Corneille de Locke - Tradition of Darkness
Posted: Fri Dec 16, 2022 6:42 pm
Droplets of autumn rain drizzling down against the exterior glass of a dirty window illuminated by jumping candlelight. A small table situated just beneath it and two individuals enjoying each other's company. Furniture was worn out and stained, the candleholders rusty and wobbly. Wine glasses weren't a matching set, and the room around was unkept and cold.
Cornellius wasn't a part of this scene, he was a mere observer. His first memory was of his family apartment in Arabel. As he recalled, it was a night to celebrate profit of some kind. By that point in the evening, he should've been fast asleep. And he would've been, were it not for a rogue thunder splitting the sky loud enough to wake him up. He must have sought comfort in the company of his parents, and that is when he found them.
Sirius de Locke was a trader. His education was that of a tailor, but he never worked with textiles, he just passed them on for profit. He had dark, brown hair and an ever-present stubble, adorning his crooked smile. He always smiled. Yet it was the kind of smile that felt reserved or afraid to fully blossom.
Virgo Cohle, his mother, was a different breed entirely. She had long black hair and skin as pale as marble. Her blue eyes always reflected the world as if she had mirrors put behind them. When she smiled, she did so with all her features. She'd brand her teeth and laugh in a way that reminded Cornellius of autumn storm. Like the one from his first memory.
Cornellius wasn't a part of this scene, he was a mere observer. His first memory was of his family apartment in Arabel. As he recalled, it was a night to celebrate profit of some kind. By that point in the evening, he should've been fast asleep. And he would've been, were it not for a rogue thunder splitting the sky loud enough to wake him up. He must have sought comfort in the company of his parents, and that is when he found them.
Sirius de Locke was a trader. His education was that of a tailor, but he never worked with textiles, he just passed them on for profit. He had dark, brown hair and an ever-present stubble, adorning his crooked smile. He always smiled. Yet it was the kind of smile that felt reserved or afraid to fully blossom.
Virgo Cohle, his mother, was a different breed entirely. She had long black hair and skin as pale as marble. Her blue eyes always reflected the world as if she had mirrors put behind them. When she smiled, she did so with all her features. She'd brand her teeth and laugh in a way that reminded Cornellius of autumn storm. Like the one from his first memory.