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What We Run From [ooc welcome]


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What We Run From [ooc welcome]
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Naunetv
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Leech of the Aeons
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Posts:1,749
Joined:Jul 2013
Character:Antimony
Linkshell:Hipparion Tribe
Server:Balmung
Reputation: 108
RE: What We Run From [ooc welcome] |
#16
01-29-2014, 05:40 AM
(This post was last modified: 01-29-2014, 05:41 AM by Naunet.)
Terrified of losing track of time, D'hein of the Dodos returned to the Quicksand after fifteen minutes and settled into a bar-stool, where he crossed his arms very tight and stared at the bar-top feverishly trying to remember how long he had said he would give Antimony. His default was one hour, but had he given her more time? Half an hour? An entire hour? Two? Was he mad!?

The bar-tender tried to speak with him, but D'hein did not notice. He sat in silent, still panic, staring at the bar and beginning to sweat, growing more agitated as time went on. After what felt like an eternity of trying to feverishly recall the time he had stated, D'hein realized he had been lost in thought over the conundrum for a disproportionate amount of time. Struck by sudden terror that he was late, D'hein leapt to his feet, throwing his barstool back on the ground and whacking an adjacent Lalafel with his tail so hard that the poor man was thrown awkwardly into the lap of the Roegadyn he had been sharing drinks with.

D'hein checked the time with shaking hands, finding it had been half an hour. He reset his barstool and apologized to the Lalafel, but the tiny man just smiled and shrugged and settled into the lap of the unexpectedly welcoming Roegadyn. So everything, it seemed, worked out.

He ordered a drink. And set his gold-crafted watch on the bar in front of him And stared at it. He never touched his drink.

After exactly one hour and forty-five minutes (figuring he had said either an hour and a half or two hours, and figuring that in between he would either be fashionably late or charmingly early) D'hein stood from his barstool and paid off his tab as well as the Lalafel's, who had since passed out and been carried off by the Roegadyn. Good for him!

D'hein proceeded down the hallways back to Antimony's room.

***

The four walls of the inn room K'airos had so generously rented for her were both comforting to Antimony and agonizing - comforting in that they kept her hidden from people she wasn't certain she had the strength of will to face again, and agonizing as they kept her separated from K'airos, something she did not want to experience ever again. D'hein's gift loomed ominously on the table a short distance from her perch on the edge of the bed, and for a long time after he left, she simply watched it and tried not to think of all those other people, or of losing K'airos.

He had described the gift as traveling supplies, which, Antimony had to admit, sounded like things she could very much make use of. Though she'd managed to wash herself during her brief stay in Drybone, she still imagined she could smell the stink of corpses on her skin, and the journey back to Ul'dah had left her once more feeling grimy all over. The state of her dress didn't help matters, unfortunately. It occurred to her that she must look absolutely awful, and her ears flattened, tail flicking in embarrassment at what Miss Carceri, D'hein, and most of all her daughter must think of her in such a state.

Well, the least she could do was fully appreciate her former (current? future? it was all very confusing still) boss's gift.

Antimony stood with a sigh, wincing at the dull ache in her joints. The strain of travel and stress was not doing them any favors, and she didn't think she'd ever felt more like her age than in these moments. Not delaying further, she allowed her curiosity to carry her the few steps to the table and proceeded to unwrap the oblong package.

The first item she saw brought a deep flush to her cheeks and she nearly pushed the entire thing off the edge of the table in her shock. The cloth was folded, but the cut of it was unmistakable, even less when she lifted it slightly in shaky hands. The soft purple fabric ran like water across her skin, and perhaps at any other time she might have admired the dress, but not now, and especially not considering who had given it. It brought to mind another gift, come all the way from Coerthas, and she grimaced with mild guilt before setting the dress - was it supposed to be tight? It certainly looked far too small for her - to one side.

The rest of the items inside were less provocative, though their quality left Antimony feeling guilty for accepting such a thing: several finely crafted soaps in fragrances she couldn't identify, a set of grooming implements and other assorted toiletries, a few washcloths and a towel so thick and soft her fingers disappeared in its fibers, a pair of water flasks made of intricately engraved metal wrapped in impossibly supple leather, and at the bottom, a set of clothing, thankfully more acceptable than the dress she'd found first, though following pattern, they were made of fabrics far nicer than Antimony had ever seen.

"And all Dodos receive these?" she muttered to herself and then shook her head. She was well aware of the tribe's accrued wealth and status; she only hoped that using these gifts wouldn't draw the ire of any other tribe member she might happen to run into.

At that point, Antimony became aware she had not kept track of time. This realization startled her so much that a number of the toiletries were sent clattering to the floor. Time! How long had she dawdled? When had D'hein said he'd return? One hour? Two? What if he walked in through the door right that moment? And she'd done nothing!

She wasted another several minutes agonizing over her delay, then recognized said agonizing was delaying her further and sprang into action. Though this room did not come equipped with a bath (not that she would have asked K'airos to spend more money on her for such a thing), she recalled the Quicksand having a publically available washing area not far. She only needed to locate it.

A few minutes later, Antimony had bundled the towels, clothing, and soaps in her arms and was making her way down the halls with quick but cautious steps. True, D'hein had assured her that K'aijeen was not currently on the Quicksand's premises, but she did not quite trust those words, and there were of course others she did not wish to run into immediately...

***

Some time later, Antimony walked back through the halls with the towels and toiletries bundled in her arms again, but this time the towels were damp and joined by her old, mud-stained dress. She had to admit that the bath had greatly refreshed her, even if her thoughts continued to wander madly towards places of worry. She couldn't smell corpses anymore, which was comforting, and the grime that had gotten seemingly everywhere - even under her nails and between her toes - was scrubbed clean as much as she could manage. The change of clothes D'hein had provided fit her fairly well, though the pants - loose and gathered in the style of Ul'dah - were a bit too long, as were the sleeves of the wrapped shirt. At least the detailing on them was pretty, though it still felt uncomfortable to wear a stranger's clothing. Her mostly greyed hair hung wet against her neck, messy from the shower but she would deal with that once...

Antimony froze mid-step as her eyes caught sight of an unmistakable fluff of blond hair hovering just outside her room. She nearly turned around and fled right there, utterly mortified at that tia seeing her like this, but no - there was nothing to be done for it. How had she lost track of time? She'd been so certain she had at least a quarter bell until...!

Clearing her throat anxiously, Antimony's still damp ears swiveled with uncontrolled nerves as she ventured, "Excuse... me. You're, ah--you're... early!"

D'hein spun to the strange-looking Miqote, thin hair wet and nice clothes but ill-suiting her frame. It didn't really do to wander around wet like that, especially if one couldn't even bother to dress appropriately to one's own size!

Oh, no, it was Antimony. That changed everything! What was that thing she had just said? Some series of words artfully broken like the fake breaks in a stained-glass window. With a smirk, he imagined what a deliberately broken greeting like that must sound like, letting his fabricated substitute fill out his memories since he'd missed it.

And then, with a smile and a bow, he said, "And I’m sure I share those beautiful sentiments, miss Antimony." And then, leaning back, "If you had required or still require time, you need only say so. I'm in no hurry to rush you."

His response confused her enough that she was left stammering for several seconds, clutching the towels and her old clothing to her chest. Sentiments? That he was... early? Did he mean to be early? Had he thought to catch her unawares? How long had he been lurking here? What else had he done while she was bathing??

"I don't--that is, I haven't--I... just wasn't expecting you so... ah! Excuse me!" Face flushed bright red, she hurried around him to the door, "I'll just--just be a moment!"

Retreating a measure with a chuckle, D'hein held up his hands, "Take your time. I tell you what: I'll linger in the tavern and you come fetch me when you're prepared."

"Yes, yes, I'll do just--" the door opened and shut behind her in a flurry, "--that," she finished to the empty room.

With a pained sigh, Antimony trudged over to the table and began to try and put herself back into some semblance of order.

***

Stritching his arms to either side of him -- whacking the walls without noticing -- D'hein began his way back to the tavern and fixed his fingers behind him as he went. He did not bother to get a table once he had set foot in the tavern, though. He just stood and lingered. It was a terribly common place and it was far below him to actually eat the kinds of food they sold here.

***

Once she'd managed to brush out her hair and pin it up into something acceptable that didn't resemble a drake's nest - a process that took very little time, considering the decades of practice she'd had, and her own tendency toward economy of style, rather than fancy flair -  Antimony tried to give her thoughts a chance to cool. Closing her eyes, she drew in a few, slow breaths and then set about the task of very carefully laying out the damp towels and, more carefully, folding her old clothes. She set the former on the floor next to the bed, alongside the equally dirty winter coat she'd somehow managed to keep ahold of throughout all of this chaos. She wouldn't forgive herself if she lost it, of course; Mitari's gift had been nothing if not heartfelt.

She wondered not for the first time what it might like to take K'airos with her up north. But with K'aijeen as hateful and dangerous...

Antimony forced herself to ignore the sharp ache in her chest those thoughts stirred, as well as the stinging in her nose and behind her eyes. Taking a moment to wipe her glasses with the hem of the clean shirt and, finally, adjust the new articles of clothing in a way she hoped at least looked decent, Antimony finally took her exit of the room in search of D'hein.

***

She found him fairly quickly, near the entryway into the open tavern that led from the inn halls. She approached him quietly, hoping to keep her composure more than the last time they'd interacted, and clasped her hands in front of her.

"Now, I am ready," she stated, standing slightly behind him. Her tail swished in slow arcs behind her, brushing against the loose fabric of her pants.

Watching the working-class mingle was an interesting past-time. How they managed to indulge on such paltry, ugly things, he wasn't sure. The liquor was all essentially the same, except for the quality of the ale which was completely uncoscionable, he was sure, but the food and the environment and just the stink off all the other working-class people should have made contentedness impossible.

All of which was not actually a thing he thought. Was this how the Dodo Nunhs passed their time? Staring down from their towers and lamenting the lesser beings? No, not lamenting. Heckling. Or something.

"Hello!" He finally announced several seconds after Antimony had arrived, spinning around, his tail fairly flailing behind him. Only one of his ears managed the turn to Antimony; the other got lost and ended up listening for the ceiling for some reason. "You look so much more comfortable, now! Collected, prepared. You look like an otherworldly genius descended from some ivory tower, still glistening with divine light!"

"I... what?" Her own ears twisted uncertainly at that description. Certainly he wasn't talking about her. What in all of Eorzea was he talking about? Her tail gave a firm swish and she drew a breath, "Ah, that's... not necessary. I apologize for, well, earlier. I must've lost track of... time or some sort of... well. Regardless."

Her fingers wove together as she looked past D'hein to the tavern, a small twinge of anxiety tightening her chest as she half-expected to spot K'luha or K'ile amongst the throng. Of course, if K'ile were here, he would have smelled her long ago... and perhaps left in disgust. She wouldn't blame him for such a thing. He had no obligation to her, an outsider, twice over. At least she'd thought to sent K'airos to help...

Antimony realized she'd grown quite distracted with these unhappy thoughts and shook herself, returning her focus to the blonde tia in front of her. She tilted her head slightly at him and, for the first time in days, allowed herself to acknowledge the extreme hunger that had been pestering her balance, concentration, and just general being, "You, ah, mentioned we could eat...?"

Watching Antimony passively as she seemed to sink into a comfortable shell of distraction for a few seconds, only to rise out of it suddenly, D'hein at length smirked and said, "Have you ever eaten near or around the hustings strip? Or any of those very red-and-gold interior places of the city?"

She frowned at that. "Of course not. It would be an exorbitant waste of agency resources."

Leaning a bit back, one ear standing up and his eyes flicking around as if to see if he is being spied upon, D'hein said, "It would? Really? Since when!"

Confusion softened her expression, and her ears tilted back somewhat. "Since... well, I have--I mean, had a budget, you should know! It didn't seem proper to spend it on... not that I'd ever considered such a thing."

"Budget? Really? I... Well," He crossed his arms and bit his thumb, looking conflicted. "I guess budgets are a thing we work off of. That must be more common for business dealings than I had suspected. Budgets for contractors is such a mad idea, though, I'd never thought of it! Draconian, but perhaps in a good way."

"In a... what way?" Perhaps it was her hunger getting the better of her, but Antimony found following D'hein's train of thought increasingly difficult. "Everything and everyone has a budget of some kind."

She didn't feel like arguing the point, however, so instead she just twisted her hands together and questioned, "Is that where you wish to dine, then?"

Taking a long time to pull his thoughts away from the revolutionary budgetary paradigms Antimony had invented, D'hein said with some difficulty, "Yes. Unless you have some special wish to remain here."

Green eyes flicked past him to the tavern once more, and Antimony decided then that she was indeed not ready to face any of those she'd run from just yet. She recognized this as cowardly, and the acknowledgement was not without a strong sense of guilt; however, to D'hein she just nodded. "That would be fine." A pause. "The, ah, Hustings Strip, I mean."

"Excellent! I know this place that purports to serve literally the best Ourobon in the entire world!" He spun, pacing his way towards the Quicksand's exit to head off to Ruby Road and, from there, to the Hustings strip. He fixed his hands behind him as he went, smiling upwards and speaking without reserve, "Then, maybe you don't want Ourobon? I'm sure that's a main staple of one's diet in Southern Thanalan!"

It took her several seconds to pull her thoughts together enough to follow him, and when he spoke again, they scattered just as quickly. And she had hoped to maintain order over this dinner...

Antimony flinched and looked off to one side, watching the brown stone wall pass as they walked instead of the man who'd decided to speak of uncomfortable things. "That's... well, yes, but I haven't..." She cleared her throat, trying to free it of the lump that had begun to form, and finally finished, "There's mostly fish in Limsa."

"Oh, right," D'hein said, moving his hands from behind his back and clapping it in front of him, "And an Ourobon is a kind of fish! Inferior to anything you get in Limsa." He put his hands back behind his back. "Although once you've eaten at the Bismarck, well, you'll have a hard time at similar establishments elsewhere! Heed this warning, Antimony!" He brought his hands forward and clapped them again. "Do not order the fish here in Ul'dah. You'll be disappointed."

His gesturing drew her attention from the wall, and she watched it with an almost-fascination at how theatrical they were. "I will keep that in mind," she acknowledged. At this point her stomach made a small, hollow sound and she ducked her head briefly before adding in a hurried tone to cover the embarrassment, "I doubt they have the true staple food, however."

"Ah, but what is truth?" Began D'hein, then shook his head. "Forget I said that." Stupid change of topic! He needed to pay more attention to what he was saying. His tail was churning like a piston behind him as he walked onward, trying to get his brain to work its way back to... food, they had been discussing? Regional food.

He cleared his throat, "Ul'dah itself isn't known for anything of any interest, unfortunately. Unless you like spices. Lots and lots of spices!"

"I'm certain it's all delicious," she replied neutrally and couldn't help but brush against a memory - faded in its age - of a rare venture of trade with the outside world. Spices were one of the treasures their huntresses had returned with, and their flavors had excited the children for weeks. Antimony's ears drooped. She should not think of such things, not when she no longer had right to them.

Think of the present.

The rough stone streets had given way to more delicately carved paths, and many of the walls they passed were now softened with richly colored tapestries. Even the lighting in these inner paths of Ul'dah shifted, gaining a warmer hue, and though she could still catch the pervading scents of sweat and dirt and sickness that covered the city like a shroud, they were more distant here. "Where precisely is this, ah, place...?"

The Dodo stopped in his tracks as the surprised by the question. He looked up, then around him, then down at Antimony wordlessly, his thoughts churning as though through some kind of clanking machine. D'hein blinked.

Antimony frowned, trying to stifle a niggling suspicion; it wouldn't do to make assumptions so frequently. Even if he did seem a bit... "... You do know where we are going, yes?"

D'hein went slightly wide-eyed. Was Antimony trying to test him? Then he must do his very best to pass! Taking a moment to ponder, only a moment so that it did not become awkward, "To... the..." Oh, food!

"It is a magnificent place!" D'hein declared, spinning to walk forward again and turning them up a flight of stairs, "You will marvel at how humble it can be while still evoking such incredible regality! Quite like myself, actually. Or yourself, now that I think about it!"

There was no real way to avoid the heat in her cheeks at that. "I am not... I wouldn't call myself regal in any..." Her ears shook vigorously at the thought. These compliments he seemed to be constantly armed with were really going to be the end of her.

The stairs were a bit more difficult than they should have been, perhaps credit to her scant rest of late, but she watched his ears to distract herself. Always mobile, she half-wondered if they were even a part of his head. It would... well, that was a silly thought.

"Oh, I would call you regal by most definitions," D'hein said with a laugh, "And I'm an expert on the definitions of that word. Here!" D'hein cut off half-way up the stairs into a relatively thin hallway, dashing into it as though diving for cover. In truth, he almost hadn't noticed it, so acted quickly when he did.

The suddenness of his action caught Antimony off-guard and she half-stumbled to keep up with him before realizing he probably wouldn't go running off without her. So she took a moment to catch her balance and her orientation before also turning down the hall he'd dove into, looking up as she did so. The ceiling vaulted high above them, making the narrow hallway seem strangely confining, or perhaps just very far below ground. Either way, it was a bit claustrophobic, and Antimony quickly returned her gaze forward to D'hein.

"I'll admit I'm a bit relieved," she said as she followed him. "Food has not been a high priority for... ah! Not that I--I don't intend to rush or... it's not as though I accepted this invitation only to take advantage of you, well, your.. ngh."

D'hein paused, staring up at the high vaulted ceiling, where it was eerily consumed by shadows. The eccentricity of the hall was charming to him, like a friend with a dark sense of humor. D'hein dropped his gaze to Antimony, and inclined his head in a tiny faux bow, "Antimony, there's an honor in having one's hospitality take advantage of. If you accepted for only that reason, I would be delighted." And then he was marching happily down the hallway again.

