A hand hovered in front of her face. Lial blinked, to check it wasn't the shadows playing tricks on her, and grabbed their fingers. She loosened her grip, and tried not to dig her nails into their skin. The girl helped her up, and she tried not to lean on her too much. But her knees were too weak, and she had to tug down on the girl's arms to get herself upright. She found herself standing up, and leant against the wall to steady herself. Dust blew around her feet and tingled. She kicked it away, but more came.
Lial met the girl in the eye for the first time, and then looked away. "Thanks," she muttered. "I could have stood up by myself, but..." She stopped herself. Someone had given her a hand up, instead of treading on her, and she could only bring herself to be ungrateful. "Thanks anyway," she said, and brushed off her clothes.
"In case you hadn't noticed," she said whilst straightening her hair out, "I didn't choose to fall over. And yes," a tiny stone had lodged itself in the sole of her shoe, and she hopped about whilst trying to knock it out, "I had noticed that this is where people walk. Hence why we call it a street. In fact, I happened to be walking down it a minute ago." Lial brushed the back of her hand, and one of the tiny pink scratches became clearer. "And no, I wasn't trying to be a rug. Maybe I'd make a decent rug, but I'll just sticking to be a human, if that's alright with you."
Lial spotted one of her coins lying in between the cobblestones. She reached down, snatched it up, and tucked it in her pocket. "I'm not stealing, I promise," she said to the girl. "I dropped some of my money when I fell. Of all the things to lose, it had to be the money." She spotted another coin beneath someone's feet and lunged for it. Their boot stamped down, and she drew her hand away before they had a chance to crush her fingers. She took the coin and stuffed it in her pocket, and stumbled out of the crowd before she could be sucked into it again. "I'm sure there's more in there." The pile of coins in her pocket had become far lighter. Scavenging didn't seem like such a bad idea after all. "I'm not going to get them all out."
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