[Note: Dialogue in red is spoken in Myrian
3rd of Fall, 512AV
"I don't like it, Kala. I don't like it at all."
Kala looked up from the steaming bowel at her... well, she couldn't say "husband", would she? Employer would be more accurate. But after ten years as Namseer's nakivak, she had grown very fond of the tall, brooding warrior who had left that life behind to open a tavern. Even now she could still see embers of that fire she saw when she was first contracted: the tightening of the jaws, making his blue skin paler around the lips, the eyes fixed and angry, bushy brows knitted and intense.
The human sighed and left her cooking for the moment. Ms Remi wouldn't complain if her food was late, the good soul. She walked around the table and put a hand on her... friend's shoulder.
"We've had worse sorts in here."
"Really? Name three."
Kala cocked an eyebrow and started reeling them off: "That pirate who stole the curtains, the drukas who bought the constables to the door, the nuit who left pieces of his-"
"That was different!"
There was iron in his voice now, but time had since erased any fear Kala had of it. He may have been near seven feet tall and still had all the muscles he did during his campaigns, but Namseer no longer scared her. In fact, she just chuckled and massaged his knotted neck.
"He paid upfront, remember? Quiet, keeps to himself... and he's always been respectful to me."
Another derisive snort. "They're women-run, Kala, you know that. And he knows if he wasn't respectful, I'd kick his arse out onto the streets!"
Kala decided to remain quiet on that one. The Myrian was more than a foot shorter than Nameer, and less broad, but some unknown, frightened voice in her said that she would not want to see that confrontation. There would be no guarantee that Namseer would survive.
Because whatever else he was, Kala knew on sight that this "Razkar" had killed and killed again, more times than he could probably remember.
She sighed, brushing auburn hair out of her face. She didn't want to think of this. It upset her, and Nameer, and that's not how she wanted to spend her evening.
"When there is cause to worry," she said, dropping her face next to his ear and pecking his cheek, "we worry. Until then, we do not. Didn't you tell me that once?"
Namseer grimaced, but there's a good-natured glitter in his eyes that made her smile. He sighed and got to his feet, towering over her.
"You have an unfortunately good memory."
"Yes, I do."