"Oh. That's--ah... alright." She followed him in silence for several moments. The strange, sideways flattery kept throwing her off, and she wasn't entirely sure what else to say to such things. She certainly didn't understand where they came from.

"Airos," she spoke suddenly, slowing her steps briefly as she pictured her middle daughter before hurrying back alongside him and adding in a quieter tone, "She... looks well."

"Oh, she's very well! Charming and beautiful beyond the right of any flower or star," D'hein glanced back at Antimony as he walked, "And if you point it out her face glows red as a sunset. Industrious. If I had half the virtues she did I'd own all of Ul'dah by now."

He took another sudden, sideways turn, through an even darker entry than the previous one. This took him not into a hallway, though, but instead into a modest and low-ceiling'ed room. More of a den than a tavern, it had a small number of long, maple tables on a dark clay floor, the walls tiles a deep rust red. The firelight was a soft orange, kept dim and calm.

The shadows were deep, but they were warmly so. The handful of patrons, well short of a dozen, spoke in low, amicable tones. They were all people who knew how to speak softly, calmly, and their words carried well in this silent place so far from the roads.

Further talk of her daughter - such as that she wouldn't stand for him to hold any designs on her K'airos - stilled in Antimony's throat as they entered this new room, the unexpected shift in decor and mood pausing her steps a moment. There was a certain understated but very clear wealth to the room that left Antimony feeling out of place; she only hoped it didn't show too much in her face.

Well, she certainly would not be seeing K'ile or K'luha here, at the very least.

"I assume this is... it?" Her hands fidgeted with the sleeves of her borrowed shirt. "It's certainly, ah, cozy."

"Pause for a moment," D'hein said, spinning on Antimony and holding up his hands. "Close your eyes and imagine a sunset."

"I... what?" She blinked rapidly behind her glasses at his hands, then up as though she could see the sky - which, of course, she could not - and then back to D'hein. "Whatever for...?"

Frowning for a moment, D'hein said patiently, "The decor of the place makes no sense unless you play along."

Glancing around the room at the other patrons, most of whom seemed content ignoring her and D'hein to her relief, Antimony finally sighed in acquiescence. "Very well. If you insist..."

Standing very straight, legs and arms together, Antimony closed her eyes and tried to picture a sunset. At first, she thought of oranges and yellows over broad spans of rolling water, the tones softened by evening mist rolling in, but such a scene didn't seem appropriate for the setting. And she couldn't help... the slow waves became rolling dunes, and the mist pulled back to a clear sky, the sun blazing with a mighty fury low on the horizon. Her chest ached.

"Alright, now," D'hein lifted his hands to gesture as he spoke, watching Antimony's features, "Fix the sunset in your mind. The place and time don't matter. But the light, the color, the warmth of the day. And then let the sun set beyond the horizon. Just that instant after the sunset, where everything is blue and purple except the lingering red in the sky. And the scent of the day is still there, the heat of it before the cool comes, and everything is dark and shadowed. Kind shadows that leave beautiful lines on everyone's faces."

Her ears tilted at the request, confused at the purpose that remained obscured behind it. "Are you certain this is necessary," she muttered, but did her best to play along. Drawing a deep breath, Antimony watched Azeyma's eye dip and fade, and as she did this, she wondered how many sunsets she had missed with her daughters. She swallowed at the thought and tried to focus on the cooling sand, the cool shadows that were not yet sharpened by moonlight.

Letting a truncated sigh slip at Antimony's question, D'hein pushed forward anyway, "Just fix that time and setting in your head. Cool, warm, comfortable, when the light is easiest and the air comfortable, and the shadows make everyone appear deep, mysterious, fascinating." He dropped his hands, "And that's it. Minutes After Sunset. That's what this place is called."

She was silent for a moment, eyes still closed, and gave an honest effort to indulge in the feelings D'hein sought to engender. They were tempered, however, by the familiarity of the vision she'd called up, and after a time she sighed, her tail drooping to hang low behind her. "It's quite lovely," she admitted, which was true despite those other things. The small establishment had succeeded in what it had clearly set out to do. "Though I tend to prefer night once it's fully set in and the stars are clearly visible. Better to chart constellations that way."

She frowned with her eyes still closed, not sure why she'd volunteered that information.

"If we could see the stars from in here, I might agree. Except that nights can be so cold, and I'm a man who prefers to stay warm." He reached out and briefly brushed her shouler with one of his gloved hands, "You can open your eyes now. I'll find us a seat." He turned to the soft lamplight and deep shadows of the place, finding that he had his pick of every seat. He went for one that looked comfortable, near a wall, away from people.

She'd never minded the cold, not when she'd had her charcoal and the few, precious sheets of hide she'd managed to beg off the huntresses, bits of worm skin too worn thin or too stiff to be used for other purposes. The weight of the memories D'hein had unknowingly stirred nearly staggered her, and Antimony opened her eyes swiftly at his notice, looking around the room once more to try and dispel them.

She followed him to the corner he'd chosen quietly, looked over the low, round table and its rather comfortable looking chairs, and settled into one with no small amount of appreciation. She didn't speak immediately, torn between wanting to bring K'airos up again or venture for something more neutral.

Before beginning any conversation, D'hein turned to wave over towards the long, narrow bar that huddled patronless against the wall. He received a nod from the bartender, and then D'hein turned back to Antimony and said, "A place like this doesn't really have a static menu. Their selection is smell and varies greatly, so I usually just forego picking something out and let the kitchen do so for me. Do you have any reservations or allergies?"

"Uhm," her brow furrowed at the question, though it was straightforward enough. "I don't... think so, no." Green eyes shifted towards the bar D'hein had made some wordless communication towards, wondering what had been exchanged, and then back to the miqo'te before her. "Do you?"

"No," D'hein said. "I don't think so. Do you drink?"

Oh, that question. She recalled unhappily those unfortunate two evenings with Captain Lamandu, tried to remember if she'd managed to get a taste of whatever he had ordered for her. The memory of Ulanan growing louder and more overtly scandalizing was more prominent in her mind, however, and she fidgeted a bit before admitting, "I haven't. Though... I'm not sure I'd be averse."

"It's more of an after-dinner thing for me," D'hein said, open palms on the table between them, "But different people do so differently. If there's anything that you're in the habit of or that you desire which doesn't rise to the top of my head, please just say so and let me take care of it. I don't want you to hesitate at all."

Glancing around the warmly shadowed room, Antimony shook her head slightly, ears shifting at the various levels of conversation. "I'm sure none of my habits are... well, necessary for this kind of place."

"All that's necessary is whatever makes one comfortable and relaxed. Case and point." D'hein withdrew his hands as two large glasses of chilled milk were placed on the table, one near him and one near Antimony. "I myself am simple. All I wanted after two months away on business was a cup of milk, so of course that witch of an Elezen pillaged my poor, helpless milk bar while I was gone. Fresh stock is difficult to come by in the desert."

"Away? What were you--ah, not that it's... any of my business." She blinked at the glass, watched the condensation settle in a ring on the coaster it had been placed upon. Her tail shook. "I will be quite alright with whatever they have to offer," she ventured to reassure, and certainly this was true. She hadn't eaten much more than a few fruits the past few days; even sun-rotten worm meat would seem appetizing at this point, she was so far beyond being picky.

"Alright, then. I'll stop worrying." D'hein said, holding his glass of milk in both hands immediately in front of him and staring at it fondly for number of seconds before indulging in a long, slow sip.

"Thank you." Not an entirely appropriate response, but it was the best she could do. She watched D'hein sip from his milk for a moment, then glanced to her own, recalling the last time she'd had milk. Such a disastrous interview... though apparently not too disastrous. Her hands moved grip it, letting the condensation sink into her palms for a moment, before she lifted it to her lips for a small sip. It wasn't food yet, but it was something, and she couldn't resist another, and then a third.

D'hein smirked over his own cup of milk to watch Antimony drinking hers.

Catching D'hein's look, Antimony stilled and then cleared her throat, flicking her eyes away briefly and setting her glass down. "Ah, excuse me. Overcome with... well." Her ears twitched in discomfort.

"I'm glad you like it." D'hein said, setting down his own glass and giving Antimony a full smile, "You'd be surprised some of the looks I get!"

His words didn't quite follow, and she furrowed her brow at him. "For... what?"

He tilted his head, "For drinking so much milk. People think it's strange, but I'm unsure why. It's good for a person. I'm always telling everyone that they should be sure to drink plenty of milk!"

Her ears followed the tilt of his head. "Surely it's not so vital. I lived without it for decades, after all."

"It is absolutely vital!" D'hein said, strongly, "That you lived without it is tragic, but it must be an artifact of your cleverness, a testament to mankind's will to live, that you somehow managed to substitute its presence in your diet. Such miraculous alchemy is beyond my comprehension, but where I walk there shall never be need of it. From now on, you will have just as much milk to drink as I've always provided my own family." He punctuated this speech by downing some milk.

"That's... very kind of you," Antimony mumbled, looking bewildered by the passion driving his words. Still, it was... She could at least appreciate the sentiment behind it. Her eyes dropped to her glass, and she couldn't help the sad tone to her voice when she said, "As you've done with Aijeen and Airos?"

"Precisely," D'hein said, leaning back in his chair and swirling his milk like a glass of wine. "Although D'aijeen is as stubborn about it as anyone and got it in her head that it's bad for K'airos as well."

She looked up worriedly at that. "She's got ahold of--" Her words cut off suddenly though, as she finally caught on to something she had perhaps heard numerous times now but had refused to acknowledge. "... She truly changed her name?" She said a bit quieter and then looked down. "She hates me that much."

"Eeeh," D'hein sat his milk down and thrummed his fingertips against the glass, creating a rhythmic plunking sound and rippling the surface fo the cream. "She became a Dodo so she could abuse our resources. She did keep her given name, which I think counts for more. And I would say that she does not have any straightforward emotions about anything, so..." He bit down on his cheek to silence himself.

"Her words in that corpse yard were very straightforward," Antimony muttered lowly, ears laying back. She couldn't help that despair, that there was nothing she could do to change her youngest daughter's mind. She'd tried for years. She'd done everything she could to protect her, and in the end it had meant nothing. And that she now threatened to take K'airos from her... "Please," she spoke suddenly, giving D'hein and earnest look, "Tell me how they've lived. What you've... done."

The Dodo watched Antimony's features, and couldn't help but to let his own emotions be moved downward by them. Her frown deepened his own. The softness of her eyes took the edge of happiness from his own. But he watched her stubbornly, even as a server arrived to decorate their table with a number of fresh dishes: breads, vegetables, a medley of dark meats from desert animals.

Giving neither the food nor the server a moment's consideration, he said, "Your daughters are doing well. I think you would be proud of them. Both of them."

"I want to believe you," she ducked her head, eyes dropping to the food placed before them and finding her appetite gone despite the emptiness in her gut. "But Aijeen, I don't... know her. I'm not sure she'll ever... allow me to." And there it was. She'd thought enough time had passed that perhaps it had grown dull, or at least distant like the grief for other lost family, but that emptiness she'd felt when she'd awoken one morning to find her youngest daughter gone, lost to the dunes... She turned her head away sharply, blinked hard.

"I'm sorry," she choked out. "This isn't... the best time for these kinds of words, I don't think. You shouldn't have to--that is, I shouldn't be... ah, I will try to just enjoy the food."

"Here," D'hein spoke with a patient smile, setting a piece of meat on a plate, placing some vegetables with it. "See if you can tell me by taste what is what. And how good a job the culinarian did." He pushed the plate towards Antimony.

Pulling in a few, unsteady breaths, Antimony turned back to the table and tried to focus on D'hein's words, the varied smells of food. "Ah, I'm... not nearly so skilled as to presume to judge an esteemed culinarian," she mumbled but took up the utensils by the plate anyway. Something familiar settled in the scents wafting up from the plate, something she recognized almost immediately, "Sun drake." This quiet announcement was followed with a small bite, and sure enough, that's what it was. Some of the flavor was different, heftier than she was used to, likely because most meat she'd ever eaten had first been dried and cured. Unmistakable, however. Antimony frowned; it seemed the past was not about to let her go.

"Ah, I do love Sun Drake," D'hein said, taking a plate and snagging some of the meat for himself. "Something about eating a predator is just so... Does justice have a taste? If it did, it would be Sun Drake."

Momentarily distracted from her previous nadir or emotion by D'hein's challenge and unusual comment, Antimony found herself struck by an almost desperate urge to... well, to eat. For this reason, her only response was a slight nod as she continued with bites of the seared drake flesh. The culinarian who had prepared it had dusted it with a crust of seasonings that sharpened the gamey taste of the meat.

"I'll admit, I'd not realized it could be quite so... well, not stringy," she admitted after a moment, before going back to finally (finally!) filling her stomach.

"An Ul'dahn culinarian can shock you with their ability change the shape and form of a thing. They have to. Not as much to work with as in Limsa Lominsa. Well," he rolled his eyes while absently piling random vegetables on his plate, "Unless they want to import, but usually that is restricted to Syndicate kitchens."

Noticing his partaking of vegetables drew Antimony's attention to those on her own plate she had been erstwhile neglecting. It was strange what hunger could do to one, for suddenly those vegetables - green, stalky things and others that looked like roots of some kind - seemed the most delectable items she'd ever laid eyes upon. She only barely restrained herself from all but diving into them. Her tail twitched at the very end as she ate, flicking against the side of her chair in a rapid rhythm.

Still having not begun on his own food, D'hein set his prepared plate in front of himself and once again enjoyed watching Antimony for a moment. "Don't eat too fast or you'll make yourself sick," he cautioned, "And remember to drink your milk," he hefted his own glass in illustration.

A flinch knocked her fork against the edge of the plate, the sound uncomfortably loud to Antimony compared to the hushed tones of the rest of the dining area. She almost looked around, half expecting the other patrons to be staring agog at her mad rush to consume the food placed in front of her, but her own chagrin kept her frozen staring forward and down. Very deliberately, she slowed her pace and stammered, "Very sorry, I--well, it's just that I haven't had... I mean, there was the apple Megiddo gave me... and that pear of Airos's, and--well, Miss Aeriyn's apple as well and... that's.. mmm--" She trailed off, ducking her head slightly to chew on a bite of root vegetable.

"There's nothing to apologize for. Unless you make yourself sick, in which case I'll make you apologize for ignoring my warnings." The Dodo pulled his plate over and began to push his vegetables around in the juices from his meat. Without looking, he took a serving of sauce and poured it over the mix as well, fairly ruining the artful presentation of the food he'd been given.

Some of the edge had been taken off her hunger by then anyway, so Antimony found it easier to keep her eating at a slower pace; however, this also resulted in more periods of awkward - at least to her - silence where she neither ate nor spoke. Her knee bounced anxiously under the table until she set one hand one it to still the limb, but then her tail picked up the slack, flicking back and forth along the side of the chair.

In this silence, more nagging thoughts presented themselves, and against her better judgment, she ventured another question regarding her daughters: "Ahm," she coughed to clear her throat and then continued, "Aijeen, has she... She was never very satisfied with my... well, has she continued, ah, studying? Under your care?" The last few words were difficult to say, acknowledging D'hein's role in her daughter's life, but she thought she managed them without too much dubiousness or jealousy. She hoped so, at least.

"Maybe?" D'hein said, taking a moment to chewy on a stringy, tough vegetable as he thought, green eyes cast towards some candles a few tables away. After he swallowed, he said, "Under my care, not so much. I paid for her to study Conjury in Gridania for a couple of years, and after she decided she was done with that, Thaumaturgy here in Ul'dah. I think she's studying Alchemy now?"

Green eyes widened slightly at the mention of thaumaturgy, recalling the Ul'dahn guild's proximity to the Ossuary as well as K'aijeen's proximity to the death all over Drybone. The thought left her feeling ill and she set down her fork carefully. A memory tugged at one corner of her mind, of an incomprehensible beast of bone and sinew and... "Vultures," she mumbled faintly and then shook herself while her hands shook in turn. "Does she... do you know if she sti--ah, if she studies the... dead?"

Pausing as he cut through a piece of meat, and then giving it a distasteful look as though it had transformed into something ugly, D'hein frowned up at Antimony and said, "That's an odd way to say it. If you mean Thaumaturgy, there's more to it than simply death, and I don't think she is still studying it."

"No," Antimony shook her head slightly, ears shivering before setting back against her head. Her tone dropped, "I mean the dead."

"... Like, history?"

The creases around her eyes deepened with an anxious, worried look. "No. The... dea—corpses. She used to..."

"I don't know anything about that," D'hein said, rather quickly, and forced himself to return to cutting the piece of meat on his plate. "Conjury and Thaumaturgy each deal with death in their own ways and times, but as far as I can tell, that's the extent of it. And I'm told she helps in Drybone sometimes, but Thaumaturgy has its uses there and they do need lots of help."

Her meal had become utterly unappetizing somehow, and she blinked down at his with a heavy look. "Before she--" Antimony winced, forced herself to pick up her fork and knife, but she couldn't manage to do anything with the utensils. "--left, she would... take them apart. Bodies. Of... hunted prey. I thought it was just, ah, harmless curiosity at first but..." Antimony swallowed dryly.

"I..." D'hein began, his voice falling away as he stared at Antimony, struggling for words, "I am not aware of such a hobby myself. There are so many good things that D'aijeen does. Should we not discuss those? She takes excellent care of K'airos, for instance."

Her hands tightened about her fork and knife, her features following suit. "It--it's just that I worry... if she still... the night before she--left, she summoned a /beast/, a demon!" Antimony flinched then, ducking her head as her voice lifted and cracked, chancing a nervous look to one side, but she couldn't tell if she'd drawn attention from any other patrons. "If she's putting K'airos in danger, or herself," she managed after a moment, quieter, in fact barely above a whisper. "I... worry."

