by Basha'ir on September 12th, 2012, 2:58 pm
Bartal had a very direct way of looking at her, which Basha’ir found different, but not alarming, or discomforting. He seemed quite candid, and also a very intense listener, as opposed to many who, out of deceit or indifference, found it hard or not worthwhile to look her in the eyes. She returned his look with a direct one of her own, though a far softer, milder one. When he made his assurance to her that she would do well enough by Nondi, her smiled warmed, though she had no idea who this mother Oriana was that he spoke of. If she had, she might have thought Bartal all the odder for calling upon the bear goddess. But as it was, her attention focused on his answer to her questions, nosy questions to be sure. And the undertone of sorrow they evoked in the man made her sorry to have asked him. She hadn’t meant to expose his lack of companionship. It had been stupid of her to assume that most people eventually found someone to settle down with, and raise a family together. Now that he had made that bald, blunt declaration, I have nothing, how she wished she could have taken her ignorant prying questions back! Without really thinking, her hand dropped from the child’s skinny leg to Bartal’s well muscled arm, a gesture of sympathy, where she could not find any words to recompense him for that confession.
The smile on her face had faded, to be replaced by a sad look, but in the end, Bartal might not have even noticed the change wrought in her. For there was a commotion brewing, where the players were performing, it seemed. Basha’ir was too short to really see much, but she heard slurred words and rowdy laughter. With all her dark experience, Basha’ir easily placed the sounds as part and parcel of some drunken loutishness, and her sad look turned into a grimace. The performance had stopped, mid-note, and now, as people began to swiftly depart, Basha’ir could see, and hear, that three drunken men were focusing their unwanted attentions on the players, specifically, the dancer. In an instant, as these things are wont to do, the drunken palaver turned physical. One of the musicians cracked a flute over a pate of ginger hair, sending the cretin to land on the ground, on his bottom. Almost like magic, the performers disappeared into a side street, and the other two drunks moved to help their friend back to his unsteady feet.
Already, Basha’ir was turning away from her brief glimpse of the scene, her hand going back with worry to Nondi’s leg. As if reading her mind, Bartal was sliding the child carefully from his broad shoulder, setting her down behind the looming bulk of his not insubstantial frame. Basha’ir grabbed the little girl’s hand.
“It seems the entertainment is over,” she said, trying to sound pleasant, for the child’s sake. Nervously, she thought of the dagger she now sported in a sheath tied to the side of her lower leg, just below her knee. She had yet to use it, thankfully, and she had no plans to, unless absolutely necessary. Flight, and not fight, was always going to be her first course of action. With that in mind, Bash’ir gave Bartal a warm, fleeting look, saying, “I think it’s time to go. Thank you again for your kindness.” She smiled, but already she was turning and she began to walk away.
Meanwhile, the three drunks had regrouped, the redhead cursing a blue streak and hurling threats at the now vanished players. His two friends, somewhat more intent on getting on their way, tugged at him, encouraging him to leave off yelling at people who were no longer there, and just come on along. With a mean snarl, he threw one last invective at the alley and he turned, wobbling precariously. But a hand to each of his supporters’ shoulders steadied him, and he sort of launched himself forward, taking three over large and extremely jerky steps, propelling himself in a slanted trajectory, right into the path of the bear kelvic.
He pulled up before actually crashing right into Bartal, but had to put a splayed hand on the kelvic’s chest to keep from tripping over his own feet and falling. With an ugly frown, he looked up into Bartal’s face, and slurred, “Get out of my way, you! Whadda ya mean, standing here gawking like some great lummox. Come to jeer did ya? Think it’s funny, having a flute smashed o’er your head? Wanna sample, huh? Would you like tha?” He reeled back a half step, and tried to cock his arm, but this threw his balance off even more. He stumbled back another step and by this time, his two friends were beside him once more, and began making some attempt to placate him and drag him away. It was at this point that Basha’ir, hearing what was going on behind her, turned her head back over her shoulder, unsure if Bartal had left already, and fearful that he might still be there.
To her great dismay, not only was he there, but he seemed to be the clear target of the ginger’s ire. At the same moment, off to her side, she heard another member of the now dispersing audience saying to her neighbor, “Look sharp. The city guard will be here any moment. Mark my words.”
Basha’ir stopped in her tracks, hesitating. She knew that the Syliran knights weren’t prone to asking questions politely. They seemed to prefer knocking heads together first and then sorting things out once the dust had settled. She looked at Bartal, and hoped that he would choose to simply walk away.
But if I share my secret, you're gonna have to keep it. No-one else can see this...