It hadn’t been the best of mornings. He had awoken with a mild headache, and his nose stuffed up, making it hard to breathe. Vyx wasn’t unused to such a condition. There were certain activities that seemed to trigger it, and rooting about amongst some of the oldest tracks in the library the day before, carefully copying the bits his father had requested, he had first felt that familiar stinging in his eyes. Then came the sneezing. And by the time he was ready to sleep that night, he was congested and his golden orbs burned and itched like mad. At least this morning his eyes had improved, but he still felt a bit under the weather, and that wasn’t something likely to improve his mood any. And it wasn’t the best to begin with. Far from it.
His father, Vylindel, had left their home a couple of hours ago, with specific instructions on what part of the memoirs Vyx was to tackle. They were being paid a pretty penny to sift through and edit and organize and compile the voluminous studies and geographical and mental wanderings of a recently passed Symenestra of fairly high renown. The family of the deceased had commissioned Vyx’s father to gather all together in a coherent, flowing volume – or more realistically, volumes – and they were pressed for time. There was to be a memorial gathering and service at the beginning of the new season, and the brother who had negotiated the deal with Vylindel had been quite adamant that all must be completed by that time, as the work was to be a special, surprise presentation to the dead healer’s widow. The race was on, and Vyx had been pulled in to lend his hand, literally, in the copy work.
While his father read and made meticulous notes of what was to go where, Vyx had already begun on those parts of the work that were straightforward and easy to place at the beginning. In his beautiful, flowing handwriting, which was regular and neat and highly legible, he had already begun to write – and write – and write. There were certain tricks his scholar-father had taught him about how to get the most work out of one’s hand, and eyes, and head, and body – for all of these played a part in what appeared to be a simple task – copy work. For the hand to keep moving - steadily, gracefully, uniformly – across the pages, it needed to hold the pen just so and be placed on the table just so, and breaks and massage to keep the fingers limber. Eyes needed breaks too, as did the back, and correct posture while sitting was important to allow for hours of what would otherwise be ‘backbreaking’ labor. Ending up hunched over and bent like a pretzel would drastically reduce productivity the next day.
So on this day, Vyx had been left with his marching orders, which included a very unpalatable responsibility that had come about as the result of hitting a snag in the preparation of the memoirs. Vylindel was a scholar, but in the field of history and anthropology. He was no medico, and the dead healer had been possessed of a cramped and often almost illegible handwriting. Notes were scrawled will nilly over acres of paper, and trying to piece them together in some logical order was proving a deal frustrating – and was slowing them down. Poking about in the tomes on hand at the library was of some use, but not enough. Vylindel had pondered this glitch for a day or two, until just the day before, he had apparently stumbled – almost by accident – upon a solution, or so he hoped. A visit to the Place of Purging to visit a friend there, to ask if she had any idea what a certain indecipherable term might be, had resulted in his introduction to a young healer who was, after some explanation and negotiation of pay, willing to help. It seemed a double blessing to Vyx’s father for the young healer in question was also, allegedly, a decent artist - at least, he appeared skilled enough to duplicate the myriad drawings and sketches that accompanied the decedent’s notes. Thus two problems had been solved with one new acquisition to their little team, and Vylindel had been quite elated about it, when he had returned to their home the evening before and shared the good news with his son. All looked rosy and the task before them much more manageable. Until Vylindel had mentioned the young healer’s name, with a fleeting hint of embarrassment washing over his features.
Vyx’s jaw had dropped, metaphorically if not literally, at the mention of who they were going to be working with. Of course, he didn’t know the creature personally – of course he would not! But he didn’t have to know him to know who he was – or what he was, to be precise. The ‘Dra’ before his name gave it away in an instant, and Vyx could only look at his father in stunned silence for a long moment. Then his golden eyes had narrowed and he had spent the next half a bell trying to argue his father out of this course of action. Yes, they were pressed for time and yes, this plan made imminent sense. But – a mongrel? Here? In their very home? Despite all that they believed in – what Vyx’s mother had died for – all that they espoused as right, and that which they condemned as the worst of racial sins – how could he? How could he?!
The argument had turned loud and scathing, on Vyx’s part. Vylindel had been calm, at first, but in the face of his hotheaded son’s ire he had finally put his foot down. Needs must and that was that – the healer would be coming around sometime near mid-day on the morrow and they would show him what was to be done and sit him at a desk and what would be the harm in that? This endeavor was important – it would preserve forever the work of a great mind and add to their people’s store of knowledge – and wasn’t that a priority? Wasn’t the greater good here to take precedence over their own closely held values?
Well, when a man wants something badly enough, he can always justify the abandonment of what he believes in – at least in a small way and just temporarily, right?
