Day 65, Season of Winter, 506 AV
This time they had set up in the street. The pavement had turned to dark grass that blew in an imagined wind, Darilava stood tall, pale and elegant, out of place in the sun, his pale, transparent skin enough to make a watcher wince, his face lined and weathered with age. Wheat stood a little behind, lifted a hand to his mouth and yawned, loudly.
Kit felt a little safer knowing that Whet was there watching her. She turned her head and narrowed her eyes and she saw him slump against the wall, tip his hat over his face to keep out the sun. Only a little, though. She shifted back and forth, stared up at the elder Symenestra with a child's seriousness. He plucked a small brown something from his pocket and tossed it at her.
She raised her hands, caught it, stared down at it. It was a leather ball, sewn together into a haphazard sphere. She tossed it from hand to hand before looking up at Darilava. There were more in his hands now, one, two, three . . . he tossed one into the air, and it made a high arc. The other balls joined it, and Kit watched as the continued in a neverending circle, propelled by the spider's hands. "If you insist so sternly on wasting yourself, there is need for other talents to develop. You will fall, girl, you will break like a precious doll dropped to the floor, and when you do, you must have other ways to entertain."
He caught them one by one, pocketed them all again. "Today, you learn to juggle one ball."
"One ball," Kit said. Her face was flat, her voice bland, with the edge of a question in it.
Darilava rolled his eyes and threw his hands up into the air. "Try, then! keep the ball going ten times, first attempt, and I shall praise you! I shall plead your forgiveness! I shall supplicate myself to you, girl." The only reason he would say that, ever, would be if he was convinced beyond recourse that she would fail, fail, fail. Kit gritted her teeth and began.
Kit tossed the ball from her left hand to her right, up, held out her hand to catch it . . . And the ball didn't go where she expected. It fell inches to the side of her hand, hit the ground with a soft impact. Kit stared down at it, disbelief plain on her face. "Your hands are keen and quick, but you should know they cannot act on what they do not know. This ball is a thing unknown to you. You are too accustomed to throwing, never catching," Darilava spat and oh, Kit's cheeks went red! "Again."