His hands motionless around his silverware, D'hein delayed a great while with his eyes fixed on Antimony, before finally saying, "I've seen no indication of that she's putting anyone in danger. She's a bit argumentative, sure, but that's... all. Pretty much."

The set of her mouth and brow spoke of how little his words did to convince her that her daughter had turned away from the dark practices she'd glimpsed that horrible night. She wanted to press him further; if he were truly taking care of her, surely he'd have spent enough time around her to notice? She couldn't fathom K'aijeen ceasing action on the very thing that had caused her to leave the tribe in the first place. Unless... it had been something else that had driven her away. Someone else

Antimony's ears drooped low to the sides of her head, and she forced a bite of the drake steak though it now tasted like little more than parchment to her distracted mind. "If you... are certain," she finally said and then fell into a sad, brooding silence.

"I think you should ask K'airos about that," D'hein said, taking a vegetable, a piece of meat, another vegetable on his fork. "If anybody knows D'aijeen better than anyone else, it's her. They've been firmly attached to one another ever since D'aijeen brought K'airos to us."

Antimony sighed, "I am not surprised. They... were always close." She glanced away again, then toward D'hein but found she couldn't quite look him in the eyes. Instead she settled for the collar of his shirt, a neutral point. Her tail twitched and she muttered a bit despairingly, "I am sorry. I must be horrible at dinner conversation."

"That just means you need practice!" D'hein proclaimed, finding a happy tone again. He let his head lean down to try and catch her eyes with his own, "Or lessons. One thing I am greatly skilled at teaching is etiquette and conversation! I'm sure you'd take to lessons with an exceptional talent. You do seem talented at all things."

"What? That--ah, that isn't--" The compliment caught her off guard - yet again, he seemed to be making a pattern of it and she still couldn't catch on, apparently. She stammered for a moment, flicking her eyes up to his and then down to one side. "Lessons. It's--it's not as though I'm some un--uncivilized savage!"

Perhaps not an entirely fair retort, considering the spirit in which the offer had been made, but his words recalled the difficulty she'd had blending with Limsa Lominsa's society in those first few years following the nightmare of the Calamity. Antimony felt a heat in her face.

"No, Antimony," D'hein gesture to himself, "I am the savage, for if I were a more honest and smooth man, better trusted and reputed, I could have reunited you with your daughters with so little effort. And Ul'dah is uncivilized, or else we would not wish to hide from it in such a place as this."

"Well." She wanted to cross her arms, but she still held her utensils and her hands seemed unwilling to release them. Instead her lips pursed and she leaned slightly back from the table, actions meant to buoy herself in the face of uncomfortable embarrassment. "You certainly could have--if you hadn't been so... invasive about it!" Ears swiveling, Antimony furrowed her brow and pulled her tail close to one leg.

"Precisely. I was such a beast about it. An accident!" D'hein gestured with his fork, "An accident caused by a lack of information, but also a lack of respect for your incredible delicateness. Both genius and incredible beauties are reputed for demanding cautious interaction and a gentle touch. I should have shown much greater care for you, who are both those things, and a mother besides."

Bowing his head, D'hein said mournfully, "Rare was she, like the shadow cast in a lonely heart by a lovely song, and my words so hastily spoken. IN my eagerness to place the rose in her hair, I left the thorns upon its stem, and she bled so tragically! Forgiveness for such a thing is a flower as well," he lifted his face again, "Perhaps one I can never grow."

Silence greeted D'hein's words for an elongated minute. She felt as though he'd spun her round and then set her loose to wander dizzily through the restaurant, though she remained seated at the table. After a time, she opened her mouth to try for a reply, but found nothing that could suit the nature of his declaration. Incredible delicateness? A rose? What in all of Eorzea was he intending with such words?

That wasn't to say she couldn't glean his meaning, but his manner of speech... well. It certainly made the only reply she could come up with feel all too inadequate, "It is... alright." She sighed slightly, glanced towards him. "As I said to Airos, I'm... just happy to have her back."

Stabbing a leafy vegetable dripping in some kind of brown juice, D'hein said, "Forgiveness is a sweet-smelling flower. So sad that it bloom only in misunderstanding, but it is so brilliant as to chase away all lingering unpleasantness."

"Ah, that isn't... I'm sorry?" She felt as though she'd missed something, though she was also reasonably certain she'd understood his flowery language. Did all Ul'dahns speak in this way? No, she'd heard plenty by now during her stay. This seemed rather uniquely D'hein, for whatever it was worth.

She found her fingers fidgeting with her fork then as she sought for something to change the subject to.

"No reason to continue apologizing," D'hein said, seeming to remember he had food to eat and returning to it.

Had she been apologizing? Antimony really couldn't be sure anymore. Instead, she welcomed his distraction with food as an opportunity to try and re-center herself - and perhaps find her appetite again. She did not volunteer another topic of conversation; the last few times she had, it had not exactly turned out well.

After eating for a bit -- something he hadn't actually gotten around to doing yet -- D'hein paused and ventured, "Iiiiiincidentally, I haven't seen Ulanan around you. Has she finally gone off and began some grand adventure of her own?"

Guilt chased her thoughts at the mention of her lalafell friend. "No, I don't--well, that is, the last time I saw her was--I'd left for.. ah..." She sighed after a moment and then just shrugged, looking regretful. "I don't know. I asked her to, ah, check in on someone but after that..."

"Ah, well. I should like to talk to her. Oh, I have a question," D'hein leaned forward and smiled like a mischievous voidsent, "How did you eventually 'stumble' across K'airos, anyway?"

"I didn't stumble!" Antimony protested automatically and then flushed, ducking her head for a second before adding in a calmer, if reluctant tone, "Ulanan had, ah, arranged an escort. To... well, it doesn't matter where."

"So it was Ulanan's doing after all," D'hein leaned back, nodding to himself, "So I had guess. My plan would have had you discovering K'airos much sooner, but obviously it ran afoul. I'm glad Ulanan decided to help it along."

"Yes, yes, and I wish you two hadn't conspired so...!" She let out a rough breath through her nose, closed her eyes, and then after a moment in a calmer tone that seemed to shrink as her words went on, "I'm sorry. I didn't mean to bring that... up... again."

D'hein held one hand up and across the table, fingers poised as if holding a slender object and offering it to Antimony, "Do you want that flower of forgiveness back?"

Antimony frowned sharply, but the expression was tempered by the chagrined set of her ears. "I wouldn't take back something like that."

"That statement is just as good as a renewed apology," D'hein said, placing the imaginary flower upon his breast and fixing it there with some kind of invisible pin. "Thank you. I think its color goes quite well with the rest of my outfit."

She couldn't tell if she were being made a fool or if his elaborate phrases were genuine. The possibility of the former kept an uncomfortable warmth to her face and an anxious twitter in her tail. Once again there didn't seem to be anything worthy of use in a retort - none that she could think of, at any rate. Antimony, the uncivilized savage, it seemed.

Poking at what remained of her meal, Antimony chose silence again.

Returning to his meal again, he said, "Make sure you drink your milk! Perhaps if you set an example K'airos will take after it."

"She isn't here to observe the example," Antimony pointed out, then winced and took the glass in hand as though in apology.

"True, but habits do rub off in the long-term. Or so I've observed."

"Only if the other is truly receptive to the habits," Antimony found herself bemoaning rather pathetically. "How many times I tried to get Aijeen to... ah." She fell suddenly quiet and averted her eyes once more. Could she not go ten minutes without bumbling back onto that cursed topic?

"I understand your reluctance to discuss Aijeen," D'hein stated, somberly, "It seems there is some great regret between the two of you. And have no doubt that it is mutual; I've observed that much at least."

Perhaps regret was one way to describe it, yes, though... "I'm not certain what I would regret," she replied lowly. "I... tried everything I could to reach her. But every time, I'm the--the crone. The stupid one." She let out a faint sigh. "Holding her back. From summoning demons? I--I don't understand it."

"I'm not sure she thinks through hurtful things before she says them."

"She thought them through plenty, if their frequency was anything to judge by," she replied morosely.

"I don't believe it is," D'hein answered, his grin a static thing, his tone serious. "It's not something we can see more than one angle on -- she makes sure if that -- but there is more than one angle on it. There is with everything."

"Mm," was all the response Antimony could muster to that. She dropped her gaze to her plate - food mostly consumed by now - and tried to think of happier promises K'airos had given her.

"I envy K'airos the adoration she receives from Aijeen. As long as that remains strong, though, I'm sure the girls will do fine."

"And--if Aijeen sees fit to--to take her from me? She's already tried...!"

Pushing his plate aside and poking at some food on one of the serving platters, D'hein states, "K'airos provides for Aijeen more than I do these days. I doubt Aijeen could force K'airos to go anywhere she didn't want to. And besides, K'airos is a Brass Blade. That job comes with responsibility. She really /can't/ go anywhere."

Antimony wavered for several moments between further despair and acceptance she very much wanted. Finally with a sigh, her posture opened up just slightly. "You... are right. She--I must believe she's far too responsible to do anything... anything rash like... that."

Smiling a bit wider, D'hein says, "K'airos makes a good city Miqo'te. She keeps track of her money and sets goals."

She looked up to D'hein at that, one side of her mouth shifting in a very faint smile. "I'm--I'm glad. I'm sure it was... well, it's not all that different from... ah. She gives me hope."

"I'm sure she'll give you more the more you talk to her. She's very good for that. She may even give you hope for Aijeen, if you ask her for it."

She had to wonder at that, and guiltily she recalled a conversation under a tree in a Thanalan downpour with an old Duskwight. But no, she couldn't give up on her daughters so quickly. "Perhaps. We'll see."

"That's the most optimistic I've heard you all night!" D'hein said, leaning forward on his elbows, "Are you the type to partake of dessert? You'd be surprised the cornucopia of baked sweets that one can prepare with access to good milk. And most of it goes well /with/ milk as well!" One of his ears bounced. The other turned about.

"I..." She watched the uneven turning of his ears and then his face before letting out a small breath. "I think I'm getting rather tired, truth be told."

"That's probably because you ate so much," D'hein said. "If you leave now you'll be wide awake by the time you get back to your room. A bit of a dessert will leave you ready for sleep!"

How could one protest that? Probably easily, but Antimony couldn't bring herself to regardless. Instead she just nodded once. "... Alright. I suppose it can't hurt to learn what, ah, might be in that cornucopia."

"Excellent!" D'hein said, one ear rotating to broadcast the turn of his head which came a moment later, point his gaze to the bar. His other ear never quite caught up. His tail swung around beneath the table, whacking the legs loudly, and probably whacking Antimony's legs as well. "We'll just see what they have baked up today." He waved.

Antimony ignored the wayward whacking of his tail for the moment and did her best, once more, to stay in the present. A good desert might indeed help.

[Image: AntiThalSig.png]
"Song dogs barking at the break of dawn, lightning pushes the edges of a thunderstorm; and these streets, quiet as a sleeping army, send their battered dreams to heaven."
Hipparion Tribe (Sagolii) -  Antimony Jhanhi's Wiki
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RE: What We Run From [ooc welcome] |
#17
02-02-2014, 01:30 PM
((The Awakening has been going on concurrently to that meal. Now, a meeting of threads.))

***

K'luha hobbled with much difficulty back through the streets to her inn room. Her hip was probably back to where it had been before Anti healed her again. She just couldn't keep the damn thing healed. Dead people kept showing up and knocking her over and... K'luha sighed rather heavily, panting a bit as she paused at the door to the Quicksand. She leaned against the door and clenched her fists. 

K'hai... she used to have a much better relationship with him. But that man that came back? As far as she was concerned, he was not her brother. Brothers did not hit their sisters. Nor did they obsess over their daughters. 

Luha scowled darkly and pushed off the wall. Struggling to hobble along the wall, she continued down the way towards her inn room.

Keeping her hands folded at her waist in front of her, Antimony walked sedately next to D'hein as they returned from what she could honestly say was the most extravagant meal experience she had ever had. Though she'd stressed herself with worry enough that the main course had grown dry and tasteless in her mouth, by the time D'hein had ordered them dessert, he had managed to distract her such that she'd actually enjoyed the sweet treat. "Ice cream" had been a new concept for her, not only because it represented a level of extravagance in a dessert clime that she'd never had access to but also because of its milk component. Desserts in general were not something she was entirely familiar with, though the concept itself she'd run into a few times in Limsa.

If Antimony hadn't spoken much during the walk back, it was because she dwelled on these things far too much. She hardly noticed as they entered the Quicksand and passed into the halls leading to the inn.

D'hein was talking plenty, however, "Honestly, I think this is something we should make a habit of! What could be more appropriate than your daughters' two primary role models modeling roles for each other? A person as humble and adept as you, I say I could learn a great deal from!" He walked with his arms and tail swinging wide, whacking the walls, big smile on his face. His motions were grand and ceaselessly energetic.

K'luha of course, was pressed tight to the wall. Namely the wall that D'hein and Anti were walking by. Also namely, the one he swung his arm and tail into. K'luha knocked her head against the wall with the push with a loud thud and snarled. Luha gripped the wall and focused on staying upright for the time being.

Grey ears sticking straight up and then flat back, Antimony jumped at the thud and the growl, blinked confusedly at D'hein for several seconds, and then realized the sound had not come from him. At this point she turned to the left - nothing - and then the right - and nearly fainted.

She tried to speak but could only manage a squeak. She tried to move to do something - anything - but could only manage a cringe away from K'luha and a manic fuzzing of her tail.

It took D'hein a few seconds to realize that there was anybody near him, because he honestly had neither felt himself hit the woman nor heard her protest. He'd just continued walking at first, then noticed Antimony's reaction, then looked around him. When he finally did see K'luha, he appeared confused for a moment and then flinched away from her, saying reflexively, "Apologies! I hadn’t realized-!"

K'luha heard a squeak and heard a familiar smell, shortly followed by an apology by some male. She turned her head slowly and observed D'hein and Antimony, but only for a moment. By now, Luha had gripped her claws into the wall to hold herself up and scowled at the both. 

Luha opened her mouth to speak, something rude and angry and bitter at K'piru, but the words died in her mouth. What was the point? She shook her head and slowly released the wall, getting a better footing beneath her. "Forget it." Luha waved a hand dismissively at D'hein and continued to limp painfully down the hall.

"You appear injured!" D'hein said, holding a hand up in vague protest, before looking at Antimony imploringly.

K'luha proceeded to ignore D'hein and continue hobbling down the hall to the inn room. She already knew that Anti wanted nothing to do with her, and she was all too happy to oblige the woman at this point.

Antimony felt absolutely trapped. She'd not prepared herself to interact with anyone one might consider family except K'airos, and maintaining her composure around her daughter took every ounce of her will (and even then it seemed to fail her half the time). Frozen, she stared with wide, terrified eyes at K'luha's retreating back and then, in a voice forced out through an almost impossibly tight throat, she choked, "Wait," coughed and then quieter, "You don't... look well."

Energized by Antimony's apparent philanthropy, D'hein surged forward ahead of K'luha and declared, in very fast words, "Indeed! You exude strength and fury as the radiant sun burning through a cloudy day, but pause a moment and profess to us that you are pained. I cannot let one pass me in such a state without the hooks of respect and mercy stinging at my heart!"

K'luha paused, mildly surprised to hear her aunt even address her. With an obvious statement of course, but apparently that was all that was left of her aunt. Fear and obvious statements. Of course, Luha found herself actually looking at a complete stranger who threw up words like so much vomit. 

Her face remained unimpressed by his rapid vomit of words and she scoffed loudly. 

"Yeah. I haven't looked well in months." Luha replied in an irritated and deadpan tone before stepping forward, moving around D'hein and continuing to walk.

"Did I not--" What? She wasn't entirely sure what she'd intended to say there, but it refused to come out. The almost relaxed, almost pleasant atmosphere D'hein had managed to cultivate at least superficially around them had shattered and Antimony could not possibly know where to look to gather up the pieces. As the younger woman continued to walk away from her, Antimony's mind flashed back to K'airos - her beautiful smile, her joy, her strength. What did she owe to her daughter? What debt could she possibly pay?

"K'luha, I--" The young woman's movements were stiff, clearly pained. At the very least, she could... "I am sorry. I was--I was wrong. I--don't walk away hurt."

Walking backwards to stay in front of K'luha, D'hein said, "If you've been like this for months, then Nald owes you as many months of comfort and beauty." He paused and one of his ears twitched, pointing at the wall, while his other angled at Antimony. "Especially if you're a friend of my friend's. The voice of holy mercy beckons! Merely pause and collapse into its waiting arms!"

At D'hein's words, Antimony flinched and half-turned away, unable to look at K'luha further.

This man and K'piru were just like the dream team of shit on her nerves now. After being criticized, ignored, slapped, and now knocked into a wall, K'luha was officially done with this shit. She was going to go home. And never leave it again. And if K'ailia wanted to be stupid she could do it elsewhere. Luha was sick of this shit and she was furious that she was probably never going to walk properly again, much less run. She was going to be a burden on the tribe the rest of her damn lift because of this shit. 

"Limping away K'piru. I am limping away because my hip is back to where it was before you healed it again." K'luha promptly informed her aunt, her voice dry and cold. Her eyes glowered at D'hein and scoffed. "And the only holy voice of mercy is Azyema when I die. Which at this rate, I am hoping for soon." Luha snapped irritably at D'hein and continued to limp to her room.

Her legs would not move, her feet frozen to the floor, an icy chill inching up her spine. Antimony listened to K'luha's door creak open, listened to her footsteps, even listened to her words, but she hid her face. "I'm sorry," she mumbled, likely too quiet for the younger woman to hear, though it was just as well for Antimony wasn't even certain what she would be apologizing for.

