her reading such things, and she was old enough to know when she was being mocked.
It was true though, the books were often filled with strange words, and stranger concepts, and she often needed help to understand. Fortunately, there were more books for this. Books that explained words, names, times, concepts…
Though each asked more questions than it answered, leading her to new books, onto new books, each leaving her wanting more. Each diversion a new branch, each book a new leaf. The messy pile against her chair showed this was a particularly long one, riven with twists and turns.
It had started with an argument, raised voices and red faces. Her parents were fighting again, though she did not understand why. She and her classmates fought, but over obvious things. If your favorite rock was stolen, or someone put a bug in your hair. Yet her parents were as coiled springs, days, weeks would go by normally, then suddenly it would erupt into anger and shouting, and try as she might, Evangeline could never figure out the reason. Perhaps if she read more of the books, she would understand.
Perhaps if she understood, she could make it stop.
This time ended as the others. Her father leaving, storming off into the night, her mother retreating to the bedchambers, where the soft sound of crying could be heard.
“Why do they fight?†She had asked Leopold, her older brother, who seemed to understand more than she, despite reading less books. Perhaps he was simply reading better ones.
Leopold growled and stormed off, “Because of that whore.â€
Finding out what this meant was more complicated than she thought. The dictionary only told her it was a prostitute. She found a few entries about prostitution in a tome of law, but the concept confused her. They were mentioned again in a mystery, one had been murdered, and a bright eyed investigator had to determine who did it. He used something called logic. Pursuing this track had led to the large tome spread upon her lap.
Unlike the others, this book did not seem to explain how something was true, but why it was true. Or why it was not. The process was more important than the result.
“Father goes out sometimes, but mother does not always cry when he does.â€
“Mother always cries when he goes to see the whore.â€
“Father is out, and mother is crying.â€
“So father is with the whore.â€
Evangeline rolls this over in her mind for a few minutes, it still does not seem quite the same as the examples in the book.
Could her mother be crying for a different reason? She had seen her cry once before, when Leopold was accepted as a squire for the temple knights. Father had not been gone then though…
She fidgets, before closing the large tome, going by the rules in the book, her Brother could not be certain that Father was with the whore. Satisfied, she goes back to try and figure out what exactly a whore is.