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Rista gets cajoled into receiving lessons in Tawna, her father's language, by Val, with an unexpected explosion at another student's appearance
(This is a thread from Mizahar's fantasy roleplay forum. Why don't you register today? This message is not shown when you are logged in. Come roleplay with us, it's fun!)by Taln on September 11th, 2011, 3:13 pm
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by Flicker on September 13th, 2011, 2:34 am
Allowing the kids to resume the lesson, the oblivious Val situated himself back on the couch and carefully attended to some figuring on a small square of parchment. It was no happenstance that when Taln had hesitantly approached him, having heard of his willingness to teach anyone, he’d started the lad off with Tawna. He had been nearing impatience with Rista’s stubborn disobedience and knew that eventually the lass, whether she came willingly, as she had, or not, she would need someone to practice with. Just because he would teach anyone didn’t mean he couldn’t use the lower caste for his own ends. Just the fact that Rista was attempting to recall the words, though several of the pronunciations were off, and some words Val suspected were just accented versions of Nari, would help the yasi in her studies. Taln, well, Taln would learn what the words weren’t. Busily scrawling out neat rows, the gatekeeper winced at a particularly rough guess on the young lady’s part. It was no excuse, however, for the drudge to take offense and display such idiotic insubordination. Jaw clenching, the elder rose, exhibiting none of the limitations of age, and strode toward the table. It was only a matter of four steps, so he loomed over the furious dek in a matter of seconds, all the power of his youth once more rejuvenated and summoned in his ire. Blue eyes skimmed over the yasi, taking in her reaction before forestalling any movement or rejoinder on her part with an upheld palm. Returning his gaze to the upstart, his voice cracked with reprimand and there was not a hint of the kindly old man left. “You be grateful for the meal on your plate, Dek. Forget not from whence you come and in what company you reside. You test my patience with your cavalier manner and you’ll learn Tawna with Rista or you’ll learn it not at all. If you find yourself unable to provide Rista the service she needs then your presence here is no longer necessary; you can leave your meal and find something more to your liking.” Val stared in terse displeasure at the boy for long minutes, wrinkled features taut under the strum of anger. How dare the drudge speak so with no greater reason than a lack of skill from his teacher? Clearly Rista was just as uncomfortable with her neophyte grasp of the language, with the way she was alternatively withdrawn and irritated. Apparently satisfied without resorting to violence, the ex-endal turned to Rista and handed over the scrap of parchment. “If his immanency had been able to exert patience, I was in the process providing you with a guide,” he sneered, directing the lass to look at the script. The neat blocky letters had the phonetic spellings of all the words they’d reviewed this evening with a corresponding definition. Following the brief list were several phrases commonly used in greetings, along with a few sentences about weather, well being, eagles, fishing, and archery. It had been formulated with the intention of Rista being able to have use of them (even should she not say them out loud to whoever she spoke with) several times a day. Just keeping her referencing or thinking about them was necessary for quick uptake. “What have you to say?” he asked, eyes alternating scrutinizingly between the pair. |
by Rista on September 15th, 2011, 12:17 pm
by Taln on September 15th, 2011, 4:14 pm
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by Flicker on September 17th, 2011, 5:00 pm
When he’d stated they should behave as peers, it had been more to keep the Yasi’s scorn in line; that had been a gross miscalculation. The experienced old man should have been able to predict the dynamics between his students, this situation left a sour taste in his mouth. Rista had behaved unpredictably, but not, as far as he could tell, unjustifiably. Taln, on the other hand, seemed to take the direction as justification to lose his mind. Even his apology disgusted the gatekeeper. Clearing the sneer from his face with difficulty, the elder stepped back from the table and motioned to the meal remnants. “Take this away, Drudge. Return in three days timewill this work for you two? and forget that I ever gave you leave to approach Rista as an equal. You are now at her disposal for learning Tawna. Go.” Val moved away from the table to give the cowed boy room to gather everything up and remove it from his chambers. Turning away with a small gesture for Rista to join him, he led the way out into the heating nook. Stopping next to the cool stove, the rough pads of one hand slid along the smooth surface. Stars twinkled in a blanket across the tapestry of night, their light warm and fantastic as only it could be during the sultry summer nights. Before long, the wind would bring the chill of snow instead of the crisp scent of pine and new growth. Thick fingers deft even in the dark of the sparse enclosure, a small fire soon danced and hungrily lapped at the dry shards of wood the gatekeeper slowly added. “Let’s go over the phrases in the guide, make sure you can read them off how they’re supposed to be pronounced and we’ll be done for the night,” her teacher intoned blandly, taking his usual seat. There was room next to him, in the light of the fire, or next to the doorway, where the natural light was more than enough to discern the writing on the scrap of parchment. “Use Taln as you will, but come prepared to your lessons so that we may proceed smoothly without belaboring previous vocabulary.” |
by Rista on September 17th, 2011, 6:34 pm
by Taln on September 17th, 2011, 7:55 pm
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by Flicker on September 26th, 2011, 1:55 am