"I'm afraid such an attitude does little to show oneself mercy," said D'hein, who really doesn't know when to stop talking, "No matter what occurrence has rendered you this way, dear stranger, you deserve to show yourself every mercy, kindness and comfort. At least admit that much." He positioned himself near K'luha's door, arms crossed, expression stubborn.

If K'luha had one thing, it was excellent hearing. Which was yet to be damaged, but Azyema knew it would be soon enough just like everything else. Luha paused at the door and stepped inside, looking out at D'hein and Anti for a moment. Words died in her mouth again and all Luha could do was shake her head and close the door on D'hein's face.

Ears and tail drooping, Antimony flinched at the sharp crack of the door and fell silent.

More like on D'hein's foot, which caused a tingling up his leg that he frowned down at, seeming confused. "Hrm." The door popped open a moment later. "I think that hurt." He raised his gaze, looking at something inside the doorframe or something, canting his head, "Apologies if I'm being invasive, but it's too far outside my nature to gaze into suffering and distance myself."

K'luha frowned as the door opened again. Just. fucking. Ugh. Luha rubbed her temples and limped back to her bed reguardless. "Leave me alone creeper."

"D'hein," Antimony muttered a bit weakly, not really sure where she was going with that.

Crossing his arms over his chest and putting his fingers to his lips, he muttered the word, "Creeper," to taste it, and then dropped his gaze to Antimony. "Yes? It certainly can't be held against me that I have difficulty not assuaging pain when I perceive it. What kind of uncanny world is it where the suffering refuse treatment and those who would aid are made to feel guilty for daring to have humanitarian inklings? Such a world would be truly twisted!"

"Look. Antimony wants nothing to do with me, so just go deal with her." Luha scoffed irritably at D'hein, slowly seating herself on the bed and rubbing at her hip.


Working her jaw around words that refused to find a way out of her chest, Antimony hugged herself and breathed to no one, "I didn't know."

"Deal with her," D'hein said, pondering. "And she doesn't know. Well, I don't think I'll be able to do anything about that. But it seems to me, just from looking, and guessing, that the problem isn't about either of you not caring enough, or not wanting help."

K'luha was too tired to give a shit about this man or the aunt that abandoned her and then didn't care. She just lay back on the bed and pressed her hands to her face, hoping if she ignored them they would just go away.

Antimony could not find the strength in her to deal with this in a healthy way. She may have owed it to K'airos, but perhaps her daughter would forgive her. Rather than speak or do more, the older, worn woman stood still as a statue, several steps from and facing away from the doorway.

"I see," D'hein said. "Very well, then. Goodnight, miss Antimony," D'hein stepped away from the door and began his way down the hallway, leaving the door open and moving around Antimony.

The grey-haired woman didn't seem to notice D'hein; at least she made no sound or motion to suggest such.

And so D'hein, wordlessly, exited the scene.

Luha was grateful for the one's exit, and simply waited for the second to leave.

As Antimony was well outside the door still, not even within visual range, she didn't so much as leave as continue being gone. She didn't move from her spot in the hall though, staring down to where the wall met with the wooden paneling of the floor with a distant look. Her tail shivered and curled.

Eventually, Luha got up off the bed and struggled terribly to get to the door so she might close it. In her struggle to make it to the door, Luha collapsed near the door and hissed. She braced the floor, her hip agonizing her entire body. Luha glanced up hazily towards Anti, only to turn her head away.

The thunk of a body hitting the floor shifted Antimony's ears, and she hunched her shoulders as though in physical pain before spinning around and taking quick, stumbling steps to Luha's room. She paused only a moment before bending down to move the woman by the shoulders, saying nothing as she acted.

Luha winced, feeling rather delirious and lightheaded as she vaguely felt something touch her shoulders. All of this nonsense just wasn't something her body could keep handling. Even with all of the rest she was trying to get, it never seemed to be enough. Almost as if there was something else wrong, preventing the healing process from taking hold like it should. Whether it was in insane family or something else, was still unclear. 

Still, Luha weakly opened her eyes and looked at her Aunt. "Don't do it if you're just doing it on instinct K'piru." Luha warned hoarsly.

That was a stupid demand. K'piru would have chastised K'luha for it, but Antimony only set her jaw as she hooked her arms around the younger woman's shoulders and moved her as carefully as she could away from the door, into the room. Lifting K'luha to the bed would take more strength than she had, so instead she took the pillows and blankets from it and wordlessly began to cushion the woman's hips so as to not strain her spine.

"I'm too old for all of this dramatic shit..." Luha mumbled half-heartedly as she was dragged over to a better resting spot. She faded in and out of complete consciousness most of the time, but she at least was able to pick up on a slight more comfort around her hips.

When she'd managed to construct a supportive "nest" of sorts for K'luha's hips, Antimony let out a slight breath and sat down on her knees, ignoring the way the position left her joints aching. If K'luha had said anything to her, she hadn't heard; she couldn't allow herself to focus on anything other than helping the woman physically. It was the only apology her mind seemed willing to allow.

Gaze lowered, she forced her thoughts to K'luha's hips, tried to recall the nature of the injury, what she'd done to assist it previously, what might have happened over the course of days to reduce it to such poor condition. She knew there was little she could do for such an injury that she hadn't already. It needed rest. Antimony wasn't certain K'luha would listen to her if she told her so; she wouldn't blame her for not.

Bending forward slightly, Antimony fought back an ache in her chest. When she'd run, she'd never imagined what she might find. She hadn't thought she'd ever catch up to her past again. But then her beautiful daughter...

A thick cough forced its way from her throat, and Antimony set her hands lightly on K'luha's hips. Her ears and tail shivered, the low set of them communicating apology, submission, fear. Then she shut her eyes, pulled her focus inward, and began an attempt to ease the twisted aether in the younger woman's ruined bones.

K'luha failed to understand her aunt in pretty much every way. She ran away from their family when K'ile practically obsessed, and still did, over her every whim and desire. She came supposedly to the cities and did something with money. And now, after those long five years, the moment she saw Luha she couldn't function. She wouldn't talk, she wouldn't do anything but apparently silently force herself to heal Luha's hip. 

And certainly although she had been rather dark about it earlier, Luha did not want to die. Luha only wanted the dramatics to die down so she could get back to a more normal life. But it seemed they had only increased in severity and frequency leaving her, once again, unable to do much but lay there. 

Luha had to fight down a bitter taste in her mouth that threatened to make actions against K'piru. Why would her aunt, that loathed her so much she couldn't look at her, continue to help heal her? The question slipped past her lips in her delirium before she even realized she said it out loud, "Why do you keep healing me when you hate me?"

K'luha's voice reached her from a great distance, the concentration the ancient technique required keeping Antimony from responding for a long time. Her hands moved just above K'luha's hips, tracing patterns in the air that even after five years took little thought, they had been so ingrained into her being over the decades. She did not have any of the supplies she'd brought to bear on K'luha's injury before, but even without them she could soothe the tangled, angry mass of aether, pulsing like an infected cyst about K'luha's pelvis. It was no cure, but it was all she could do.

She owed K'luha that much. She owed K'luha so much more.

'I don't hate you,' she wanted to say, but her voice remained locked behind the iron wall that had slammed down to ward against the other woman's angry rejection. She didn't hate K'luha. But K'luha should hate her - for leaving, for staying, for grieving, for thinking of no one but herself, for fracturing remnants of family into nothing. Antimony bore her shame in silence, just as she continued to cling to that fear of memory, that fear of family long dead.

The silence was deafening. There was only nothing. A void that her leaving had opened, and the void that remained. For all her aunt's 'living', she might as well have been dead to K'luha. For all the things she could do or say to her aunt. It was like talking to K'ailia. Or a brick wall. Or K'hai. They all resembled walls of one sort or another. 

K'luha let out a short hollow laugh, delirum getting the better of her as she stared upwards at the ceiling. "I don't think I'm going to make it through this..." Although they were said with a weak laugh, they were genuine. With the severity of the injury and such frequent re-injury, it was really only a matter of time until it simply killed her.

In deceptive silence, K'ile Tia walked through the still-open door into the room, actually closing the door behind him. His bright red ears lay back against his head, his lips in a frown, though the expression on his face was controlled. The blueness of his eyes seemed darkened, almost gray, as he paced over to the side of K'luha opposite where K'piru was and dropped to his knees.

"Stop that," he said, having heard K'luha's previous statement. He doesn't look at K'piru at all, instead watching K'luha. "Seriously. Why are you in the floor again?"

K'luha heard K'ile before she saw him. Not the sound of his feet moving across the hallway and into the room, as she was too far delirious to really listen or acknowledge those sounds. Instead she heard his voice chastising her for being on the floor and saying her fears aloud. For a moment, she thought only to have hallucinated hearing him somewhere in her mind, but then she realized she didn't care if she only hallucinated him. 

Luha blindly groped a hand out towards K'ile and found his leg, or what she thought was his leg. She left her hand on him and shivered faintly. "K'ile?" She called quietly, letting her eyes half open hazily and search for the color of his hair or eyes if nothing else could be seen.

Antimony might have predicted K'ile's appearance eventually, but that didn't change the way she shrunk before him, hunching down by K'luha's hips as though she could hide behind the woman, hide in her meager offer of assistance. Her tail tucked between her feet and she told herself that it was good he hadn't acknowledged her. It was better than listening to anger.

She didn't look at him, kept her attention glued to K'luha's body.

Leaning his face down close to K'luha's, he said, "Yeah, it's me. One of these days when your hip is better you and I need to team up and kick K'hai's ass, okay?"

Luha smiled faintly, and then frowned. She couldn't tell what emotion she was feeling more of. Angry because K'ile left her and ignored her again, Angry at K'hai for hitting her in the firstplace, Angry at K'piru for being a dead body walking; and yet she was also relieved K'ile was seemingly okay and had returned. And this time without dead people, not counting K'piru. Part of Luha was tempted to tell K'ile her fear that she wasn't going to make it through this injury, but instead she decided to be angry and scared later and just accept his return for now. 

"You've got to stop ditching me K'ile... dead people keep showing up and throwing me around..." Luha mumbled half-heartedly.

Putting a hand on the side of K'luha's face, noticing the bruise there and avoiding it, K'ile said, "I didn't ditch you. I just wanted to find the food and get that taking care fo so we could go home."

K'luha faintly turned her head towards K'ile's hand. It was comforting to feel him there. Even if it was a hallucination, if she could feel and hear him, for now she accepted the comfort it brought. "You could've gotten in a lot of trouble just going to get it. You don't know hardly anything about the Ul'dahns. I told you to take me with you or just leave it...."

"Yeah, well, K'hai found me and had some dumbass plan. And you know me: all kinds of trusting." Finally, K'ile lifted his gaze and set it on K'piru, noting her withdrawal. He reached out to put a hand on her arm, but didn't know what to say to her.

Her ears flinched down, sought to bury themselves in her grey hair at K'ile's light touch. For a moment, Antimony almost wished D'hein would return and pull her away from K'luha and K'ile, two markers of the past she'd wronged. There was no forgiveness for outsiders, especially after she'd abandoned them a second time.

The twisted knot of aether about K'luha's pelvis had smoothed somewhat, though she could sense points where its flow remained obstructed, where it turned in on itself with an infected fury. She couldn't do anything about that here. K'luha's instincts to go home were rightly placed; a healer could help her better, family could help her.

She let her hands drop to her knees and muttered, "She shouldn't be here."

Nodding, K'ile said, "I don't know how to move her."

Antimony had no immediate answer save to twist her thin fingers into the loose cloth of her borrowed pants. Her thoughts kept wanting to twist about, return to reasons K'ile should be telling her to leave, telling her she was not welcome. Instead she managed, "A flat board. Padding. Ties to minimize movement."

"Tie her down to a board? I'd had that thought a few times actually." He gave K'luha a strained smirk, "If the healer says so, I might have no choice."

Luha frowned again. K'hai came up with some stupid plan? How had her brother become so... Luha didn't have a word for the anger she felt at him. He suddenly just appears after five years and dunks her head in water and criticizes her and tries to tell her K'ile didn't care about K'ailia and then abandons K'ile to K'hai's very own stupid plan?  Luha didn't much pay attention to the conversation between K'piru and K'ile, as she was too busy delirious being furious with K'hai. And then after another moment, angry with K'ile for telling K'aila to go back to the tribe. And then at K'aila for being stupid enough to do it without waiting for K'ile!

Luha shifted and took note of the conversation when K'piru mentioned something about a board. She hazily lifted her eyes to look at K'ile before frowning again. "K'ailia went back to the tribe without us."

"I heard," he replied to K'luha, "And we'll do something about that. Both of us. As soon as we can." He stood, then, "First I think I'm going to break this bed into boards, though."

"No, don't." K'luha frowned immediately and grabbed tightly at K'ile's leg. "I can't pay for you to break it. Don't. Just use the blankets or something. Don't break anything."

"Do not bother yourself with it," Antimony murmured to K'luha, green eyes shift towards the woman's face for a brief moment. Then to K'ile, "Do what you need to."

"You need to be completely immobilized, K'luha," K'ile said as he walked over to the bed, "I'm not going to do this half-way. You're getting tied down to a board and staying there until your hip's completely healed."

K'luha grabbed at K'ile's leg again to try and stop him from leaving, but it didn't seem to even remotely help as he walked off to the bed. Tied down to a board for what could be something like a year? How could she be anything but a burden to the tribe unable to even sit up? 

"No I... stop. Stop!" K'luha called loudly, turning her head in K'ile's direction and weakly reaching for him again. "I'll go. To a healer. A proper one. If you just... can you promise not to leave me that day?"

There was a certain insult, or perhaps just plain hurt to K'luha's words than Antimony winced at. A proper one. What could she mean by that? Were her recommendations no longer sufficent? But then, she wasn't family now, so of course they weren't. "You'll find proper healing at home," she stated flatly.

Luha looked sharply at K'piru, frowning. "Not like that. A conjurer. Or a white mage. One of those ones. Not at home. I can't go home like this."

Applying a foot to the flat footboard of the bed and laying his weight against it until it creaked, K'ile glanced towards K'piru, "Could a magical healer do better than the shaman back home?"

"No," the answer was easy, though truthfully Antimony hadn't seen conjury in practice. She had seen conjurers the few times she'd been to Gridania, however, and what she'd seen had been rife with pitiless racism. She couldn't imagine a healing practice that employed such tactics would ever come close to the methods she'd learned and taught for years.

K'ile's reply was to press down on the footboard until it cracked free of the frame with the sound of splintering wood and metal bindings tearing out of place.

K'luha opened her mouth to protest but K'ile was already breaking off the board. How could she remain tied to a board for so long? How could she go back to the tribe like that? K'ailia had said she could heal it, and K'ailia was at the tribe right? What did K'piru even know anymore? "Don't tie me up if you're just going to haul me back and then dump me there again! You asked me to trust you but you keep blatantly ignoring me!" Luha pleaded with K'ile, fair well knowing she wasn't going to get an answer she liked.

"I'm not dumping you or ignoring you," he continued to pry the pieces of wood apart, hauling on the footboard with his hands and kicking off the supports. "And I'm not tying you up. I'm trying you down. So you don't hurt yourself. So relax."

Frowning slightly, Antimony looked away as she worried her fingers into the loose cloth of her pants. She had no place in this argument, not after delivering medical advice.

"You dropped me on the ground and vanished for two weeks!" Luha protested frantically. "Without a damn word! What am I supposed to do if I'm tied down and you just figure you'll fucking vanish again, huh!?"

Freeing the footboard and laying it down so that the unblemished side was facing up, K'ile spoke calmly, "You don't get to be mad at me twice for the same thing. That means you were either lying when you forgave me the first time or you don't have anything to actually be mad at me for now." He rose and looked at K'piru, saying, "How's her hip for now?"

Antimony flinched at K'ile's voice before processing his words and even when she replied, her tail tucked further between her feet, "Likely infected again. Or... heading that way. Scar tissue has started to develop, I think, which... it's going to make it heal wrong."

"I'm mad because I forgave you and then you turned around and did the same fucking thing!" Luha fumed, waving a hand somewhat dangerously and very uncoordinatedly around before it flopped back onto the floor. "First K'hai shows up after five years of being dead. Then your exiled brother K'zhuzu's kid shows up and then freaking K'airos AND K'hai show up and K'hai tells me you've abandoned K'ailia and don't care about her! And THEN HE SLAPS ME IN THE FACE! I. Can't. Do. This. Shit. Anymore."

"Then don't do shit," K'ile said, his tone rather on the pitiless side, "Obviously I don't not care about K'ailia or I wouldn't have talked to her at all, and I've only been gone a few hours. The only person you should be angry at is K'hai and we can gut him as soon as you're up to it."

Antimony looked up sharply, a worried look crossing her face at K'ile's words, but then she was ducking her head again, away from the quarreling pair.

"Well obviously I already know that he was wrong to begin with." Luha replied her voice dying down as she felt suddenly dizzy from yelling and flailing about with her arms. Her arms dropped over her chest and she looked up hazily at the ceiling. "K'hai has suddenly somehow become obbessed with K'ailia now. And far more violent than I remember him ever being... I don't want him near K'ailia. Not that I can stop them but.... " Luha trailed off for a few moments because she could open her eyes again. "K'ile, is it so much to ask that after you sudden vanished for two weeks, that I could keep you close for a day?"

"K'hai's alive...?" Antimony murmured, words barely over a whisper and more to herself than anything. She bit down on her tongue the moment they escaped.

"The tribe is starving," K'ile answered, leaving the board where it is and returning to near K'luha and K'piru, "We can be all emotional later. Right now I need to make sure I get you and the food home as soon as I can."

"I went back to the tribe you know." Luha mumbled, again closing her eyes. "We're going to move to Eastern Thalan."

