Scar-Faced Hag
The Harvest Festival had been a success. No major upsets, and the local populace seemed to mesh well with the off-worlders. Above all, the Alliance personnel who'd been present for her sudden and disastrous engagement party several months prior seemed to enjoy themselves.
A step in the right direction, if there ever was one. The crown was still wary of the galactic superpower, but ultimately accepting of their aid.
The celebrations went on through the night until long after dark. In the small hours, when most attendees had gone home, Corazona found herself alone in the gardens.
Even a social butterfly could find her batteries drained after such a long day playing diplomat. After swapping her corset and dark pink gown for a more comfortable white tunic tucked into a gauzy blue skirt, the Princess procured a bottle of wine from the cellar and stole away into the maze of gardens at the front of her family's estate for her own quiet after party.
Seated on a bench with half a glass of red in her hand, Cora reflected on the day. The people she'd met, the resounding popularity of the racyons, and the general merriment that came with a festival.
It was late, but the fairy lights adorning the high, neatly manicured bushes provided a soft glow for her private musings. The residual buzz of the party was distant, muffled by the labrynth of shrubbery. It was a pleasant white noise against a backdrop of cicadas chirping in the ponds.
Cora tilted her head back, resting it briefly against the dense brush of a shrub and sighed.
Makko Vyres
A step in the right direction, if there ever was one. The crown was still wary of the galactic superpower, but ultimately accepting of their aid.
The celebrations went on through the night until long after dark. In the small hours, when most attendees had gone home, Corazona found herself alone in the gardens.
Even a social butterfly could find her batteries drained after such a long day playing diplomat. After swapping her corset and dark pink gown for a more comfortable white tunic tucked into a gauzy blue skirt, the Princess procured a bottle of wine from the cellar and stole away into the maze of gardens at the front of her family's estate for her own quiet after party.
Seated on a bench with half a glass of red in her hand, Cora reflected on the day. The people she'd met, the resounding popularity of the racyons, and the general merriment that came with a festival.
It was late, but the fairy lights adorning the high, neatly manicured bushes provided a soft glow for her private musings. The residual buzz of the party was distant, muffled by the labrynth of shrubbery. It was a pleasant white noise against a backdrop of cicadas chirping in the ponds.
Cora tilted her head back, resting it briefly against the dense brush of a shrub and sighed.
Makko Vyres