mod noteTani's player is going on hiatus, and gave permission for me to use her character in closing out the thread.
Her newfound peer, this other hunter, this Tani, took Khida's assertion with seeming surprise -- and a faintly disdainful loft of her chin. But the falcon thought it was as much appearance as actual caution, scoff for the sake of scoff. "Fine," the woman said, and "we'll see how you do." Khida said nothing in reply, and after a beat the green-eyed woman turned away from her steady quietude. She offered a more polite farewell to the elder teacher, before withdrawing into the tent-city beyond.
Khida watched her go, attention drawn away only when the man gestured for her regard. "You'll have to tell me how that hunt works out," he remarked, voice smooth and level but a curious glint in the man's dark eyes, a hint of smile around the edges of his expression. She thought him amused, and perhaps pleased -- somewhat like a raptor freshly sated, comfortably satisfied, just a little smug in his success. Something else seemed to occur to him, and he gestured to the trophy head she had earlier examined. "In fact, bring your kills here afterwards," he continued, hands fluttering through companion signs she mostly understood. "From that hunt, and any others you make later on. The Clan will buy the kills from you."
Canting her head, Khida considered this thought. Most of her hunting, now, went to feed herself and the camp directly; so did his, but so too did he sell some of it, and the mizas from that selling bought the tents, the clothes, the tools, all the things which the Dawnwhisper camp needed and could not be foraged from the Sea. She herself needed little, but the others needed much -- and as they were his responsibility, they also became hers. More mizas could benefit them all; meat, they obtained in relative plenty.
Yes, Khida signed, hesitating a moment after to find the Pavi words she needed. "I will hunt, come here... to you," she assured the man, as the equivalent of to sell eluded her. He smiled his approval, gesturing thank you and something else she didn't understand. He opened his mouth to speak again, but other voices cut across before his could even start -- young voices, eager, excited; the two boys returning from their practice, leaning on one another and gesticulating wildly as they laughed and groaned over revisited successes and failures. The teacher turned to attend to them; Khida withdrew from the ruckus they made, having no further business here.
She would find the Tani woman another day, and bring kills to the teacher to sell as she had them -- all of which arrangements had come entirely unlooked-for, even unasked-for. But she hunted, and she lived with Drykas -- was wed to a Drykas -- and that apparently brought her the same consideration he received from these people.
It remained to be seen whether she really desired such. But if it did benefit the hunter and the rest, it would be worthwhile to go along. |
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