"That's nice. I'm glad you decided to come back and get stranded in Ul'dah again. You need to be more careful, but I guess that's what the board is going to be for, now." The tone of his voice dropped to something more somber, "K'piru, is there anything else you can do for her here?"

Move? They were going to... Antimony struggled with a moment of breathlessness until K'ile's tone addressing her dragged her back to the present. She dipped her gaze and ears in apology. "No. Not... not without--they will be able to do more at.. home."

"Can you help me rig up the board, then?" K'ile turned back to it, "I'm sure she won't actually be on it all the time, but still. It should be comfortable."

"I came to give K'ailia her things in the first place... and to look for you K'ile. I took responsibility for your disappearance... among other things... I cannot return without you and your bracelet unless you want K'yohko to come looking for you." K'luha mumbled half-heartedly.

Wordlessly, Antimony stood and after a moment stepped over to the now broken bed. The blankets that remained on it weren't the nicest - the Quicksand wasn't going to splurge on amenities for its usual clientele - but they would have to do. She took one corner of them in hand and began to pull them off the bed.

"Why are you taking responsibility for random things?" K'ile said to K'luha, annoyed, "That makes everything worse and nothing better!"

"Because you were already in trouble and if I hadn't they would have sent K'yohko to drag you home!" Luha protested. "Isn't me coming better than sending K'yohko!?"

"I don't know. Is K'yohko going to run out in the desert, break his hip and die?" K'ile paused at that, looking at the ceiling and thinking, "Actually, that would be kind of great."

Antimony's grip tightened around the blankets and she forced out in a strained voice, "What has become of--wishing death on your own...!" She tore the blankets from the bed and moved stiffly to the board K'ile had laid out.

"I don't... K'ile I..." K'luha paused, whimpering in a moment of despair. But only for a moment before she frowned. "You know what? No. Fuck that. I made some bad decisions, but I am not going to sit here half dead and feel bad. You were wrong K'ile. Take some resonsibility for that."

"Okay! Awesome! We're all on the same page." He then flinched at K'piru's growl and the violence she inflicted on the blanket, "I'm just joking! I don't want anyone to die or anything."

Antimony didn't reply. Her hands shook slightly as she laid one of the blankets over the board and said only, "Lift her onto it now."

"Okay!" K'ile said, clasping his hands together in front of his face and turning to K'luha, "How?"

K'luha sighed heavily and pressed her hands to her face to as to cover her eyes. "Painfully."

A few, silent moments passed while Antimony took the board and dragged it with some effort alongside K'luha. Straightening, Antimony said in a flat tone, "Take her shoulders and support her back," and then moved to one side of K'luha's legs, bending so that she could hook her forearms beneath them. "Do not lift her high."

K'ile moved accordingly, pulling K'luha up so that her shoulders rested on his upper arms and his hands extended down to her lower back. Putting his face against the top of her head, he said, "You can bit me if you want. I can't do anything to stop you right now. You smell like alcohol."

"One, two," Antimony breathed in and strained her muscles as she made to lift K'luha's legs, "three." She would then move the woman swiftly, and as gently as possible, onto the board with K'ile's assistance.

K'ile did the thing.

K'luha inhaled shakily, preparing to be moved and for the extreme pain that was going to go along with moving. At least K'ile was kind enough to distract her with his suggestion and pointing out of the obvious. 

"I would do so many things to you right now if I could." Luha muttered back in a hushed whisper. "And I was drinking earlier. Although K'hai and your exiled brother's son decided to interrupt me." Luha spat the words out before inhaling sharply again as they lifted her as gently as possible and moved her over onto the board. Luha tried not to howl, instead biting down on her lower hip and hissing in a surprising display of self-control.

Thoroughly confused, K'ile said, "My exiled who's what?" As he settled K'luha onto the board.

"K'zhuzu. That kid. I was really little when it was exiled. I thought he was your brother." Luha replied after a few moments of regaining her breath.

"What? I don't know. Whatever. Just relax so we can get you strapped in all comfy."

Antimony refrained from comment, forcing herself to focus on adjusting blankets and pillows over and around K'luha's hips. After a moment she sighed and spoke reluctantly, "I've... nothing to hold her in place."

K'luha dropped the subject, not really caring about the stranger in the first place anyway. She instead whined softly at being tied up. "Can't we wait until we're about to leave to do that part?"

Leaning back, K'ile pulled the leather ties from his shoulders and back, which would normally hold his lance or bow. He offers them to K'piru, "Use this for now. We'll get some rope and cloth and tie her down more firmly before we load her up to head home."

She took the straps without looking at K'ile, found his talk of home more distressing than it should have been. Did he know yet? Should she...?

The first strap she stretched across K'luha's waist. With the width of the board, it was just barely long enough, but she managed to tie it with some effort. "I--K'ile, I found--" She tried to start, head ducked low as she worked to arrange K'luha's body in a way that was both comfortable and secure. Distract her hands. Distract her thoughts. He deserved to know, didn't he?

K'ile watched K'piru working patiently. "Found...?"

K'luha frowned at the feeling of bindings going across her waist. This... this was not... What if she needed to use the bathroom before they left? Under normal circumstances, K'luha had always been a little heavier than most of the girls. She had curves and a small tummy, but lately with all of the starvation and her intense lack of food she had all but lost most of her weight and was starting to look a little gaunt. She let them work, albeit obviously uncomfortable with it and frowning. Looking to keep herself occupied, she reached a hand out towards K'ile.

Antimony choked, working at the second strap, this one just below K'luha's hips to prevent the joints from rotating overmuch. "Found--" She blinked hard, her hands and the leather strap they worked blurring. Why was this so difficult? Sharing this should bring her so much joy, she should just-- "--Airos!" she blurted suddenly.

Rolling his jaw in thought, K'ile said, "I saw her. I'm still trying to decide if it's real or not. It doesn't feel like it can be."

"It's real," Antimony breathed and sagged over K'luha's legs, her shoulders shaking. "Real. She--she must be--she's real, and here and--and--" Her hands had forgotten K'luha's straps at this point, though luckily both had already been secured.

K'ile reached out and put a hand on K'piru's shoulder.

"Where is Airos now? She came to the door with K'hai earlier." Luha remarked, dropping her hand in front of K'ile's leg and giving up.

Antimony just shook her head and muttered, "She's real. My baby girl."

"She's with K'hai still," K'ile answered K'luha. "I guess K'airos is one of those sword people? She thought she could get the food."

"A Brass Blade?" Luha questioned.

"I asked her to--to help you," Antimony whispered in strained explanation.

"Then she's doing so." He moved his hand to test the straps on K'luha's legs, "How does it feel, Luha? Good?"

Luha glanced down to the straps K'ile was testing and grunted. "Tight enough I think."

Antimony sat back on her heels, tail still tucked between her legs, and rested her hands on her knees once more.

"Is it comfortable?"

"Sort of...." Luha grumbled, her ears flattening. "As comfortable as being strapped down can be I suppose."

"Well you're going to have to get used to it." K'ile said, standing, "Because it's going to take a good bit until your hip heals up and I'm not showing you any mercy this time."

"Can you at least stick around then? I'd feel better strapped to a board if you aren't running off getting into trouble and getting yourself hurt."

"I'm not going anywhere. The only thing I care about out there is K'airos and K'hai getting that food, and there's nothing I can do about that for now."

K'luha looked incredulously at K'ile for a moment before giving up and just staring back up at the ceiling.
As the two spoke back and forth, Antimony found the anxious desperation to share her news fleeing, leaving behind an exhausted isolation. K'ile and K'luha were family, she told herself. She had done all she could here. Her joints ached when she stood, tail tucked close to the inside of one leg still.

As K'piru stood, K'ile silently walked around K'luha and then pulled K'piru into a very sudden, very firm hug.

Grey ears pressed back as K'ile's arms locked around her in an entirely unexpected gesture. Several seconds passed where Antimony simply stood stiffly in the hug, until her lungs burned and her throat ached, and then she drew in a short gasp of air before turning to him and clutching at his shoulders. "My baby girl," her voice shook. "She's real. She's--she's my... I am so sorry--"

"It's okay," K'ile said. "I get it. I don't understand how she's..."

"She's alive," Antimony said with vehemence, hands shaking against K'ile's shoulders. "I don't--I don't care if she won't--if she can't accept me as--she's my--K'ile, she's alive! By the tw--By all that is good..."

"I'm afraid she's going to disappear."

Antimony stilled, his words like ice down her spine, all the more terrifying for the truth they struck in her. K'aijeen's threat loomed like a malicious cloud over her thoughts then and she forced herself to look at K'ile. Her eyes shook. "She--she won't. She's real. She must b--she's real. She'll stay. I won't lose her again. I can't lose her again. She's real."

Giving K'piru a renewed squeeze and nuzzling her a little bit, K'ile said, "There's enough people coming back to life. About time the Twelve gave you back one of your girls." With that, he let go of her, stepping back. Almost onto K'luha, but not quite.

'I am RIGHT HERE YOU FUCKER. IF YOU STEP ON ME I WILL SIDE WITH K'AILIA ON THAT FUCKING ROCK NEXT TIME!' That would be what K'luha would have screamed out, if she wasn't so burning furious and completely dedicated now to giving all of these idiots her absolute hatred and silence.

"The Twelve had nothing to do with it," Antimony forced out suddenly, with unprecedented venom, feeling like an island suddenly when K'ile stepped away. "Only D'hein and Ai--Aijeen. The Twelve will not take her from me again."

Looking more confused than anything at K'piru's first protest, his expression suddenly dropped into a frown and a squint afterward. "Aijeen? You mean K'aijeen is...?"

The older woman flinched violently then, visibly shrinking under K'ile's words. "She--" A flash of fear churned her gut. What if K'ile sought out K'aijeen? What if she took that as another excuse to take her daughter away? Antimony froze.

"Is she here? Does she know?"

Her thoughts danced back to those terrifying moments in the lichyard, her youngest daughter looking at her with such an impossibly cold gaze, speaking words she never should have been able to speak. "Aijeen," she choked and then spun on K'ile with a desperate look, "You must not let her know you're here! You--you must stay away! If she knew, she--she'd take my--she'd take Airos away...!"

K'ile immediately raised his hands, "I'm not telling her. K'aijeen scares me." He looked around then, noted K'luha behind him and then turned towards her and dropped down into a crouch. He still addressed K'piru, though, "I'd rather K'luha and I get out of here without running into her."

She watched his back with wide eyes for a moment before drooping and half turning away, going quiet.

K'luha bitterly turned her head away from K'ile and K'piru when he finally decided to acknowledge her still being alive. She didn't forget to cross her arms over her chest either.

Frowning at K'luha's behavior, he glanced back at K'piru and noticed she was truend away as well. He turned forward and stared at a wall, looking confused.

The relief that K'ile was not about to trigger a devastating reaction from K'aijeen was short-lived. Her thoughts returned to K'airos, to the one connection with family that she still had a right to maintain, to the family in the room she no longer had a right to. Her hands worried at the too long sleeves of her borrowed shirt. "Airos is--she will return... soon...?"

"They were just going to get the food and then come back," K'ile said, glancing down to watch K'luha ignore him. "I wonder if K'airos will want to go back to the tribe with us."

Antimony's breath caught in her throat, her face paling as she flicked her eyes towards K'ile. "She... my girl--she... misses everyone," she managed faintly.

"But she does have a job, right? She appeared very much an Ul'dahn when I saw her."

"A Brass B--" Antimony choked, coughed and murmured, "In Drybone."

His ears perk up. "Oh! That's... good..." He looked down at K'luha, "Do you think K'airos counts as having left the tribe?"

Luha took a long moment of silence before looking towards K'ile. "No. She died. She didn't leave it because she wanted to. She was separated. Have her come and at least find out from the elders if she wants to come back."

"And what if she can't? Because of the Blade thing?"

Antimony listened to this exchange with a frail expression, as though she were about to blow away on the slightest of winds.

"Ask the elders for a special permission to come and go as needed. It's not her fault about what happened after all." Luha suggested with a small shrug.

"That could work!" K'ile nodded, "I'm sure the Elders won't be able to say not to her. It's Airos, after all!"

"She could go home," Antimony murmured faintly.

"You could come back as well K'piru. In light of the dead returning, I doubt they would much begrudge a few wandering tribe members at this point."

K'ile's tail flipped and shivered, but he didn't speak.

Antimony seemed to lose all color at that and her tail sought to hide further against the inside of one leg. "I--"

K'luha let out an annoyed sigh and tightened the arms across her chest. "No one's going to kill you or get angry after five years. If you want to stay with K'airos, go back with us. You want an excuse just to see everyone? Just say you're coming to keep me stable while we travel. You don't even have to stay."

For a long moment, Antimony remained frozen, pale features locked into an odd terror. Then, she shuddered and bowed her head, murmuring in a low tone, "Ai--Aijeen would never allow such a thing. I know it."

"Aijeen doesn't control you or Airos. What's she' going to do? Track you down and try to kill you? If she does, she's out numered and dead." Luha huffed again, interjecting before K'ile could say anything else.

Clearing his throat, K'ile leaned down and whispered very quietly into K'luha's ear, "K'yohko threatened to hurt K'piru. So, she might be afraid of that."

Luha glanced over at K'ile at the whisper. K'yohko? Really? "Yohko won't hurt her. Not if she's supposed to be keeping me alive. And he would never disobey K'takka. If she says K'piru can stay and is family again, he will begrudgingly accept it. Of that, I am absolutely sure."

Though K'ile's words may have held truth to them - and no small amount of it - Antimony found her primary concern for one other: "You don't--you don't understand," Antimony all but whimpered. "Aijeen... it--it must be some sort of... d-demon magic...! Airos won't--she won't--"

K'ile sat up straight and turned to look at K'piru

Antimony just quailed and brought her hands to her face.

"She won't what?"

"She won't call me her mother!" Antimony forced out with a half sob. "Aijeen won't--won't let her... I--I tried.."

"If there is anything I have learned about having my hip shattered by my daughter, it’s that there is a limit to even the bond of a mother and a child. If Aijeen is threatening your life and refusing to acknowledge you're her mother, it's time to painfully cut some ties." K'luha insisted, frowning at K'piru.

"Don't say such things!" Antimony breathed raggedly.

K'ile wasn't going to go anywhere near that. Nope.

"K'piru, look at me! I'm DYING because my kid broke my hip and tried to maim K'ile! There are limits! There our boundaries! Do you want Aijeen to kill you and Airos? Because that's what it sounds like she's going to do. You can't just run away from this unless you want to endanger Airos. We're going to be here for you to stand up to Aijeen. And it's going to be painful. And you're going to think you're doing the wrong thing, but it's not. Because even though you abandoned us, you're still my aunt and I still love you and I don't wanna see your own daughter hurt you anymore!"

"Stop," Antimony whispered. "I will fix this. I--Airos will be able to go home. I won't--"

Putting a hand on K'luha, K'ile says, "Maybe it's a bit soon to be calling it quits on any daughters."

"If she's already threatened your life, you take backup with you when you go to fix it then." K'luha demanded sharply. "Take K'yohko or K'ailia or someone with you."

"I'm not--" What - hunting her daughter? She wasn't even sure she could risk seeing K'aijeen again. She didn't know how she would get her K'airos back completely, but she had to try something. Anything.

An old Duskwight's voice echoed in the back of her thoughts and she shut her eyes. Not that. Just, not that. "You don't understand," she managed in a small voice.

"Hell, get that Mitari guy to go with you! He sound strong whatever he is." Luha waved a had somewhat dismissively and frowned.

"Uhm. No, I don't like that suggestion," K'ile put, frowning down at K'luha, "Why aren't you suggesting she take me?"

"No." Luha sharply put the idea down and looked to K'ile. "You stay with me."

Shaking her head, Antimony shut her eyes, kept her hands shielding her face.

"Don't encourage my family members to start conflicts and then forbid me from interfering," K'ile said, dryly, to K'luha.

"Don't ignore me and almost step on me when you tie me to a board with a broken hip." Luah shot back in an equally dry tone.

"Don't break you hip and make me tie you to a board!"

"The least you could do is not ignore me! What do I have to do to get your damned attention!" Luha hissed back, ears flattening.

"You have my attention! I was gone for all of five minutes! Do you want me to carry you around everywhere?"

During all this, Antimony remained quiet. Perhaps wishing for a hiding place. Perhaps contemplating fleeing. K'luha and K'ile were frightening.

"You were gone for hours and yes! I do! You were just gone for weeks! I was so worried! The least you could do is let me calm down about that before you run off again!"

"You never calm down! I'm not going to sit around for a week waiting for you to cool off before I do something about the tribe starving. You need to take care of calming down your own damned self, instead of just running off and hurting yourself every single time you're left alone for more than a little bit." He stood, arms crossed over his chest, tail shivering behind him.

"I wanted to go home after it first happened! The thing we can do about the tribe starving is get the hell home so we can move! And this time it wasn't my fucking fault! I had dead people banging on the door demanding to enter or they were going to break it down and then they went and said you were in trouble! And if people would stop breaking my doors down and then getting in my face, I would stop falling over when I try to walk away!" Luha hissed, ears flat in her hair and tail frizzed out to her side. "And where do you get off being cruel to me!? Don't tell me you love me and then constantly go out after K'piru and refuse to be near me! How am I supposed to feel!?"

K'ile just shook his head really hard and said, "What!"

Antimony was quite certain she shouldn't be here anymore, intruding between family, fracturing family. Anxious eyes flicked towards the door.

Luha could practically feel Anti thinking about leaving and sharply turned her head on her aunt. "You sit down! No leaving or so help me I will track you down and drag you back to the Sagolii!" Luha stared K'piru down for a moment, her glare a most frightening and intimidating one for a woman with a broken hip, half delirious, and strapped down to a board she couldn't move.

"Don't yell at her," K'ile chided, his voice cool but heavy, his gaze falling on the woman, "It's not cruel for me to tell you to pull yourself together."

