LOHDUTUS
The man poured her a new glass in her stead in what was an open invitation to intoxication. Maintaining sobriety was ideally a core priority here, but within the Sith, there was a destructive want to just let go of both her lies and her sensibilities. Given her current circumstance, it was more than justified. Not particularly wise, however.
She'd play it by ear, this was all a part of the pleasure, after all, straight out of the bantha's mouth.
The food arrived, their plates heavily contrasting as Emryc's slab of meat dwarfed the woman's 'cornucopia' in both size and volume. His meal was food, fuel for both the stomach and soul and hers a statement, a carefully arranged display of Artrisian delicacies arranged into tiny structures and artfully drizzled with jus.
For just a moment her eyes settled upon the knife as her host wasted no time cutting into his steak. Flickering thoughts of crimson set the smallest of curl at the edge of her lips before his voice broke through the brief fantasy.
She laughed.
Open-mouthed, it let him view her distinct lack of a tongue and the hoarse sound suggested a total lack of use. She could still speak, technically, but the garbled vowels that Dorn produced were nothing more than horrendous to witness.
What she found so humorous was the notion of 'getting to know them' because really, that's what ordinary people did, albeit in a manner much less tense and frustrating as this. How could one not find the humour in how terrible they were at this? Him, a ruthless inquisitor with no social boundaries, only one step away from summoning an interrogation droid and her, a rude and stand-offish, lying cripple who had only come for fine dining.
“You'll have to forgive me,” came the robotic voice, killing any mirth that she might have left in the air, “I thought you had invited me here as a cruel joke.”
And so the lie remained as Evelynn took up her own cutlery, the delicate precision in which she cut through the minuscule monument of oily fish and leafy salad suggesting her own familiarity with a blade. “Mm,” she actually vocalised with a closed-lipped croak, indicating that the food was satisfactory and that she was going to speak again (although after another sip of wine, of course).
“You do realise that the nature of your questions are deeply personal and rather rude, yes?”
---
Emryc
She'd play it by ear, this was all a part of the pleasure, after all, straight out of the bantha's mouth.
The food arrived, their plates heavily contrasting as Emryc's slab of meat dwarfed the woman's 'cornucopia' in both size and volume. His meal was food, fuel for both the stomach and soul and hers a statement, a carefully arranged display of Artrisian delicacies arranged into tiny structures and artfully drizzled with jus.
For just a moment her eyes settled upon the knife as her host wasted no time cutting into his steak. Flickering thoughts of crimson set the smallest of curl at the edge of her lips before his voice broke through the brief fantasy.
She laughed.
Open-mouthed, it let him view her distinct lack of a tongue and the hoarse sound suggested a total lack of use. She could still speak, technically, but the garbled vowels that Dorn produced were nothing more than horrendous to witness.
What she found so humorous was the notion of 'getting to know them' because really, that's what ordinary people did, albeit in a manner much less tense and frustrating as this. How could one not find the humour in how terrible they were at this? Him, a ruthless inquisitor with no social boundaries, only one step away from summoning an interrogation droid and her, a rude and stand-offish, lying cripple who had only come for fine dining.
“You'll have to forgive me,” came the robotic voice, killing any mirth that she might have left in the air, “I thought you had invited me here as a cruel joke.”
And so the lie remained as Evelynn took up her own cutlery, the delicate precision in which she cut through the minuscule monument of oily fish and leafy salad suggesting her own familiarity with a blade. “Mm,” she actually vocalised with a closed-lipped croak, indicating that the food was satisfactory and that she was going to speak again (although after another sip of wine, of course).
“You do realise that the nature of your questions are deeply personal and rather rude, yes?”
---

Last edited: