513 AV, 16th Day of Spring The first thing she registered as she was waking up were her aching shoulders and neck. Sleeping on the floor did that to the body, but she'd never complained. The second thing she noticed was that her cheek was wet. When her eyes finally fluttered open, Kayelin realized why. She'd drooled profusely sometime in the night. As she sat up to stretch her cramped muscles, she wiped her mouth and cheek vigorously. Luckily the fire hadn't gone out during the night, so their apartment wasn't cold. Kayelin sat in her spot on the floor for a few long minutes, staring at the smoldering remnants inside the old hearth. It was the day after her birthday, but she didn't feel twenty. When she ran a hand through her cropped blonde hair and down over her tired eyes, she was thinking how much older she really felt at that moment. The dying fire snapped loudly and drew her attention back to the dim apartment. It was sparsely furnished and dingy, but she and her mother made sure it was always as spotless as possible. It was home. When Kayelin glanced at the bed pushed against the far wall and didn't see the familiar lumps of her parents and youngest brother, she stood with a concerned frown. It was definitely empty. Her father was guaranteed to be crashed on the floor at some drinking buddy's house, too liquored up to make it home. But her mother and brother were always in bed until Kayelin woke them. For a sickening moment she imagined the worst, sending her heart hammering in her chest. But thinking like that never solved anything, so she bottled down her hasty panic and went about adding some wood to the hearth. After all, the bed was made. Her mother would've been the one to do that, so there was surely a reason they had left without waking her first. Surely. With the fire now growing and eating away at fresh logs, she went to wash her face at the basin in the corner. The icy water chased away the last of her fatigue, shocking her awake as it ran down her neck. The rest of her morning routine Kayelin did much slower, hoping that would help pass the time until her mother returned. She felt like a machine going through a monotonous checklist, only at half speed.
Eventually she ended up sitting on the edge of her parent's bed, tapping her knees like a prisoner in a cell. How long she sat there, she wasn't sure, but eventually the gnawing fear starting swirling in her gut like a pair of wolves fighting over a rabbit. "Where the petch are they?" she grumbled to herself, mulling over several different scenarios all in quick succession. Fear was also giving way to anger, and that anger ended up driving her to her feet and to the door in a few long strides. She yanked the handle and it swung open on its well-oiled hinges. On the other side of the threshold stood her mother, cradling her brother against her bosom, hand still raised to grab for the door that had been pulled from her grasp. They both gave a surprised start and gasped, jumping in unison and rousing Merek from sleep. The bleary smile he gave Kayelin didn't douse the fire burning in her chest, and she instantly went on the attack. "Where have you been? It's been at least a bell, and you didn't tell me where you were. I was starting to fear you'd been taken, or hurt, or worse! Why didn't you wake me? That was a stupid thing to do. And why did you take Merek with you? You could have left him with me! You know how I feel about you two being out on your own when it's barely daylight." Finally, she ran out of breath for her tirade and lapsed into an upset silence. Her mother barely batted an eye, looking as calm and serene as ever. Not a single hair was out of place, nor a crease in her old dress. Kayelin's mother was the only woman in the slum's she knew that could make poor look good. Pleasantly plump, beautiful, and somehow always clean. Her hair was more the color of a golden wheat field while Kayelin's looked like straw. They both had the same sparkling blue eyes, but that's where most of the physical similarities ended. Her mother never seemed ruffled by anything life threw at her, be it a protective daughter or a drunken husband with gambling problems. "I was out getting your birthday present. I couldn't yesterday because your father's friend was away on business, but he returned this morning and I was promised the pick of the litter for being midwife last spring to his daughter." Like always her calm, matter-of-fact voice melted Kayelin's worries away. Her shoulders sagged noticeably with relief, until her mother's reasoning registered and set her on edge again. |