"You'll tell me but you won't tell her!" Luha shot back at K'ile. "I've been trying to pull myself together goddamnit! It's cruel to LIE about something like that!"

"You two aren't the same person, Luha. Sorry."

"That's not what I'm talking about damnit!" She frowned again, losing the anger in her voice. "I'm trying to pull myself together, but I need help. And so far, all you've done is told me you loved me and then ran after K'piru. How is that fair to me? I was there all of those years even when she left and now I need help but you'd sooner leave me for her and tell me to do it myself than... " Luha felt hot tears at the corners of her eyes. She blushed with embarrassment and pushed her hands to her face. "Just forget it... Do what you want. You never listen to me anyway."

Cringing away from both K'luha and K'ile, Antimony couldn't manage a reply to that tirade. Her body leaned as though wanting to move, but her feet remained frozen in place.

"Yeah. Because I didn't spend like two weeks straight trying to hold you together only to be thanked by death-matches with Ventus, broken hips and complete disregard." He turned away, "I'm not having this conversation."

Luha lifted her hands to watch him turn away from her. She felt shattered. Was that it? The end of it all? That was how it ended for her? She wanted to run, but she couldn't. She'd lost that ability now. And now that it was gone, it was all the more precious a thing. Why couldn't she be like K'piru? K'ile loved her properly. Everyone loved K'piru. Even K'ailia loved K'piru more than she loved her own mother. And K'piru could run away and everyone still loved her. Somehow in all of the mess, K'luha had become the bad guy. And the weight of all her decisions fell hard upon her broken head and she cried again. 

"Can you two please leave the room for a while...?" The request was timid and broken and hoarse, but there was no alternative. As she had always been but now to an extreme, K'luha was at the mercy of people who somehow had come to hate her but at the same time compelled to keep her alive.

"Of course I'm not going to leave," K'ile said, "Just leave you strapped to a peice of wood on the floor and walk off? Really? No."

Antimony's tail quivered with fear and indecision. She wanted desperately to flee through that door, but at the same time... she wasn't sure she could leave them behind willingly a third time. Swallowing, Antimony just kept herself turned away.

Luha could do nothing but keep her hands pressed to her face and try to cry as quietly and subtly as possible. Her once strong and muscular form seemed shrivelled and sickly from only a month or two ago. K'luha both looked and felt frailer than even K'takka and K'deiki.

K'ile just lingered with his arms crossed, not knowing what to do. He gave K'piru a very 'I have no idea what to do' look.

Antimony would not be very helpful, unfortunately. "Perhaps... perhaps I should g--if you want me to, I will go," she murmured down towards her feet.

"She doesn't need to be left alone right now," K'ile said, "Anyway, K'airos is coming back soon, and I won't believe she's actually alive until I see her interacting with someone other than K'hai."

K'airos. Antimony could stay for K'airos, for her daughter. Her tail shivered against her leg and she hugged herself. "Alright." She stood like a statue between K'luha and the door.

"Alright," K'ile said, turning around and pacing back over near K'luha, crouching down next to her. "Does it help to tell women to stop crying or does it not help?"

Luha was far too upset to respond to K'ile question. To which the answer was a, 'Of course it doesn't help you idiot'. Not that she said that, but part of her wanted to. Luha remained crying as quietly as possible, face hidden by her hands.

K'ile just made a face and swung his tail around behind him, looking up at K'piru and saying, "You think K'aijeen is using some of her magic somehow?"

Antimony's ears shifted uncomfortably, echoing her expression which she angled sideways at K'ile. "I... I don't know. She just--when Airos took me to her..."

"I wouldn't put it past her. If she's around there's something to be wary of. Don't trust her. Don't believe what she says and don't let down your guard around her."

Antimony flinched. "She's not--she's not a... a monster!"

"I didn't say that," K'ile said, "But she is dangerous."

"She's my daughter," Antimony half-begged for understanding. K'ile was right, though. K'aijeen terrified her.

For a while, K'ile stayed silent next to K'luha, not speaking at all. Then he just slumped his shoulders and dropped his head, "I'm just going to stop talking."

His tone drew a tightness to Antimony's expression. "... I... am sorry. I know what--I know..." She let out a shuddering sigh. "I know what... she can do. I remember."

As far as Luha knew, and she was pretty sure about this, there were no magical spells making her feel like this. Just the insanity around her and an inability to cope with it all on top of being sick and having a miserable sickening injury that made her more sick. So in the silence K'luha just cried until she ran out of tears and then she just sniffled and choked and coughed every so often.

K'ile eeeeeventually reached out and put an arm around K'luha.

Antimony remained quiet where she stood, body language closed off and apologetic.

K'luha took a long moment after K'ile put an arm around her to drop her hands from her face. She dropped her hands lightly to the board, moving one to weakly grab at K'ile's wrist. Luha looked pale and shaky again, her eyes a bit bloodshot and puffy from the crying.

[Image: AntiThalSig.png]
"Song dogs barking at the break of dawn, lightning pushes the edges of a thunderstorm; and these streets, quiet as a sleeping army, send their battered dreams to heaven."
Hipparion Tribe (Sagolii) -  Antimony Jhanhi's Wiki
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Leech of the Aeons
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RE: What We Run From [ooc welcome] |
#18
02-03-2014, 05:28 AM
((Woo RP from in-game!))

***

Lingering near K'luha but without anything to say to the crying, injured woman, K'ile frowns awkwardly in K'piru's general direction. His sister has gone quiet as well. These women. There's no winning.

Antimony had indeed gone quiet, for some time now as her thoughts roiled about her grey-haired skull. Every so often, she'd cast a sideways glance towards K'ile and K'luha, but watching them only reminded her of how she did not belong with their family. No matter what K'luha said. That was how it had always been.

K'airos arrived with K'hai to the door and knocked. "We have the food!" she told the door, melodically. K'hai walked behind her, growing dizzy, but he did his best to not show it as he followed K'airos.

K’luha shivered with the knocking of the door and a bright cheery announcement. 
 Antimony first jumped at the thunking on the door, then blinked dumbly at K'luha and K'ile as though they had caused it, and then processed the voice that had sounded shortly after the knock. The dull expression she'd worn for the past hour or so shifted suddenly to unadulterated joy and she spun around, rushing to the door to fling it open with a, "K'airos! You're back!" She greeted her daughter in the same manner she had the past few times - with an overwhelmingly desperate hug.

K'hai just stood behind K'airos stone faced.

Observing K'pirus reaction, K’ile muttered, "Guess I can accept it now."

K'piru's daughter was about to say something to K'hai, but a sudden hug made her forget all about it. "Hi!" she said, patting her mother's back. Noticing K'ile and K'luha over her shoulder, she waved at them without leaving the hug. She is then scandalized. "Why's Luha tied up?"

K'hai looked where K'airos was observing. Hmm so the squirt did something right at least. There was definitely no getting out of that bed for her.

Burying her face against her daughter's shoulder for a moment, Antimony allowed herself to revel in K'airos's scent and presence. Then she blinked, looking past the girl to spot the man behind her. Her weight sagged somewhat against her daughter in shock.

K'hai looked down at K'piru, smiled, only to be struck by another dizzy spell and staggered.

K'ile called out an answer to K'hai's question, "It's holding her hip in place so it can heal. Should be firm enough to move her back home." Then, quieter, "I hope. That's me hoping."

K’hai shook his head and, recovering, he answered back "You did good K'ile. Even I can see she won’t be moving."

K'luha scoffed loudly, seeming coming to life for a moment. "What? He holds me down so you can slap me around some more?" She muttered bitterly.

Still hugging her mother, K'airos said: "We could get her a healer before you leave!" And then she pointed at Antimony. "She's a healer! And I bet she's free!"

"Sister, I apologize. I have not been well,” K’hai acknowledged. “Your insults at me, and lack of caring for family made me do a terrible mistake. I will not let myself lose control like that again."

K’ile spoke up quickly, "Nobody cares more about family than K'luha. I doubt a man who would hit a crippled woman even knows what the word 'care' means. But the Elders will have their go at you. You're lucky I don't need one."

Antimony leaned back slightly from K'airos, setting her hands on the girl's shoulders as she looked past her to K'hai, confusion pulling on her features. "What is--what is this talk of... first wishing death and then--lack of caring? What... has happened to the family...?"

K'luha bristled. Even his apologies were insulting. The hair on her ears and tail stood up on ends as she even tried to dignify him with a response. But to some surprise, K'ile spoke up for her. She bit down on her tongue and kept her eyes averted from K'hai. "Well K'piru, most of the family died and apparently I turned into a horrible monster who can't raise children."

K'hai growled, "Crippled women should not be picking fights. And it's funny She seemed so concerned with her daughter when she sent me to find you. Then when I return to her, you'd swear her daughter was some demon needing destroyed. If that is caring then it is awful funny way of showing it."

"Hold your tongue, K'hai. With your hand, if your mouth is too weak," K’ile snapped.

K'hai then looked to K'piru, "I do not know. I only know I woke up about a year ago, and regained my strength enough to start heading home. Only to find... chaos..."

Antimony flinched, looked to K'airos worriedly, and then took a step back with a frown. "This is not right," she stated, tail lashing. "None of you... you should not be turning on each other so."

K’luha bristled again, her head turning sharply towards her brother. K'ile spoke again before the words left her mouth, but the fury in her gaunt and bruised face. Her lips twisted into a trembling scowl. "You LIED to me and you're obsessed with my daughter! She's got NOTHING to do with you K'hai so don't come back after five years of sleeping and tell me how I should have raised her!"

K'airos sadness wasn't evident; one of the advantages of wearing a mask as part of the uniform. "You shouldn't be fighting! You should be happy that each other is alive! This is not healthy." she pouted.

"Stop this, now!" Antimony demanded, turning between the two on the floor in the room and the two at the door. Her ears shivered anxiously and though her words were forceful, she still looked as though she wanted to bolt.

K'hai fell back against the back wall and sighed, "K'ile, did you not say you did not care what her foolish daughter did? You were more concerned with food." He then slid down the wall into a sitting position holding his head.

Weathering K'piru's snap well, he replied in a dry tone, "K'hai does not appear well."

K'airos kneeled next to K'hai, poking him with a gauntleted hand. "Are you alright? Did you eat this morning? Anything hurts?"

K'hai looked at her, "I been sick since I awoke. The maiden that nursed me back, said it is some sort of sickness.”

Her ears laying back, Antimony looked away from the pair on the ground once more and, after a moment, directed her attention to K'hai through the door. Her tail shook and pressed against her legs but she spoke, "The... maiden didn't specify...?"

K'hai looked to K'piru "She said it was something with them big crystals. Ather... or whatever."\

"Not too sick to muscle around," K'ile muttered, and then raising his voice, "K'airos! Come here a minute."

Antimony blinked. "Aetherytes...? But... ah? I don't understand."

K'hai took a deep breath ,"Aether sickness..." finally standing, his tail whipping back and forth hearing K'ile speak once more.

Antimony frowned as he stood, ears shifting uneasily. It was not an affliction she'd encountered before, and so she worried. "You should not... be running about either, I think," she said after a moment.

K'airos stood up very calmly, letting out a sigh of relief and turning towards K'ile. "It’s not lethal! Good. He should be used to it, though..." she said, walking to the other two Miqo'te in the room.

Smiling up at K'airos, he said, "Hey, take that thing off your head."

K'hai looked at K'piru, "I found I felt better when I was away from them crystals. It's when I got to this outsider city that I felt dizzy once more."

Antimony blinked, giving K'airos a baffled look as she walked past her, reached out as though to hold onto her daughter and then, after a moment, let her hand fall back to her side. K'hai's voice dragged her attention back to him and she furrowed her brow. "It... is good then that you are to... leave soon. At least," she paused," that is my understanding."

K'hai nodded, "Though this whole situation has me confused. But now, I am even more confused. And all I've gotten for answers is to 'fuck off' from my sister."

Worrying her hands together, Antimony dropped her eyes away. "I doubt they've... if everyone would just... be family." She sighed, ears drooping. "There's little I could tell you, though."

Confused by K'ile's request, K'airos took off her turban and mask and examined them. "...they aren't dirty..." she spoke to herself.

"I just like seeing your face," K'ile said, "And it's weird to say your name and then hear your voice."

K'hai nodded, "So far, you and K'airos seem to be the only sane ones in this messed up world. I admit, my temper got the better of me, and I never meant to hurt Luha..."

"You fucking backhanded me. I have a broken hip you ass," Luha hissed across the room at K'hai.

K'ile put a hand on K'luha's shoulder and squeezed it, "You don't need to respond to him."

Antimony gained a strained look. "Please. The both of you... Family is above this kind of... whatever this is."

K'airos was a silly woman, and so she smiled to K'ile's previous words while blushing and not having a clue what to say. Thankfully, Luha and Hai's argument fixed that. "I propose you stop hating each other until Luha's back on her feet again and the food's on the tribe... or...with the tribe..." she quickly amended.

K'hai remained silent, his tail thrashing with annoyance, "When I was told one thing then suddenly the opposite is true... I wish my sister never sent me to find K'ile."

"K'airos, did you two get ahold of the food? And my spear?"

K'luha bristled furiously again, her tail swishing angrily about. Her ears twitched at K'ile's touch, and again at Antimony and Airos's words. But lost her temper when K'hai opened his mouth, "I asked you to do me a favor because you appeared after being dead for two years and told me K'ailia ran off to the tribe on her own without K'ile who had invited her in the first place and-" K'luha's frustrated angry words were broken by an equally frustrated and somewhat piercing shriek, also by K'luha.

K'hai stepped past K'piru, "Yes, you had an urgency to your town. And I could tell you cared about her. And when you care, I care."

Flinching, Antimony half-stumbled into a turn towards K'luha at her scream and begged a harried, "You must not try to move!"

K'hai continued and looked to K'ile, "When I found K'ile, I am positive he said he does not care what your foolish daughter had done, his priority was getting the stolen food back"

K'airos just looked between them, answering to K'ile's inquiry about spears with what came more as mumbling than proper words. "I left it with the cart...next to the chocobo keeper.”

Antimony cringed away from the bickering group and added in a quieter voice, "You must not argue like this."

"Forgive me K'piru,” K’hai acknowledged. “I am not arguing. I am merely giving my side. If I am mistaken in what I heard, then he can tell me himself."

"That you would all presume the--the worst of each other..." Antimony trailed off in a strained voice, unsure what else to say.

"Don't ACT like your innocent!" Luha snarled viciously, clawing herself so she might look more properly at K'hai from her binded prison. "You LIED to me, LEFT K'ile with some assasine plan, OBESSED over my daughter, PHYSICALLY ASSUALTED me, INSULTED my entire character, and to top it all off you act innocent!?" Luha snarled, gnashing her teeth at him.

K'ile pulled on K'luha's shoulder, "Don't even try to move," and then to K'hai, "You can't really hit people and then expect them to listen to your side. If you really can't stop talking, you need to leave."

"Listen to yourselves!" Antimony choked out, her voice raising in pitch on the trailing syllables. "Stop, please! No one--none of you should--stop!"

K'hai waited long enough for K'ile to tell him he was wrong and looked back at K'luha, "You sent me to find him because you were worried about her. When I returned, suddenly you hated her, and you told me to fuck off and that I should stay dead. Fine then, I shall remain dead. You can find someone else to pull your cart and your sorry hides home." with that he turned and left the room.

"DON'T YOU RUN AWAY YOU SNIVELING COWARD!"

K'airos looked stumped as K'hai bolted and left. 
Antimony spun, expression shifting into something closer to panic. Her body leaned towards the door, and then back to the room, completely torn as to who to stay with.

"It's fine," K'ile said. "He can take his time and cool off and go back to the tribe if he wants. If not, then he was never going to anyway."

After a moment, Antimony shook, brought her hands to her face, and fought back a sob.

K'airos put her turban and mask back on. "Uhm...wait here! I'm fixing this awful family situation!" She did not wait for anyone to speak up, running off behind K'hai and doing her best to catch up to him.

"Yeah, good luck with that," K’ile muttered.

Antimony jerked up as K’airos rushed past her, throwing out a hand after her daughter and then just wilting again.

Luha fumed as that shit of a brother ran off again spilling lies and making her some evil villain again. Why was she always the evil fucking villain? Luha slammed her hand furiously down on the board beneath her and snarled again.

"Chill," K'ile said, and then looked past towards K'piru, "THere was nothing to really be done about that."

Shuddering, Antimony pushed her face against her hands, feeling the metal frame of her glasses digging into her skin. "I can't find family again only to... watch it fall apart," she whispered half to herself. "I can't..."

Luha scowled darkly at the ceiling and shivered. "Yeah well I'm not going to be told how I did a shitty job raising my daughter and get slapped around."

"The family isn't falling apart," said K'ile, "K'hai's just got a bit too much of your other brother in him all of a sudden."

Antimony's tail twisted at that, shoulders hunching as though to hide from the words. "I'm sure... this was all a misunderstanding," she murmured faintly.

"Tell that to my swelling face." Luha muttered bitterly, looking away from Antimony and towards K'ile.

"Much as I'd like to let him borrow one or two of my own bruises," K'ile rolled his shoulder, reminding himself of the injuries he still wears from being beaten down earlier, "I don't think that would be super healthy."

K'luha shuddered again, ears flattening to her head as she felt rather sick. Too much exhertion from the anger most likely. "I can't keep doing that..."Luha muttered, shaking visibly.

Antimony turned her head slightly at that, ears shifting in worry. "Your... own?" She blinked and then finally took a good look at K'ile, blanching. "What--! Oh no, I'm so sorry, I didn't even--I thought to help K'luha and I never thought to even ask if--"

"Huh? No, I'm fine. A few bruises and cuts are good for a guy every once in a while."

