She listened to the man’s introduction, the one on the horse. The other man seemed to be fixated on the area behind them, his attention not wavering.
She was amazed as the man on the horse spoke. She hadn’t met anyone for a long time who had travelled from that far away. Questions burned from inside her, wanting to know the answers from her childhood, but she stopped herself. Believing that, most likely, it would be taken the wrong way and would seem rude rather than curious.
He put his hand to his chest, over his heart, an snake, made up of some blue-green stone lay there, catching the brief glimpses of sunlight that escaped the canopies grasp to the floor below. It was beautiful. Siola wondered what hands carved it. It wasn’t like anything she had seen in Sylaris recently. Some of the jewellers sold animal bracelets, but she had never seen one this colour or shape.
As the man finished, she realised that he probably thought that Sylaris was where she was from. ‘-oh, ah, no, I’m from Zeltiva, I’ve been here only since the summer.’ She hurriedly corrected him. However much she loved the city and the grounds around it, it didn’t mean as much to her as her home back in the shambles of Zeltiva. She would never give up her claim to that place.
A few minutes hung in the air before the forest dweller spoke, his voice breaking the untimely and uncomfortable silence. He paused after saying his first name. This surprised Siola. How long had it been since he had seen someone? How could his own name sound alien on his own lips? Siola watched Jonathon with confusion.
Jonathon explained that he did not need their help for looking for the game, and with Siola was pleased. She wasn’t a natural hunter, far from it. Her hand eye co-ordination didn’t work well with swords and bows. Let alone catching a simple ball. ‘How long have you lived here?’ She asked, curious to know.’