Subject: An Unusual Wedding Party
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Posted on: 2015-12-01 22:17:00 UTC

“Are you sure?” Dawn asked. She finished checking her hair in a small, square mirror that had once been used before dance performances and tucked it into a hidden pocket. “Really sure?”

“Definitely sure, Shakhar,” Des replied. He rubbed his faceplate. “To be frank, I could use cat cuddles,” he said in an embarrassed voice. “‘sides of which, I can count on you carrying a D.O.R.K.S. for me, right?” He tilted his head.

“I can probably fit one in my awesome pocket, yeah,” Dawn said. She checked it, and then nodded. “Yeah, there’s space. But if you’re coming as a cat, you’d better be the sort that doesn’t shed much. Okay?”

“Of course,” Des said, waving his fingers. “With my luck I’d probably be allergic to my own shed fur.” He approached the console and tapped a few keys, and soon an Aegean cat, white with grey stripes, stood in his place. Around his neck were a translator collar and, funnily enough, a bowtie.

Dawn knelt next to him with an “awww” and scratched behind his ears. “Lookit you, all fluffy and nice.” She tugged lightly on the bowtie, grinning. “Sweet. I think Zeb’s going with one of these, too. How’s it feel?”

Des mrrowed happily and flicked his tail. “Cats are fun!” he said.

“They are,” Dawn agreed. “I expect Valon and Kala would be happy if you went humanoid at least briefly, though.” She caught the tip of his tail, running it through her fingers. “In the meantime, though, this is adorable.”

Des mrrowed again, then, with surprising agility, lept onto Dawn’s shoulder. He rubbed his head against her cheek.

Adorable,” Dawn repeated, and petted his head. “Right, getting up now…” She did so, hands poised to catch him just in case.

Des didn’t fall. He bared his fangs, then remembered that he was a cat and switched to flicking his tail to and fro. Khataltelet half-snorted, half-trilled and took off from atop one of the kitchen shelves; he flew circles around Dawn and Des.

“I might run out of shoulders,” Dawn told the fire-lizard. As if to prove the point, Gwilithiel landed on her other shoulder and peered at Des, curling her golden tail possessively around Dawn’s neck. “Alright, are we all ready?”

Des glanced at his fire-lizard. “... No, Khataltelet, you can’t land on her head.”

Dawn looked up hurriedly. “What? Yeah, no, seconding that. My head is off-limits to anything but my hair, and you, dear fire-lizard, are not my hair. Stay in the air or switch off with someone.”

Khataltelet trilled — it sounded like a laugh — and stayed airborne.

“Alright, shall we, Shakhar?” Des asked.

Dawn grinned, and scratched under his chin. “We shall, O fluffy one. To the Courtyard!”



The woman, cat and two fire-lizards arrived at the Courtyard. Khataltelet immediately headed toward the nearest tree, perching on a branch and surveying the area. Gwilithiel stayed perched on Dawn’s shoulder for all of two seconds before she took flight, soaring through the air to get a better view and soon adding in loops so as to be admired in turn. Dawn, for her part, stayed still for a bit to take in the view.

“Hm,” she remarked at last. “It’s pretty nice. Not overdone, like in Twilight, and it… I don’t know, it looks nice. What do you think?”

Des purred, tilting his head. “It smells nice,” he said.

“Oh?” Dawn turned her head to see him a little better, petting him because cat. “What’s it smell of? — don’t say freesia.”

“Sun and air and people,” Des mewled. “You smell good, too!”

“I do?” Dawn grinned at him. “Thanks. I’d return the compliment, but you mainly smell of cat, which isn’t bad, but it’s cat.” She ran a hand over his head, pushing down each ear in turn. “Cat. But yeah, sun is good. Very good. And it isn’t shining over something uncanonical, either!”

Des mrrowed again and nuzzled against her cheek. Dawn leaned carefully into the touch.

Then, she began to look around for a destination.

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