Antimony frowned, looked unconvinced, and then just looked exhausted, ears and tail drooping in surrender.

"I'm seriously just fine."

Luha glanced up towards K'ile's face and noted the state of his injuries. No one was getting out of Ul'dah very healthy were they?

Glancing to one side, Antimony was silent for a moment and then in a quiet voice, "... You have the food back now, at least. You'll be able to go... home soon."

"Uhm. Yeah. That's..." He looked down at K'luha, "Pretty much required at this point."

Antimony nodded, looking quietly to the woman on the floor - or, more specifically, to her padding and the straps holding her hips in place.

"And I'm guessing that you're staying in Ul'dah, K'piru. I'm sure K'deiki would let you come back. How could she not?"

Her tail hung low, tucked down between her legs, as she replied in a small voice, "How could any of them." A pause and then, "... I can't leave Airos."

K'ile's ears drooped down near his head, and he muttered, "Yeah. I guess she’s staying too."

K'hai stepped up behind K'piru in silence then. A second later, "I brought him back!" K'airos proclaimed behind K'hai. "Promise me you will all be nice to each other!"

Antimony’s own ears shivered. "I'm so--" Her words cut off suddenly at the voice behind her and there was a moment where she looked as though she were about to cry before she forced relief to her face and spun around. "Oh Airos, you..."

K'hai smiled, "Aww I didn't know you cared!" and picked K'piru up in a big bear hug.

K'ile frowned in the general direction of the doorway.

Antimony let out a faint "Oof" as she was lifted and, after a moment, managed to work her own arms around K'hai. "I'm... glad you've returned. Both of you," she mumbled in a shaky voice.

Kluha's eyes glanced back down to the floor in the calm. A small thought struck her, and before she had time to stop herself she had already mumbled it in a hushed whisper to K'ile. "If you wanted to, you could stay with them too. I have an inkling how much they mean to you so..." K'luha was interrupted by K'hai and Airos's return and promptly shut her mouth.

K'hai set K'piru down and stepped into the room, approaching K'luha then kneeled, "Sister. I deeply regret my actions. I never meant to hurt you. I love you and if you told me to step into the maw of a sandworm, I'd ask which one. I am sorry."

K'airos just smiled in their general direction, very proud of something.

Luha listened quietly to K'hai's apology. It seemed genuine. She lifted her head weakly and turned it back to look at K'hai. "I wouldn't ask you to step into the maw of a sandworm idiot..." Luha mumbled, although it was clear now that she was not angry. It was the usual way she begrudgingly forgave people.

Antimony let out a faint breath as the two interacted on much more friendly terms finally.

K'hai nodded, "I am an idiot. I was slow on learning, but I mean none in our tribe harm. I was only confused."

Kile maintained his silence throughout all of this.

K'piru's daughter was also quiet, but she looked ready to jump in and interrupt the conversation at any moment.

K'luha bit her bottom lip. She wanted to forgive him, but the slap still stung on her face and made her bitter and angry. "You hit me again and I will never forgive you. Got it?" Luha wasn't entirely happy with the words she had settled on, but they were there now and she stuck with them.

K'hai nodded, "Never again will I hit anyone in our tribe unless ordered by the elders."

"That's still my job," K'ile finally put in, "And I expect you to confess what you did to the Elders as soon as you get back."

K'hai looked to K'ile and scowled and said nothing. Only stood and turned to K'piru, "Shaman... is there anything you can do for this illness?"

Antimony swallowed, looked away from K'hai as though uncomfortable under his sudden attention, and replied after a moment, "I cannot take such a title anymore. But... I don't know. If I had..." She drew in a breath, looked pained, and then, "The tribe's shaman would be better equipped to help you."

K'luha let out a heavy breath. She felt... better. If only a little. But K'ile's reminder of elder confessions made her uneasy. K'ile most like would also face punishment... perhaps as severe as K'hai's.

K'hai sighed, "Your daughter mentioned you were still a healer. It is why I ask."

Pulling his gaze from K'hai and K'piru, K'ile looked to K'airos and said, "The Tribe is still there in the Sagolii. Why didn't you come home, Airos?"

"I don't know what aether sickness is," Antimony murmured. "But--I... don't have any supplies to treat... anything anymore."

K'hai nodded, "I see. I don't understand it either... all I can tell is what I experienced…” He then took a seat on the floor.

Antimony's ears and tail drooped in silent apology.

K'airos looked troubled. Or she would have, if she wasn't wearing her mask again. "I thought you all had died. And...Aijeen found me. I couldn't leave her alone here, even if she managed to...become Ul'dhan. I thought I had nothing to go back for!" she managed to say.

"And now that you do?"

K'airos turned her head to look at Antimony for a long while. "Mom's still..." She shook her head. "And I can't leave Aijeen. She won't go back, and she would be devastated if I left."

K'luha lifted her tail slightly and reached it back to lightly touch K'ile's leg. As if to remind him that he could stay with them as well if he wanted to.

Antimony blinked, looked up sharply at K'airos's initial words, flicking her eyes towards the girl with a strange expression.

K'hai looked at his sister, at her tugging, then looked between them all, "Wait... K'piru and K'airos are... exiles?"

"They are not," said K'ile, sternly, "They're just..." He didn't even know.

"There is nothing else I can be," Antimony replied in a low tone, still watching K'airos with a distant expression.

K'hai stood, "Those who know they cannot return to the tribe, left. There is no return." Antimony flinched at that, turned her face away from all of them, towards the door.

K'airos clapped her hands. "Well, the food is waiting outside! I can go with you until you reach the Sagolii Gate."

K'ile dropped his gaze to the floor in front of him, "I'm not sure if it's wise to leave immediately."

K'airos' ears dropped to the sides of her head.

K'luha turned her head back towards K'ile and looked up to meet his gaze. "K'ile..." She murmured quietly to him. "If you want to stay with them... I know they mean so much to you..."

K'hai looked at K'airos, "I will always have fond memories K'airos. And it warms my heart to see you've made such a good life for yourself."

Lifting his gaze to K'hai, he says, "I didn't ask for your opinion on it," and he dropped his gaze to K'luha, seeming unhappy, but not having words for her either.

Tail shivering, Antimony found breathing suddenly difficult and she forced out, "You... you are right. I'm sorry I--I will go now." She moved towards the door.

"No K'piru. We are the ones who must go." K'hai intercepted her and gave K'piru a soft hug. "Thank you for your help." He then turned to beckon to K'airos.

Antimony shrunk into the hug and remained very small once K'hai released her. "I can't watch any of you leave," she whispered and continued to exit through the door.

"Uhm. One thing!" With her ears still down, she struggled to take off her left gauntlet. Once she accomplished that, she took off the Brass Blade identification ring from her finger and handed it to K'ile. "If you run into Brass Blade patrols and they give you trouble, just show them this and tell them you are me. They'll let you go in peace." she said.

"K'ile...?" Luha urged quietly as Antimony began to leave.

K’ile still didn't acknowledge Luha's prodding, but he didn’t reach for the ring either, "Thought you said you'd go with as far as the Sagolii Gate."

"If K'hai doesn't mind..."

K'hai sighed, "Our laws dictate the moment I found out you both were exiles, I should of picked my sister up and left the room without any further words." He shook his head, "Thank you for your assistance K'airos."

"You can just go back without us, K'hai," K’ile announced.

K'hai looked at him plainly, "So you are staying then? Is that the wish of sister?"

Antimony exited without further interruption, an almost panicked haste in her steps. She would continue a good ways down the hall before sagging against the wall for a time.

"No, you,” K’ile explained. “If you don't want to interact with K'airos, that's fine. But she needs to take us to the Sagolii Gate so we get past those Blades people safely."

K'hai frowned, "Very well. I will tell the elders all that has transpired here. Including my violence against sister." with that, he turned and exited the room.

K'airos put the ring back on. After K'hai left, she looked down at K'ile. "When do you want to leave?"

"It doesn't matter anymore. Whenever. If you bring the cart around I can load K'luha up on it."

She nodded. "Alright. It's right outside the Quicksand, so I'll help you get her on it!"

"K'ile...?" Luha called quietly, shifting her head to glance back up at him.

"Hm?" K'ile looked over to Luha, pretending to be oblivious.

K'airos moved to the other side, crouching and getting ready to lift K'luha.

"You really can stay with them if you want... I know I got mad earlier but... it was wrong and I was being selfish."

Making a face of displeaure, K'ile said, "I hear you," and then moved to help K'airos lift Luha off the ground. The woman’s ears flattened again and she quietened down.

K'airos smiled at some thought. "At the count of three. One, two, three." and she lifted up K'luha.

[Image: AntiThalSig.png]
"Song dogs barking at the break of dawn, lightning pushes the edges of a thunderstorm; and these streets, quiet as a sleeping army, send their battered dreams to heaven."
Hipparion Tribe (Sagolii) -  Antimony Jhanhi's Wiki
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RE: What We Run From [ooc welcome] |
#19
02-04-2014, 02:02 AM
Not long after half fleeing and half being driven away from K'luha, K'ile, and K'hai (though the latter may not have been an entirely fair interpretation), Antimony had retreated to her inn room where, stomach churning with emotion, she found herself overcome and simply dropped to the floor once inside. There she cried.

Ulanan bashed her tiny hand against the door. In some cultures, this was called "knocking". In this lalafell's mind, though, it was a "Ritual of Announcement" and it involved a complex rhythm and careful timing. So, naturally, this meant she just hit the door with her knuckles four times in a row.

The knocking sent a shiver through her ears and she looked up in a hurry. K'airos? Back already....? No, she'd gone to say goodbye to... Antimony's breath hitched and she wiped hastily at her eyes beneath her glasses before stumbling to her feet. When she opened the door, she did her best to look composed but likely failed miserably. She blinked at the empty space in front of her for several seconds before dropping her gaze to Ulanan.

In that moment, the lalafell thought she should find a taller, pointier hat. She smiled at the woman, not showing much concern for her state initially. "Hello!" she said, waving a basket filled with papers, jars and a half open bag filled with fruit.

"He...llo," Antimony mumbled, coughed once to try and clear her throat, and watched the swaying basket with some measure of confusion. "Ulanan," she sighed. "It's good to see you."

Ulanan stopped smiling and raised her eyebrows. "You look terrible! Is everything alright?" she asked.

Antimony was silent for a moment, looking way from the lalafell, and then in an unsteady voice, "It seems family is... common these days." Her tail shook and she looked again to the basket.

"I'm sorry. I thought you'd be happy to see your daughters again." Ulanan said, pouring disappointment all over the place.

"I'm sorry, I don't mean it like--" Antimony gave Ulanan a pleading look, searching for understanding. Her hands twisted about one another until she finally dropped to one knee to pull Ulanan into a hug. "Not that at... I'm so grateful. So, so..."

She was completely confused by the hugging woman. "Then what happened?"

Antimony's arms shook around Ulanan. She didn't respond immediately, instead biting back tears that wished to spring up once more. "It's all a such a mess," she finally breathed. "I... should have stayed away from them the moment I knew they were in Ul'dah."

Ulanan continued to be confused. "Can I come in? This situation and squeeze have a scale that requires privacy."

Grimacing, Antimony pulled back slightly and ducked her head away before nodding. "Yes, yes of... course," she muttered and stood unsteadily. "I'm sorry, I..." She took a few steps back into the room and made way enough for Ulanan to enter.

"Thank you." Ulanan said while entering. Once inside, she left the basket on the floor, very close to her. "Now tell me accurately who are the acting actors of this account?"

"The actors," Antimony echoed as though confused by Ulanan's words, and then shook her head slightly. "They... They're from the tribe," she offered quietly before suddenly exploding, "I didn't intend to--didn't mean to... seek them out but it just--first K'ile was there and then K'luha was hurt and I tried to run from them but then Airos! My baby--my little girl! And she came back to Ul'dah and I couldn't not follow and they were still here and I know I should not want to see them, not when they still remind me of--I can't see them, I'm an--an exile! And they still--they still... I should never have even spoken to them, Ulanan!" She felt very, uncomfortably childish in that moment, and her words dissolved into sobs as she dropped to her knees.

Two small hands rose from the lalafell and clutched Antimony's shoulders. "Calm down! It's not so bad, is it?" she said. "If these people were forbidden from speaking to you, they would not have done so in the first place, right? So no rule was broken!"

Antimony shook her head and moaned. "K'hai knew. He knew--he told... told them just so. Told me--"

"I'm sorry." Ulanan said after a long pause of uncertainty. "But your daughters are still around, right?"

"...Yes," Antimony breathed. "But Aijeen.."

"That's the one who's angry with you?" Antimony's only response to that was a short sob and a nod. "I'm sure she'll come around. Just give her time! Or...give D'hein time, I guess. How's K'airos?"

It took Antimony several long moments before she could calm herself enough to respond. When she did, her voice was low and thick but carried a sense of awe, almost worship, "She's beautiful. She's... got a job and... happiness. I still can hardly believe she's..."

"Then not all is bleak tribal laws and related sillyness. You should be happy for this!" Ulanan took off her hat and dropped it on top of the basket.

"I... am," she admitted in a choked voice. "It's just..."

"...your tribe's terrible timing." Ulanan finished, in a tone that denoted grumpiness but some degree of joke at the same time. "I'm sure they are fine. You should focus on your daughter being alive. Alive and happy!" she added.

"It's just that I can't help but wonder if... I should try to hold on to them as well," she whispered and then immediately regretted it, saying quickly, "But you're right. Airos is--is alive. That's all that matters."

"You can only focus on one thing at a time. We both know your daughters should be first." Tha lalafell turned, taking the basket and her hat into her hands. "Now I stop crying and tell me about your daughter while we have an appetizer!"

 Antimony watched Ulanan move to the basket, blinked at it dully for a moment, and then let out a shuddering sigh. "I'm... certainly not being the best model for behavior right now, am I," she muttered and carefully folded her hands in her lap. "... Appetizer?"

Ulanan pulled a jar out and shaked it. "Olives! With cheese and thyme. I have forks!" she declared.

"... Olives, of course," Antimony smiled faintly. Ulanan's familiar antics were comforting in their own way. "Airos... I'm not sure where to... I've had so little time yet to even speak with her..."

Ulanan looked around for a table, instead finding a nightstand. She walked to it and unloaded various jars. All of them had olives, mixed with different fruits and vegetables. It was almost like a collection of olive recipes. "Surely, she'll find time to share with you. I imagine her sister is being less than ideal for that, but we can work something out!"

"I don't dare risk Aijeen even... suspecting my presence," Antimony muttered weakly. "But Airos, she... she seems to be doing so... well."

"That's good!" Ulanan said. She placed a small bowl on the nightstand. A fork quickly followed and not long after that, the bowl was filled with olives, cheese and various unidentifiable veggetables. She walked to hand them to Antimony, smiling and all. "I don't know many happy Brass Blades, but it looks like she enjoys her job."

Antimony pressed her lips together briefly. "She's... dedicated." A sigh. "I'm very proud of her."

Ulanan held the bowl in front of Antimony. "These olives will catalyze that proudness and make you even happier!" she smiled. "And don't forget you have to make her proud, too."

The older woman took the bowl after a moment, hands only somewhat shaky. She looked away. "There is little for her to be proud of," she replied. "Though... at least I... think I am not unemployed anymore. Or... for now? It's... confusing."

"Oh! You...got the job back? Did that Elezen peiste show sympathy for once?"

Antimony winced at that. "No, ah... D'hein offered to... well, he wants the investigation finished and--I'm not sure it's actually my job back or if... it's something at least." She sighed and added in a quieter tone, "Airos deserves more than a mother who needs more caring for than she."

"You'll work on that!" Ulanan picked up her own bowl. The olives inside it seemed to be mixed with chocolate bits. "First order of business is finding out if your job is stable or not. And secondly you have to not run from your past anymore." she said, speaking strategically and using a spoon to take a bite out of her weird appetizer.

Antimony's ears drooped low and she said in an equally fallen tone, "That won't be an issue anymore. They're... leaving."

"What if they come back?"

The only response to that Antimony could give was silence. She bowed her head and looked to the bowl in her hands.

"We'll have to work on that." Ulanan mumbled to herself. Then, in louder tone, she changed the subject. "I checked on Loughree and she was quite fine. Though she didn't want my help."

Antimony greeted that announcement with vivid relief, letting out a long sigh. "Good. That's... good. Not--not that she didn't want your help but that... ah."

"That she's fine, yes." the lalafell smiled. "I have the feeling Megiddo is only trying to keep her terrified. He won't kill her, or he would have already

Antimony frowned, looking away. "No, he's trying to..." She trailed off then and shook her head before taking a deep, only somewhat unsteady breath. Her eyes returned to the bowl with its strange mix of olives and she said rather apropos, "I'm unsure how you maintain a balanced diet on all this, Ulanan."

"It's the olives." she explained, munching.

[Image: AntiThalSig.png]
"Song dogs barking at the break of dawn, lightning pushes the edges of a thunderstorm; and these streets, quiet as a sleeping army, send their battered dreams to heaven."
Hipparion Tribe (Sagolii) -  Antimony Jhanhi's Wiki
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RE: What We Run From [ooc welcome] |
#20
02-11-2014, 04:18 AM
(This post was last modified: 02-15-2014, 01:13 AM by Naunet.)
((The following occurs almost immediately after the events in the first post of Mind Over Breakfast.))

***

Ulanan took a chunk out of the day to show Antimony all the marvels of Ul'dah's ridiculous riches. She failed to mention that all the empty lots in the Goblet could be used to build houses for refugees instead of wealthy adventurers, though. But that would not bother a true Ul'dahn.

Antimony was not a true Ul'dahn, however, so she would indeed have been bothered by such things. It might even have occurred to her, but she'd been rather quiet this whole walk so far, smiling briefly at Ulanan's explanations. With a distant look, she wondered half to herself, "Airos spoke of saving to buy a house... I wonder if this is the place she imagined."

