You’re standing outside of a fancy Nightclub. It’s raining; not hard, but just enough to be annoying. You’re hiding underneath an awning in the rain and the fog. The traffic is slow and you’re waiting for your cab.
finally remembered that I should scan this drawing of my friend’s kind-yet-pissed Raksha-touched Eclipse, Lark Sings at Dawn. (sadly the paper got a bit rippled by water damage, but without photoshop there’s not much I can do to fix it)
Less widely known than their cephalopod cousins the octopus and squid, cuttlefish are masters of disguise. They conceal themselves using chromatophores, which are specialized skin cells that hold pigment and reflect light. With up to 200 of these cells per square millimeter, cuttlefish can transform their appearance with a variety of hues and patterns. When vying for a mate, for example, some male cuttlefish will showcase “intense zebra displays,” creating an almost hypnotic pattern of animated stripes. Cuttlefish also boast one of the largest brain-to-body size ratios of any invertebrate. According to some scientists studying cephalopod learning, cuttlefish can use visual clues to solve mazes, making them more intelligent than many vertebrates and land mammals. Photo: Peter Hellberg