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_____A smaller mansion compared to most on the island, perhaps it was better named a villa. This did not mean, however, that it was any less elegant. Unlike the Playhouse, Lady Kitara decided to have a more Moroccan style architecture home than a western style.
_____In accordance, the wall were made of a rough sandy colored material inside and out. The doors were of white wood and decorated with carvings of magnificent birds all around the frame. There were iron balconies here that over looked a small garden that was located in the center of the villa, the four walls enclosing it so that it was impossible to get into the garden unless you went inside the building.
_____Inside of its walls, the same style pursued. When you first entered there were large decorations of rugs and paintings hung from the walls. A spiral staircase lead up to the several rooms located inside.
_____Each of those rooms contained a large bed with the finest of covers, a desk, a chair, and from the ceiling hung a plethora of see through silks that covered most of the room. To give it just that much more, as Lady Kitara often put it.
_____Back downstairs there was a modest kitchen, full of the most modern day appliances and only seen by a few servants. The dining room overly countered the kitchen's modesty by its grandeur.
_____Huge murals of forest scenes hung on each wall overlooking the long table that stretched from one end of the room to the other and surrounded by chairs. Each segment of the table was decorated by burning candles, that never seemed to burn any lower and gave off a wonderful fragrance of jasmine.
I could go on, but you'll have to find out the rest on your own...