Corvus cursed Leth with his swollen tongue, betting both of his horns that the moon god could hear him. The fallen Ethaefal didn’t care if anyone could understand him anymore, least of all, Leth. He was still a god after all, living without worry in the world his child had fallen from. Corvus's mouth picked the perfect time to silence him, or he would have used another curse against the one who’d saved him. It wasn’t the stranger's fault that he'd come into this miserable world belly up, but the guilt of forcing him to live through it, should have landed like a heavy sack across his shoulders. And he didn't seem to care...
He stood in front of Corvus mouthing words that scared him, more because they were starting to make sense, than because of anything he was saying. He didn’t want to revert to what he’d been. It felt like he was devolving.
What was at the end of the road? First from the heavens to the ground, then to what? If he had no language to communicate with his brothers and sisters, better that he not stumble across them. They would only bring him more pain. He was better off being found by this being who carried the weight of his six arms with a gracefulness that he once could have understood. If Corvus was going to live what was left of his days here, it was better that he get them over with quickly.
He turned his naked back on Leth and looked into the blue eyes of the one who’d saved him, searching for a reason to hate him more than his god. Even in his state of confusion, he found nothing in their depths that gave away anything but his annoyance. As Corvus started to let go of his anger, his hands began to tingle from lack of blood and he realized he’d been clenching his fists, preparing for the fight that he knew now, wouldn't come. When he opened his hands, one finger at a time, then shook them out, a weight he was carrying in his body that was more than the heavy atmosphere of the new world, crumbled off his back. For the first time since he'd fallen, the tension in his muscles slowly unwound.
The male was still talking, unaware of Corvus's mental transformation, giving him the feeling the stranger liked to hear himself talk. He tossed his horns, clearing his mind and focused on the man's words, trying to ignore the harshness of each syllable. His lips moved longer than most males, but the Ethaefal still couldn't make out what he was saying. He bellowed with frustration. The speech nagged something in his brain, something that was so close to the surface but wasn't. The closer he got, the more painfully he slammed his head against the wall in it. The pain was worse than his ugly words.
“Gah!” He jumped back, startled by the thick goo of the words that his throat had thrown up. The taste was awkward on his tongue, he hated the pasty feel of it, but it couldn’t be undone. He’d spit up his first word on Mizahar and he had no idea what it was.
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