When Arlette explained how she knew his father, he couldn't help but to consider her age. Surely she wasn't much older than he was? Of course, it was hard to tell, as she was immensely knowledgeable and well-mannered. It was funny─it was almost as though she didn't know how spectacular she really was. He was quick to pick up on her nervous mannerisms and the way she looked to him when she spoke, almost as if she expected to be corrected, but the last thing he would ever do was just that. As a matter of fact, he was simply taken by the pretty, pale-eyed girl. "I guess so," he mused with a humble laugh. "I think...I think it's pretty cool that you know my dad, and my cousin. If you ask me, they're both pretty lucky to have known you. Or know you." Very rarely did Mirren trip up on his own words, and for the most part he was adept in conversation, but something about this girl made him feel a bit off-kilter. |
A r l e t t e You're a hard soul to save with an ocean in the way.
|
Arlette's clarification of the rules were just the kind of guidelines that he needed, and actually he liked the direction this game of hers was taking. She didn't know it, but not only was he a champion of games, but also a champion of bullshit. Or calling it, rather. With a pretty girl at his side, the sun trickling down from the tree tops, and the perfect challenge at hand, he couldn't help but to feel─a bit arrogantly and not without really jumping the gun─that the odds were truly in his favor. Avoiding a tortuous root that cut across their winding path, he was all ears. "Do you secretly like this muddy place?" His lips curled once again into a boyish grin, but when he became aware that his expression could be a hint to his competition he quickly made a straight face. The lack of tension in his body was apparent in his easy stride and the way his tail swayed with the smooth movement of his hips. As if to maintain that he were actually considering the notion that he could, in fact, like this ridiculous bog, his lively eyes cast about at the twisted tree trunks and the shadows that lingered in the folds of the forest. "Hmmmmm..." he hummed exaggeratedly, stretching his neck to look over into the murky depths of the brook. Well, he couldn't really lie and give her a chance to win just yet. "Not in a million years would I ever like this stuffy, horridly lackluster, awkwardly quiet muddy place..." Mirren resigned to look over the perfectly angled contours of her face, the charming grin of his emerging subtly. The shade of the forest darkened the mask of his face, making his amber eyes smolder that much more. They traced over her lips and his own parted to speak, only to press back together. Placing one paw in front of the other and with good company at his side, Mirren returned to Relic Lore on the right foot, even if that foot was trudging through mud. When their game would eventually come to an end, the boy wished the girl the best of luck, parting from his newfound friend with a smile before pressing westward and on into the night. |
{end}