A draft from Taln's entrance to the nook stole the gumption from the hungry little fire and the light of the moon invaded its territory for a few, brief flickering seconds. Val used the darkness, his voice fading under the snapping protest of the whipped flames, to evaluate Taln's body language as he awkwardly hurried from their presence. The boy had utterly and inexplicably lost his mind. More bewildered than angry at this point, the elder shook his snow white locks and leaned back into the lesson. With inexhaustible patience, the gatekeeper guided the yasi through the proper pronunciation, even offering suggestions how to alter the spellings of the words so that she could remember what Nari sounds made what Tawna words. His blue eyes, easily fatigued in the fickle light, rested sharply on the guide from beneath bushy eyebrows. When she proved able to read and understand the sounds and phrases, Val leaned back, folding his thick, gnarled fingers together. The boy had utterly and inexplicably lost his mind. It seemed that Rista was just as subdued as he by it. That there were exterior factors coming into play here never even crossed his mind, despite the tersely offered clue Taln had given "We've met before, sir" or some such thing. If the youth still found her tongue tied regarding questions or comments, the disappointed old man would clear his throat and somehow summon up a pleased and kindly smile. "Come again in three days time, Yasi Rista. I'll have prepared another lesson and tasks to aid in your comprehension." Follow-up thread :
Currently waiting on HD permission to backdate the thread. I suggest you two talk about how you're going to handle the fact that Val told Rista to make use of Taln before their next meeting. Figure out what they do between threads, if anything, so that everyone is on the same page when next they all meet.
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by Rista on September 30th, 2011, 11:08 am
Rista worked diligently with the task at hand, trying her best not only to get the words and phrases into her head but also to forget about the whole matter with Taln. Both were hard tasks to accomplish, and by the time the elderly man considered her finished, her eyes felt sore and tired from reading in the fickle light. She gathered up the papers at the mans finishing words, returning the smile faintly with one of her own; it didn't look very lively though, and the girl seemed unusually quiet as she stood up and took a few steps towards the door. It was true that she had many a question to ask the gnarled old man. She had been given a lot of things to think about during this lesson, and some were slightly more comfortable than others. As her foot hesitated between one step and the next, however, it wasn't anything about Taln or the lesson that burned on her tongue. No, the pondering that made her face seem so hesitant as she turned around half-way and glanced back at the Gatekeeper was of a slightly more sensitive nature, one that she had only ever inquired about once before in her life... "Elder.. You met him once, right? Him, the man who.. who sired me." She didn't want to call him a father. What kind of father would leave a potential mate and child and run off like he had? She had heard some old story about how he came and left and created a mongrel during his stay, but there were never any solid facts and stories had a tendency to warp as they were told. She wasn't even sure why she was asking. Maybe it was just the simple fact that he was getting closer to her now, as she learned to speak his language. Was it his voice she spoke with as she tried to bed the tongue around the foreign syllables, did he see through her eyes as she looked at the gray-haired man on the bench? The girl didn't know how much of that man she carried within herself, and how much that was pure and untainted Inarta. The thought was frightening as always, unsettling and bothersome and she didn't want to even think about it, but if she would continue to study this language and learn about this people... Sooner or later it would inevitably lead to talk about this man, this blood of hers. She wanted to at least try and prepare herself, so that the blows to her views on herself wouldn't be too hard. It wouldn't do to break under such an unimportant thing. |
by Flicker on October 5th, 2011, 2:23 am
Rista had hit it right on the head in one of their earlier skirmishes; Chaktawe simply didn’t venture to Wind Reach all that often. Val’s eyes, hidden in the vibrating shadows cast over his face by the fire, unfocused as he thought back all those years. Oft, when visitors from lands he’d once ventured forth to stopped in, they spent much time with the old gatekeeper. One, he could speak their language, and two, he was a fabulous guide to the city and its strange inhabitants. Pushing to his feet, the fatigue of his earlier anger setting in, the old man disappeared back into his small chamber for a brief second of rustlings. Coming back out, he sat close to the yasi and tipped a large, loosely bound stack of parchment toward the fire. “How old are you?” As Valterrrik flipped through the chronologically ordered papers, a handful of strange languages came and went in neat hand. He came to the correct year, went back nine months, drug his fingers over a few sheets, scanning for something specific. “Ah, yes, I remember that fellow. He went down to Thunder Bay, hid for three days in the settlement, terrified of the ocean, and then spent two whole days at the baths just floating.” A grizzled old laugh interrupted his ruminating. “I met him, Rista, and learned much from him while he was here.” Thick, strong hands offered the loose papers to the girl, open to the page. It was all written in whimsical Tawna, but there were at least three pages under the same heading there, presumably his name or something similar. As though Taln had never ruined their budding friendship and camaraderie, Val’s gentle and sincere manner returned. “Don’t be afraid, child; face your fears and you will overcome them.” A careful guiding hand settled on her shoulder for the briefest of moments. “But it might be best to let the past lie still,” he warned. |
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