“Here, look—see?” He pointed at a point where the weft went over two warps. The mistake, however, was near the top of Avelina’s work, because, unlike Tell, she was a slow worker. She seemed to have the opposite problem—instead of blazing ahead, she drifted behind idly.
Llyvi turned around when Sosicly tapped him on the shoulder, turned to a reddened Avelina and prodded her on with a slight toss of the chin, and turned back Sosicly.
“Yes?” he asked, and then looked over her shoulder, watching Tell glare at his loom—sulking at his rushed weaving pattern and at his dreary life, no doubt. His furrowed brows were adamant.
Llyvi’s lips made a silent O. It seemed that he’d put the world on Sosicly’s shoulders.
“Was he any trouble?” he whispered, words slithering out from between his teeth in a sort of soothing hiss.
“I’m sorry—I’ll work with him. Avelina’s a dear, but I’m not sure about the last one.”There was something about Dyval that put Llyvi on edge. Not in the same way that Tell grated on his raw nerves—this one, with black bags under his eyes that looked profound against his snow white pallor, was a different kind of unnerving. Like a sleepy predator laying eyes on meat.
Avelina was engaged in an uneasy, one-sided conversation with the boy, who nodded absently. Occasionally, the corners of his lips would twitch, but Llyvi wasn’t sure it was from the threat of a smile.
As he crawled over to where Tell sat, Llyvi realized that he was pushing a lot of his own work onto Sosicly, and he made an irritable face—he really didn’t mean to, and he vowed to make it up to her later. Tell barely acknowledged him, his hands angry as they jerked the weft over and under the warp.
“Um, Tell?” The question was hardly imperative. Llyvi cleared his throat, a little loud.
“Tell? You’re going too fast.”“What?”“Tell, wait—look here!” Llyvi, in the heat of the moment, went for Tell’s wrist, but hesitated, and instead settled for grabbing the frame of the small loom itself. It made Tell lift his chin slightly.
“Yes?” he asked, voice charged with vitriol.
Llyvi heaved a sigh, sounding like somebody had whacked him in the chest.
“You’re going too fast.” He said this in the all-condescending voice of a typical teacher—he really didn’t mean to, but he couldn’t help it when he watched Tell’s incompetence—and Tell’s nostrils flared.
“You can’t tell me what to do,” he said. And then he wrested the loom away from Llyvi’s grasp, and continued to yank at the string, muttering something that Llyvi couldn’t quite make out, but the tone was clear:
leave me alone, or I’ll bite you. Llyvi was left to sit there, a little awkwardly, and watch him pour out his emotions onto his plain weave.
OOCI should probably tell you that they're using those cute little looms that you can sit in your lap. Also, you can do what you please with Dyval!