Gods created the Striders with human souls. As she considered this, Khida regarded the horse before her, head canted and lips faintly pursed. She stood quiet and still, no longer brushing Talvael, but caught up in her own pensive thoughts. ...Really, they just seemed like horses to her, like any other. Not that she had had much to do with horses before, but still... In the end, the Kelvic shrugged and set those thoughts aside.
Respecting the living... that was an idea she could understand more readily, though the Kelvic had not given it much thought before. All things... they see, they think, they feel. She had known that -- humans thought, Kelvics thought; she practiced caution and ambush tactics because her prey might see her and think to flee; and it was no great stretch to conclude that if she felt fear, triumph, contentment, sorrow, then so did all else, at least such creatures as clearly acted and reacted. But that thinking and feeling made life special...
She would have to consider that one more, later.
The Drykas woman went on to speak of a web, some kind of magic, something which... linked... Drykas to Striders and to... other things? Rebirth and personalities and horses and Webbers... The Kelvic's frown deepened, from an expression of contemplation to one of bewildered noncomprehension. Turning away from the woman, she walked slowly around the Strider, studying the surrounding grasses in the gloom. When she came fully around Talvael, Khida walked a circuit around Vallora as well. She was a Webber thing, whatever that meant? Tied to... what? Khida was already confused, and she could see no such connections tying anybody to anything; about all the conclusion she arrived at, a few moments later, was that whatever Vallora described surely couldn't be that important right now. If at all.
The woman fortunately provided an entirely different subject of conversation in short order, and the Kelvic seized upon it most promptly. "I will stay," she replied, stopping and turning to face the woman. She gave no end date, no qualifier, and from that it might be inferred that Khida meant for the rest of her lifespan. But she shook her head to Vallora's second question. "No, I do not have a horse. I do not need one. But..." Her voice trailed off, brow creasing as she faced the inadequacy of words to describe what she felt and knew at an integral level. Any further explanation was not quick to follow. |
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