This morning's dishes rattled as she dropped the book onto the table.
“Who was this woman you were talking with?!”
He looked her straight into the eyes without an answer.
“Just like all the money you have, all of a sudden? Just look at you.” Her voice had a concerned mother's reproachful timbre; but it could only worm a shrug out of him.
“I work.”
She slumped down into the chair and eyed the bag. He watched the dew on the plants in the garden. They needed water, just like the window – only those facing the street were cleaned regularly, he concluded.
“Who is she, Voron? Is it your child?”
He chuckled and shook his head. “No. Where did you get that idea from?” Anamyêl did not respond. This kind of habit might run in the family, but did she really think he was just like his father?
“I have not seen you at the burial well.”
“But I have seen you.” He turned around and made a small bow. “Find good use for the tria, mother.”
And then he left, sure that she still sat there, alone with a book on Talad's teachings at a set table. And the street was filled with stench and rats in this morning's shadows, with a damp cold drawn like an old coat over the city.
“Hey! Wait!”
She came running after him. Her voice told of her uncertainty, and there was something odd in her blue eyes. The Ylian blushed.
“You are going to the Garden, right?”
He shook his head and noticed how she looked at him. Not quite what she expected. “I will be there later today.”
She hid behind her warm smile.
“I see. May the light shine on your path.”
_
She crossed the empty plaza; climbed the stairs deep in thought. Of course, she knew: there was nothing odd in Hydlaa except the city itself. But he was different, everything was foreign about him and in the same moment so familiar. She had overheard him and Mother earlier that morning; and the pain she felt in her heart made her wish she had none.
Somehow she needed to stop her thoughts, needed to work a lot, needed the city's trouble around her. But even her green refuge was only filled with dew and silence this morning. So much here was dripping with memories, soaked in moments they had here together: the bench, the fountain, the grass and the flowers. Everything. The scent of his fur, the tone of his voice lingered here as if he would suddenly step out of a nearby tree's shadow and hug her. Eventually, these remnants would fade and disappear like dew under the crystal's heat; as would all -
And she fell on her knees, slowly, trying to reach the Great Mother with her prayers. But even the birds' song felt empty. The young woman opened her eyes. Then a cry escaped her throat.
The enkidukai supported herself on a low branch of a nearby tree, shivering. She was tall, lean even, and clad in the dried mud and blood and what little was left of her armor. She staggered forward.
“Abde, abde...”
She wrapped her in her light coat, shivering. Malal told her how to do these things, but now all was gone.
“It is alright. Everything will be alright. Talk to me! Help, I need help! HELP!”
_
The pain was gone, or just sleeping. She was in a tent. It was hot, uncomfortable, somehow smelly. People talked outside. New clothes, good. Even her amulet was still there, she could feel it. Wait. Slip away in the cover of the night. She was good at this. She knew that she could do it – and so, in the cover of the night, she got up and slipped away, sure that nobody would miss her. Who should miss her? The alleys where comfortably dark, so she returned to the place with the trees. That was easy. Hiding there, in the bushes. The ylian woman was good, but gone. Maybe getting in trouble for helping her. Maybe not. The Mother would help her too.
Time to think.
Fin
(1396 words. I hope you enjoyed the read.)