Astroscope
She was walking with a quick step along the sun-burned stone streets. Boot heels struck stone with the repeated hollow tone that seemed to announce her wherever she went, but today the hurry was nothing more than an attempt to keep her job.Â
The offer had been worth being late for, hadn't it? Raka, the Lalafel fellow ahead of her had been similarly struck: how often is one given the opportunity to see an Astroscope, let alone to peer through the lenses at the heavens above?
An Astroscope! She had not anticipated just how the sight of such a device, wondrous and devilish in the same instant, would effect her. How long had the predictions made with the aid of the instrument, combined with the lusty tones of Halone's clerics, determined the fate of her, and everyone she had grown up knowing? They had sealed the gates, and turned men and women into paupers all in the divine goal of securing the city as a fortress against the Dravinian Horde.
Of course, those most effected by the decisions wrought by the Astroscopes would never share the luxury of peering through the eyepiece and tracking the movement of the heavenly bodies that determined their fate. Such liberties were the sole province of those who lived in the towers above.
There was little doubt that this Ul'dahn Astroscope was of Ishgardian origin, the lenses at least must have been cut by House craftsman. What price had it fetched in export? What luxuries had it been exchanged for? Just how much food would it have purchased for people who have by now forgotten the taste of fresh meat? Â
She had convinced herself that it had all been left behind her; that she had moved beyond it; that she would never end up like her parents clinging to the past, rather than seizing the future. She clenched her fists, gesturing in the air with an impossible frustration.
She let out a breath, eyes glancing skyward once more just before she passed into one of the many tunnels that cut across the Jewel of the Desert. The stars winked, and twinkled to her from their lofty places high above the sodden earth below. Â
"So beautiful..."
It was beautiful. So beautiful. She loved star-filled nights beneath an otherwise dark sky, and to trace their movement and imagine the meaning of their unknowable light. Each mile placed between her and the shuttered city was a liberation, a promise of the freedom to simply enjoy the beauty that had once seemed so sinister.
Only in the Jewel of the Desert could an Ishgardian gutter-snipe peer through an Astroscope. Only in this land of gold, spice, and sand could a barmaid be given the opportunity to peruse the stars above, as if she were a princeling.Â
She smiled. It was delightful.