Homework
15th Ashan, 721
Shortly after this
Shortly after this
The Watchers Union.
Perdita had not long left her meeting with Woe and she was, it had to be said, somewhat overwhelmed by the situation. Trying not to think of the payment he'd given her, because she'd hyperventilate, she turned her mind instead to the task at hand. She'd thought about it, considered it, and she had decided on a way forward. Having spoken with Woe, she knew what she had to do and she'd stopped at the Lemon Messy to have a quiet drink while she gathered her thoughts. She'd gotten her notebooks ready and she was, she decided, prepared.
Which was odd, because she didn't feel prepared.
The thing that Perdita needed to do, she knew, was to simply and solely be herself. If she tried to be some kind of undercover anybody here, she was going to crash and burn in the worst way possible. She smiled to herself as she thought that and considered that one research task was - apparently - enough to send her into dramatic and over-exaggerated language. No, what she needed to focus on here was not lying. Telling the truth. Being who she was.
Because, she was a researcher - a student of history - who had been given some homework. It was true. It was what she was and - since she was going to do her homework on this place, Perdita decided, she needed to start here. So, she made her way to the Watchers Union and she walked in. It was - of course - a large and open space. Perdita really found herself unnerved by those and, just as she had in the glassblowers guild some trials before, she felt out of sorts.
However, there was a reception and so she went there. Her blush was ever-present and the awkward young woman looked at the receptionist and spoke. "Hello," she said, quietly. The receptionist raised an eyebrow and Perdita explained. "I'm studying history, at the University," she said. That did not cause the eyebrow which had raised to lower at all. "I have to choose a place, or event, and compare accounts of it." She pushed over her note book and later she would consider that at least she could be pleased that - in fairness - she was just being honest and trying to explain her homework. "I'd like to base my study on the Watchers Union here. I wonder," she said, earnestly. "Could you tell me, has there been any study of this place, previously?"
Those may be, Perdita considered, the longest sentences she'd ever said. So, she smiled, blushed, and pointed to her notebook. "My professor. Deadnut. He'll confirm." Stop talking, Perdita, she thought. Just. Stop. Talking.
Perdita had not long left her meeting with Woe and she was, it had to be said, somewhat overwhelmed by the situation. Trying not to think of the payment he'd given her, because she'd hyperventilate, she turned her mind instead to the task at hand. She'd thought about it, considered it, and she had decided on a way forward. Having spoken with Woe, she knew what she had to do and she'd stopped at the Lemon Messy to have a quiet drink while she gathered her thoughts. She'd gotten her notebooks ready and she was, she decided, prepared.
Which was odd, because she didn't feel prepared.
The thing that Perdita needed to do, she knew, was to simply and solely be herself. If she tried to be some kind of undercover anybody here, she was going to crash and burn in the worst way possible. She smiled to herself as she thought that and considered that one research task was - apparently - enough to send her into dramatic and over-exaggerated language. No, what she needed to focus on here was not lying. Telling the truth. Being who she was.
Because, she was a researcher - a student of history - who had been given some homework. It was true. It was what she was and - since she was going to do her homework on this place, Perdita decided, she needed to start here. So, she made her way to the Watchers Union and she walked in. It was - of course - a large and open space. Perdita really found herself unnerved by those and, just as she had in the glassblowers guild some trials before, she felt out of sorts.
However, there was a reception and so she went there. Her blush was ever-present and the awkward young woman looked at the receptionist and spoke. "Hello," she said, quietly. The receptionist raised an eyebrow and Perdita explained. "I'm studying history, at the University," she said. That did not cause the eyebrow which had raised to lower at all. "I have to choose a place, or event, and compare accounts of it." She pushed over her note book and later she would consider that at least she could be pleased that - in fairness - she was just being honest and trying to explain her homework. "I'd like to base my study on the Watchers Union here. I wonder," she said, earnestly. "Could you tell me, has there been any study of this place, previously?"
Those may be, Perdita considered, the longest sentences she'd ever said. So, she smiled, blushed, and pointed to her notebook. "My professor. Deadnut. He'll confirm." Stop talking, Perdita, she thought. Just. Stop. Talking.