That elicits a faint lift of a supraorbital ridge in a manner that certainly shouldn't be possible for bone, and most especially not for the skull region, which is, ostensibly, all one solid mass. Bone, when it's made of magic, just happens to defy laws of anatomy and physics like that, oblivious of the fact that it may be rude or difficult for one to wrap one's head along.
Hypothetically, though. Of course.
"Wouldn't bet on it, personally," he says, after a fair stretch of silence in which the sense of judgment was almost palpable. "Never has before for any other events."
no subject
Hypothetically, though. Of course.
"Wouldn't bet on it, personally," he says, after a fair stretch of silence in which the sense of judgment was almost palpable. "Never has before for any other events."