Ulanan shrugged, pointing at a random, meaningless point of space. "I hope so, because this place is much nicer than the city. Look at that waterfall!" she said, actually pointing to it this time. "A house with a window to it would be very nice. Just...not close to it, though. That would be too noisy."

“It's all very impressive. Grand. Ul'dah does seem to love their stone walls...”

“It keeps the peistes away.”

Antimony turned her head to look across the small, likely man-made pond below. "I'm sure she would love it here," she murmured.

“Well, it would certainly be one of the safest neighborhoods! Especially now that it's so...empty.”

Antimony's ears drooped at some thought and she went quiet, making her way down the stairs of the path they walked.

Ulanan tapped her chin. "I wonder if it's legal to plant crops in this place."

Antimony blinked, brow furrowing behind her glasses in confusion, and looked down at Ulanan to her left. "What would you do with that..?"

“Plant olives, of course!” The lalafell’s white, broad-brimmed hat bobbed with her gesturing. “Then I'd have all the olives I could ever want without having to pay. Though I guess the process of making the oil is a bit cumbersome.”

Antimony's ears fidgeted one way and then the other. "I... am not entirely sure what goes into such a thing at all. Wouldn't you need a great deal of space..?"

Ulanan turned to the right at a fork in the path, towards an arching tunnel. "Maybe. I don't know. This begs investigation! We need to find an olive farmer."

Antimony looked up as they round the corner, wrinkling her brow at the towering walls above them, palm trees peeking out from behind balconies at improbable heights. “I... suppose they must have one. Somewhere.”

Ulanan took a sharp turn in subject. "Where did you get those clothes? They do not seem to be your usual style."

Antimony's ears flattened in embarrassment. "Ah, well, that... these were... well, my own clothes are rather ruined and--I suppose he meant well and... they were from D'hein," she finished at a bit of a mumble.

Ulanan frowned. "He has terrible taste. We'll get you some actual clothes from the Weaver's Guild when we get back." She raised her head up, noticing that she walked into a tunnel.

“Oh! They're really not... that bad,” Antimony protested with a wince. “They're comfortable! And I wouldn't want to seem ungrateful…”

“Did he give you an entire wardrobe, though?”

“An entire...? No! I'd never ask for such a thing.”

“Then you'll need more varied clothes. You don't want to wear that every day.” Ulanan's words came out as a true, valid statement that could not be questioned.

Antimony couldn’t really argue with that tone, though her ears lay back uncertainly as she continued down the tunnel. “It still feels... strange, this whole... situation.”

Ulanan nodded with a weird air of understanding. "Running away does that. But good things come out of it, if the gods are willing!"

Antimony frowned at that, unsure whether she should feel offended. “It was not the gods that... brought Airos back, certainly.”

“Do not be so sure. You fled to wander, and the gods bless those who lose their way. In your panic, Oschon brought you to your daughter. Or perhaps it was chance, but these are all the same.”

Ulanan was about to say something, but and old, male voice came out from a corner. She turned her head towards its source: an old man in the corner.

Antimony's tail shivered spastically behind her, and she turned first her ears towards the voice, and then her eyes. Megiddo's dark skin blended well into the shadows he sat within, cast beneath the lanterns lighting the tunnel.

The old Duskwight smiled.

“... If chance and the gods are one and the same... ah, you... always pick the best times, Megiddo, “ Antimony sighed, ears relaxing just a bit.

“Oschon picks the place and Nymeia picks the time,” Megiddo corrected. Antimony pressed her lips together.

“Oschon is fond of giving you all the shadowy corners of the world,” Ulanan observed.

“I do have some preference. I spent most of my life in tunnels beneath the Shroud. So when I arrived in the goblet, I sought the place most comfortable for me.”

Antimony looked away, clasping her hands together and weaving her fingers between one another.

Ulanan placed her hands on her hips. "That sounds awful. Why did Oschon bring us to you?"

“Why do any people ever come into contact, Ulanan? It is because they have something to say, or to do, or to hear from one another.”

Antimony's tail flicked against her legs and, after a moment, she managed in a quiet tone, "It's... good to see you well, Megiddo. What do you need?"

“I require nothing,” Megiddo replied. “If you do not appreciate my presence, then you may choose not to suffer it.”

Antimony's ears pressed back. "That's--not at all what I meant..! It's only that--well, you implied.. and I thought.. ah."

Ulanan chose that moment to intervene, “Maybe it's the tunnel. Lalafell and Sun Seekers are surface dwellers. Let's get out of your featureless cave.”

Megiddo hummed, and then braced himself against the wall to stand. "Ever must I walk in places that are unnatural to me. Oschon guides me to them as well, though. I should not lament."

Antimony held up both hands, turning to Megiddo, "It's alright, you don't have to--I wouldn't want to put an undue burden on you.. Ah, this tunnel is just fine!"

Ulanan remained unconvinced. "Is it?" she asked, then shook her head. "Let's assume it is, then."

“Don't be ridiculous. Obviously you were on your way somewhere. Do not pause underground on my account. If I value your presence, then the least I can do is walk a ways.” Megiddo stepped away from the walk, not looking particularly weary on this specific evening.

Antimony glanced to Ulanan. "Ah, I... don't think we had a particular..." She sighed. "I was simply trying to clear my head."

“That is a particular goal we had! So, Megiddo, tell us where Oschon has sent you since the last time we saw you.” Ulanan gestured to the exit of the tunnel, trying to convey the idea that everyone should start walking towards it.

Megiddo hummed, stepping forward to comply with Ulanan's gesture. "I do not pay attention to where I am most times. That is the point of wandering. I believe I walked through Ul'dah several times, although once or twice I was in the Shroud visiting a friend."

Antimony ventured a small smile. "That sounds lovely. I hope your friend was well."

Ulanan got going. She was so impatient! Antimony blinked and started after Ulanan as the lalafell said, “I assume he must not be a Gridanian. Or maybe an exceptional one.”

Megiddo walked patiently, "He was well, thank you. As for if he is Gridanian, no. I have no friends native to that area, for obvious reasons."

Antimony frowned. "Yes, well... ah, at least Ul'dah isn't... hm."

Ulanan let out an amused chuckle. "Yes, nobody can say anything nice about Ul'dah."

“I can say I have more friends here, and that -- although it is hot -- it has many convenient shadows. At the risk of re-cluttering Antimony's head, I hope things have not gone too badly since our last meeting. You look like you are doing better, actually.”

Antimony looked down to the cobblestone path beneath her feet, brow still furrowed. "Ah, yes, well... I suppose. There's still..."

“Difficulties,” Ulanan finished. At that, Antimony winced, tail shifting uncomfortably.

“Life is a long series of difficulties,” Megiddo observed.

Antimony simply went quiet and continued walking through the tunnel. After a moment, Ulanan spoke up, “And who's your friend, if you don't mind me asking?”

“Simply a man, no different than any other. I have many friends across Eorzea.”

Ulanan looked away from the Duskwight. "He sounds very interesting."

Antimony blinked, ears tilting. "He does...? How do you..." Her tail shivered then and she hastily added, "Ah, I mean, I'm sure he's wonderful! If he knows you, well..."

“You are being polite. It's fine,” Megiddo acknowledged. “I'm curious how Ulanan has been keeping busy. I've begun to imagine that she retires into an enchanted cupboard, most days.”

“... I certainly hope you're staying in more than a cupboard!” Antimony gave a worried look to Ulanan.

The lalafell frowned and pouted, "Do not get silly ideas only because I'm small! I've been busy making paper constructs, and before that I was busy locating your daughters." She sped up then. The exit was just ahead! Oh, glorious daylight!

“... Those do not sound like occupations.”

“Your wandering isn't an occupation either,” Ulanan replied.

“Oh, it is.”

Antimony looked even more worried then. "Ulanan, you really shouldn't... there's no need to waste your time on my troubles--I don't want you to end up... well, homeless! Or.. anything else!"

“I was homeless before we even met! But I have family in the city, and they do have homes. So don't worry.” Ulanan smiled up at Antimony.

The older woman's ears lay back unhappily. "I would just hate to distract you from... well, everything more important." She blinked, catching on the lalafells words, and then, "... paper constructs?"

Megiddo lingered back in the shadows for a moment, watching the daylight and letting his eyes adjust to it.

Ulanan nodded and said, "Yes." as if that somehow explained the concept.

Antimony hesitated in her steps, caught up in the thought and confusion around paper constructs, then hurried to follow after Ulanan before suddenly stopping and turning to check on Megiddo.

“There is a saying,” the Duskwight began, “’Do not trust a homeless person who has much money.’ I suspect it does not apply to Lalafel, though. For who has ever heard of a Lalafel without money?”

“... That's a saying? From whom?”

“Envious people, clearly,” Ulanan declared as she spent some time standing on her toes and peeking over the railing just outside the tunnel.

“I believe it is meant to be a political statement. Ul'dahns have a lot to say about money and station.” With that said, Megiddo finally emerged from the tunnel.

Antimony pursed her lips. "I suppose so... It's an unfortunate place." She sighed, looking troubled. "I'm glad Airos doesn't seem to have been... bothered by it."

“I have a bigger question, though. Ul'dah is a city built by lalafell. Yet all our architecture seems to be made by extremely tall people.” Ulanan made her point by standing on her toes to look over the railing.

“I offer no explanation,” Megiddo shrugged. “Perhaps they wished to be welcome to very large guests. Overestimating the size of Roegadyn.”

“Truly, we are a very charitable kind.”

Antimony brought one hand up to her mouth to stifle a very inappropriate laugh. Clearing her throat, she added, "Or simply to be intimidating."

Ulanan found the railing too tiresome, so she turned around and stopped bothering with it.

“I doubt it. Once something gets too big, it is no longer intimidating, and simply ridiculous,” Megiddo shook his head. “Now, how does one clear a head? I'm unfamiliar with the process.”

Antimony's ears twitched. "Ah, well. I..." A small shrug.

“You distract them with diminutive but decidedly delightful dealings so they can dismiss the dull dealings that dirtied their determination.”

“That may be beyond my abilities,” Megiddo admitted. “All of my dealings are dirt, and I'm far too tall to do anything diminutively.”

Antimony looked between the two and, after a moment, let out an uneasy, faint chuckle. "It's alright. This walk is... well, the fresh air is nice. Without having to worry about... ah."

“I should show you my paper constructs right after we get you a proper wardrobe.” Ulanan's change of subject was swift like the shadow of a dove that had been tied up and catapulted towards a wall.

“A paper wardrobe...?” Antimony looked thoroughly confused.

“Proper, she said,” Megiddo corrected.

“... Ah. Yes. Of... course.”

Ulanan burst out laughing.

“I belive it being proper means it cannot be paper,” the Duskwight added.

Antimony wrung her hands uncomfortably. "You truly don't have to go spending money like that, Ulanan. Paper or... proper."

“Paper would be a pain to put on. And I can't let you walk around like this. It's an outrage against proper manners and the basic fashion instincts of mankind.” Ulanan gestured broadly towards Antimony, “Specially the trousers.”

“From my point of view, it's an amusing thing to be preoccupied with.”

Antimony went a little warm in the face, her tail wrapping itself against one leg. "Ah, well, they're--I mean, they're a bit over-large, but... they're not that bad!"

“He could have at least asked for your size. But typical of men, he thought he could take one look at you and guess it,” Ulanan scoffed.

“... It was a gift! And--I hardly think he had the... opportunity,” Antimony winced.

“I suspect it is rude to ask another person their measurements,” Megiddo commented. “I'm from a cave in the woods and even I know that much.”

“Yes, and that's why you don't just give clothes to people. You bring them to the Weaver's Guild with you...why are you standing so far?” Ulanan waved one arm from where she stood several fulms away, at the top of another flight of stairs.

Antimony jumped and moved to close the distance between herself and the lalafell.

“Why did you walk so far away? I thought we were resting. That tunnel was a very long hill,” Megiddo replied.

“Because there are benches down here.” The lalafell gestured to the benches.

Megiddo nodded, "I see," and walked on over.

Antimony perked up somewhat.

“Didn't you have benches on your cave?” Ulanan questioned.

“I did not. There's little difference between a bench and the floor once you're down, though. One is just easier to get up from.” Megiddo went straight for a bench and sat himself down.

“And aren't you glad we are sitting on the easy to get up from one?”

“For now. I learned a while ago to only sit on the ground when I don't intend to get up for a very long time.”

Antimony offered a small, brief smile to Megiddo and Ulanan. "And the cleaner one, I imagine."

“Ulanan,” Megiddo said after a moment of easing into the bench, “if you can afford an entire wardrobe made by the Weaver's Guild, why are you homeless?”

“Are you implying only poor people can wander?”

“I encourage all to wander,” the Duskwight acknowledged. “But it is also good to have a home to return to, and I know of few who choose to wander without that behind them.

Antimony dipped her head slightly. "Wandering isn't... well, for a long time my own home was constantly on the move."

“You must have missed the part where I said I have a family in the city.”

Antimony furrowed her brow. "But... you don't like your family." Flinching she added quickly after, "Not that--I mean, I was only assuming based on what you've previously... said.."

Ulanan seemed confused. "I don't?"

“Do they wear linen cloth?”

“What? No! Gods forbid that!”

Antimony's ears quirked in different directions.

Megiddo's ears did not move. "Would you say any of your family's homes are your homes?"

“Home's where the family is.”

“Then you are not homeless.”

At that, Antimony looked down to her lap, tail wrapping against one leg.

“Was that ever in question?” Ulanan seemed to have lost track of the matter at hand.

Antimony's mood seemed to have taken a downward turn, but she still said, "It's comforting you do have a place to go, then, Ulanan. I'd worry for you.”

Ulanan changed the subject of the conversation once again, "This side of the Goblet is awful. All these cliff faces ruining the view. The other side must be much nicer."

Antimony made a distracted sound and glanced at Ulanan sideways.

Megiddo spoke then, “Is the head-clearing working?”

Antimony was quiet for a moment, ears drooping with whatever thoughts dogged her, and then she turned with a warm if faint smile to Megiddo. "Quite! As clear as.. the... midday sky!"

“You are a terrible liar,” Ulanan said with a joking tone.

Antimony's eyes widened. "Why would you--no, you both have been very helpful!"

Ulanan squinted with suspicion. "Well, what kind of clothes do you like?"

“Ah, well...” Grimacing, her ears twisted uncomfortably. "... Clothing clothes? I--really, I can't be picky."

Megiddo looked up from where he was staring at the ground, turning to Antimony and saying, "If you don't mind my curiosity, were you successful?"

Ulanan didn’t understand the question, so she just raised her brows in complete silence.

Antimony shifted her gaze to Megiddo, green eyes blinking rapidly behind her glasses. "Ah...? Successful in... oh." She went quiet at that.

“You look well, so I had thought you might be,” Megiddo explained. “But then you seem upset as well. I cannot tell if it's something I can help with or not.”

Antimony gained an odd, unsettled expression, breathing a few, short times through her nose, and then managed quietly, "It will just take some time."

“I'm afraid we don't need you to stab anyone in the eye with exploding dolls, no.” Ulanan’s tone was bitter for no reason.

Antimony winced. "Ulanan..."

“Hrm. The statement is very specific. I am guessing the event did not meet with your approval.”

The lalafell shrugged, “It's just not he method I'd use, that's all I'm saying.”

Antimony ducked her head. "Perhaps, ah... perhaps something else will... work."

“We should concentrate on your clothes,” her smaller friend announced. “Unless you don't mind wearing blankets with holes for the limbs and head.”

Furrowing her brow, Antimony protested, "They're not blankets..."

“I've worn blankets. The difference is vast,” Megiddo concurred.

“Then what kind of clothes do you like? Long dresses? Skirts? Trousers? Big hats? Small hats? Pointy hats?”

Antimony worried her hands together in her lap. "It... truly doesn't matter, Ulanan. Whichever--ah, whichever doesn't put too much burden on you."

Megiddo lookeddown at his lap when he remembered he actually was wearing a blanket. It just rested against his pants, but was Ulanan insulting him?

“Mm. Fine, then,” the lalafell huffed. “When would you like to get that done?”

Antimony sighed, looking to Megiddo and then skyward, squinting through the glare. "... Alright. I suppose it can't hurt."

“It's good to accept your friend's help, even if it is with such a thing as clothing,” the old man added.

Her ears shifted back slightly as she glanced towards Megiddo. "Yes, well..." Then with a sigh, she stood.

“Specially when you need it,” Ulanan said.

“Go on without me,” the Duskwight offered. “I think I'll sit here a time longer. Though, a question, before you go.”

Antimony looked to Megiddo with a quiet expression. Ulanan was suspicious but waited for the actual question before doing anything more than raise both brows.

“What method would you have used, Ulanan, since you seem to have an opinion on these things.”

Antimony's tail flicked, thrown off by the question, and she glanced sideways at Ulanan uncertainly. The lalafell gave Megiddo a thoughtful look. “Olives.” A pause. “...and maybe a well-balanced, non-poisoned breakfast.”

Antimony let out a short, quiet chuckle.

“Olives. I wise answer, I suppose. Perhaps next time I will try olives.”

“You should!” the lalafell nodded, her hat bouncing. “You can't go wrong with them.” Ulanan smiled at Antimony. "Should we get going, then?"

The older woman nodded after a moment, then offered a brief smile and a bow of her head to Megiddo before turning to leave with Ulanan.

“Fare well.” The Duskwight remained on his bench, looking older by the minute.

[Image: AntiThalSig.png]
"Song dogs barking at the break of dawn, lightning pushes the edges of a thunderstorm; and these streets, quiet as a sleeping army, send their battered dreams to heaven."
Hipparion Tribe (Sagolii) -  Antimony Jhanhi's Wiki
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