Anya is live and ready to show you everything. Watch her strip, dance, and perform exclusive shows just for you. Interact in real-time and make your fantasies come true.
ā Live Streamingā Interactive Chatā Private Showsā HD Quality
Anya is LIVE right now
FREE
Free to watch ⢠No registration required ⢠HD streaming
He turned toward the eastern thunder, lip curled. Nothing.
The constant urging to āmake somethingā of himself only made him feel ashamed. Valiant, artisan, merchant, banker, trader, soldierāthese paths were all fine ones, he figured, but none of them were for him. It wasnāt a lack of ambition, heād tried to explain; his drive was merely to be content. To enjoy his life the way he wanted. Few others would hear him, though. Why should it matter that I donāt want to do anything?
He crossed beneath the grey cloud cover and felt the cool autumnal rain pattering gently on his shoulders. It had been six months since he fell from his pod, and while all the saplings his age were off studying for this and practicing for that, he wasnāt happy unless he was daydreaming. Heād imagined entire worlds separate from this one, ones where heād been on great adventures. Heād cracked open chests of glowing riches surrounded by motley bands of pirates. Heād conquered evil dragons with nothing but a mighty warhorse and a shining silver lance. Heād been blessed and cursed by dozens of strange, haggard witches found wandering the woods. Living inside his head suited him just fine.
By the time he returned to the dreaded present the marshy ground had yielded to sand and grass. After wandering beneath a small natural overpass he peered up into the drizzling rain and smiled at his discovery: a great magic tower. I could make a hut at the top, he decided. No one would bother me there. He couldnāt actually climb it, however; he could tell from there that some of the gaps between platforms were too long for him to jump. Iāll build bridges.
First, though, he wanted to sit and rest in view of the towerās majesty. To the bridge he strolled then crossed to find a modicum of shelter beneath the nearby cliff face. Soon he was dozing peacefully in the shade.
He woke to a distant uproar. By straining his ears he could make sense of the sounds haunting the air: screaming, shouting, and the ring and scrape of steel. Gnarled roots of fear closed on his heart and for a moment rooted his person there in the safety of shadows.
Curiosity got the better of him, but not by much. Filled with dread, he dragged himself on his stomach across the ground to peer out over the beach. What he saw was one sylvari locked in combat with multiple others but winning, slaying them all indiscriminately. He jolted with excitement. Heād seen this before in his imagination, but this was real. That hero, that underdog, the outnumbered, would slay them all, he knew. After all, thatās how the story went.
Yet as the last one fell he landed a blow on the heroine. His sword bit deep into her stomach, sending her to her knees, clutching at the wound and groaning. Finnās amber eyes widened. Sheād pull through, right? She had to pull through. His fingers clutched in suspense at the sandy weeds.
From a cove opposite the tower strode a single dark figure. I have to help her, thought Finn, yet his body remained still as stone, petrified. He wasnāt armed. Heād never even handled a weapon. Instead of striking the heroine down, however, the man tenderly took her face in his hands. It seemed to Finn that he smiled at her, and after some seconds, her head bowed.
From the west came sprinting another sylvari, this one white. When he looked upon the field he crumpled to his knees and drew his despairing hands to his face. Soon he was folded on the shore, his face hidden against the sand. Finn glanced back to where the pair had been, but they were gone from his sight. When the saplingās eyes returned to the lone figure he was drawing his blade deliberately across his chest, cutting through leather and skin alike. Sap bled quick and free from the wound. I have to help, he thought again, but still could not bring himself to move.
A detachment of Wardens was soon behind the bleeding man, thankfully. Most took to aiding him, some to peering grimly out over the corpse-littered shore. Finn crawled away unseen, and as soon as he was safe to rise, tore back to the Grove with frequent frightened glances shot over his shoulders.
That night he strode up to his mentor, stark and serious.