In the end, Vylindel won the case, of course. What could Vyx do, but steam and huff and pout? He had come very close to refusing to help on the project. But his own values, his own sense of duty and loyalty to his father, nixed that option. It was complicated, and he was feeling quite resentful towards Vylindel for putting them – him – in this awkward and uncomfortable position. So he had gone to bed feeling crappy and awoken feeling not much better. After consuming a breakfast of pureed fruit, and dressing with his usual meticulous care, Vyx had listened to his father’s instructions in stony silence, waves of disapproval wafting off of him but hitting an equally stonily resolved barrier. Vylindel was feeling defensive, which made him even more of an apologist for the soon to be arrival of a mixed blood Sym into their home. Vyx was young and brash and couldn’t see the bigger picture, but he’d just have to swallow his anger and adjust to the situation as best he could. Vylindel would just try to keep the two young men apart. He would have tried to do that in any case, to avoid…well, undesirable affliliations….
So all was in order for the arrival of the healer, when, mid-morning, a message came, brought by a special courier. Vylindel’s niece was just being brought to her childbed – she was in labor, and a new generation of his small family was to be born on this day, it would seem. A day of great joy and profound sadness, for this family of Esterians that believed in racial purity above the lives of its daughters. Vylindel had made the easy decision to leave the house and go to his brother and perhaps take one last chance to make a good bye to Vyxaaron’s cousin, for it was almost a certainty that this would be her last day in this cycle of her life. With curt and pointed instructions to his son to stay and receive the young healer when he made his appearance, and some hasty and less precise words of how to get that young man started on his work, Vylindel had left a very sour looking and feeling Vyx behind.
For the next two bells or so, Vyx had gotten down to business and made good progress, for it was something of a distraction from his displeasure to stay focused on his work. He also thought with disapproval that his father’s departure and absence would just put them that much further behind. He loved his cousin and he had made his good byes a few days ago, but this was how life was. His father’s being at his uncle’s side would not lessen the grief the man would surely feel, seeing his only daughter passing into the beyond. So Vyx tried to concentrate, and suppress the fact that, as time passed, he was coming closer and closer to that moment when he must open their door to a young man who epitomized in his conception the dilemma of Vyx’s race.
The time passed much more quickly than Vyx would have liked, and he was actually quite engrossed, not realizing how close to noon it had come, when he heard the light tapping. He actually startled, his hand jerking and a trail of black ink spewing across the almost completed page he had been working on. Cursing, he rose in an instant, almost throwing the innocent pen across the room. But too well trained for that, he took a breath and carefully laid it in its little tray. He swallowed, feeling a slight soreness deep in the back of his throat, and he cleared his voice with a little coughing sound. Carefully running his hands down the front of his silk shirt, smoothing away imaginary wrinkles, he then reached to tuck an errant strand of palest grey hair behind his ear. These were all natural, almost unconscious gestures of his, but today, he was highly cognizant of a desire to make sure he looked the part of a real Symenestra – dignified and proud and…superior.
With an unhurried gait, Vyx made his way from the desk where he had been working, in his father’s study, through into the main living area of the home. It was sparsely but beautifully appointed, the décor chosen long ago by his mother, when Vylindel had first brought her home as his bride. There was an understated elegance and air of good taste about every carefully chosen piece that graced their home, and upon her passing, when Vyx had been born, Vylindel had left it all without change, his own small memorial to a much beloved wife. Vyx crossed the living area, straightened the neck of his collarless shirt, and paused before the door. Fixing a haughty look upon his finely wrought features, his eyes hard as amber, he opened the door.
The first thought that flew through his unhappy mind was By Viratas, he’s even worse than I thought he’d be – doesn’t he even care how he looks?! Well, of course not – why should he? It wouldn’t help, would it – trying to look like something he will never be!
Outwardly, he held his features carefully frozen in place, giving the young healer a frosty glare. “You are Dra-Marvasa Whitevine?” It was amazing how the young Sym could put so much of a sneer into that last, foreign sounding name. There was a reason, though, that he could pronounce the Vani word with something approaching accuracy – a secret reason that he probably would have died before revealing, though its very source came unbidden to his mind as he gazed down his nose at the dark haired mutt before him.
He didn’t wait for a reply, for really it was only a formality – a way to let this foreigner know that Vyx was in the know - and information was power, right? “My father told me you’d be arriving about now. He’s had to leave, rather unexpectedly.” His voice was as chilly as his stare, and he had no intention of going into any explanations – he wasn’t going to share any of their family’s personal business with the halfbreed, for it had nothing to do with him. What would this healer truly know about the interwoven and inextricably enmeshed joy and sorrow of a pure Symenestra couple bringing a real Symenestra child into the world? He might work at the Place of Purging, but standing on the sidelines, even as a healer, was nothing – nothing – like being part of such a family. For all Vyx knew, this stunted mistake standing in his doorway probably tended to the foreign bitches that the unenlightened of his race utilized to further corrupt their purity. Any way you looked at it – this guy had pariah and traitor and sullied written all over his diffident looking features.
And Vyx had to let him in….
…
“Come in,” he said brusquely, barely stepping aside and his body stiff with wariness, his eyes glued on the young mixed blood, as if he was willingly letting a thief into his home and expected nothing good to come of it.