by Ainyi on January 28th, 2014, 3:56 am
Slowly, Ainyi began tending to the rabbit's hanging entrails. First, she pulled the intestines out slowly, unwinding them from the tangled mess. They fell from the rabbit's midsection like two slimy, pink strings of pearls. She used the knife to cut where the intestines connected to the colon tract, and moved the attached genitals and internal colon tract to the waste bin. The Chiet followed the string of the intestines to the stomach, and cut it there as well. The stomach and liver could still be used for cooking, so they were set aside to be taken to the Kitchens directly after she delivered some of the salted meat to the Food stores later.
“Why, Ainyi, hunters like myself find themselves at one with the world. I merely bathe in muck to contain my body heat before donning a dress of leaves and bracken to blend in with my surroundings. Then, to cleanse my body I bathe in the waters of Morwen. It should be expected, Ainyi, that at one point you don the same dress with Turrin as he tutors you.”
Her ritual of dressing the rabbit was interrupted by this explanation of Edric's nudity. She noticeably blushed at the thought, but waved it off lightly. "I have no problems with nakedness," She stated, only lying a little bit. "If that is what I must do, that is what I must do. That still doesn't-"
Her words stopped as his hand caught her chin, and held it there, their eyes locking perfectly. She felt his other, blood dipped, hand stroke across her face. There was an electric feeling that his touch gave her, her whole face and scalp tingling under her billowing mahogany locks. As the blood dripped from his placement, the tingling feeling ran down her spine like static, filling her whole body with a warm...happy sensation. It was one Ainyi didn't understand, but she felt it as long as she maintained eye contact with him.
"There."
Even as he stepped back, neither of them seemed ready to let the gaze fall. She studied his features intently, both intrigued and mystified by what this strange, powerful emotion they both felt was. However, a drop of rabbit's blood came down from the carcass and plopped on the tip of her nose, as though trying to alert her once more to the task at hand. She cleared her throat, and offered a bewildered smile as the subject changed to his tutoring, and her conditional agreement.
As she felt a drop of blood drip from her face, she looked at his lean, pale face with a sense of mischief while he considered her return offer. Nonchalantly, she pulled out the rest of the nonedible organs - kidney, spleen, the like - and placed them in the waste bin. As she did so, she dipped one hand in deep to nearly coat it in blood. With the other hand, she cracked the neck of the rabbit to make cutting the head off easier, olive eyes listening to his return intently.
“Fair enough, Ainyi. I will agree to escort you through while you investigate, with given notice, in exchange for archery lessons.”
He was less than an arm's length apart. The Chiet offered her cleaner hand, but quickly withdrew it when he simply saluted. Ainyi pouted, propping her torso forward on the table to close a few more inches on them. "You know how we lowly Chiets make agreements, here in the Processing Center?" She offered quietly, looking around as if there were some deep secret she were about to reveal. She leaned in suspiciously, met his eyes once more...
And slathered her bloody hand across his left cheek, her pinky finger trailing off his jawline to paint his neck. She pulled away quickly, giggling at her own mischievous behavior. "A deal, we have. And now you're all ready to hunt again!" She quipped, face glowing a slight tone pinker than normal. She flicked the excess blood on her hand to the waste bin, wiping off what was left on the butcher's apron she borrowed every day from the Processing Center.
Now, time to refocus on the task at hand. Ainyi took the rabbit off of the meat hook, and held the carcass over the waste bin and used her finger to carve the lungs and heart out of the rib cage cavity, along with any leftover organs that didn't feel like parting from the carcass. The fur was set aside in a separate pile for tanning; she cut the ears off, and put them in the waste as well. Now for the hard part.
Laying the rabbit's carcass on the chopping black. She lined the head up on the notch she practiced on earlier, drew her arm up, and landed it with a firm, harsh thunk. The rabbit's head came off cleanly, though some capillaries burst in the process, so blood wasn't done going everywhere. She placed the head, and it's brain, in the waste bin. Now came the precision work. Taking the cleaver, she placed a short, hard sliced down the sternum. The rib cage splintered, but didn't come apart quickly enough. Another two cuts, and it was open. Putting down the meat cleaver, she picked up the precision knife, and flopped the body on it's side.
Following the grain of the muscle, she sliced along the front right leg, right up to the shoulder joint. Hooking the knife's lowest part of the blade into the joint's gap, she applied as much pressure as she could, until the shoulder gave, and popped off. Turning the limb over, she opened the muscles to find the sinew, and pulled it out of the leg. While it was too short to use for a bowstring, the smaller sinews were great for musical instrument strings, when horse hairs were short. And they were always short on Mount Skyinarta. She repeated the process on the front left leg, and the haunches, until she had four severed limbs and four varying lengths of sinew sitting by the fur. Additionally, she cut the rib cage away, and added it to the pile. The cooks liked to throw that one in the stews; assuming the bones didn't choke anyone. In times like this, she could only barely convince the cook that it wasn't sanitary to eat the rabbit's head; Ainyi didn't know how much longer it would be before they didn't care.
Before moving to the spine, Ainyi inspected the claws; this was an older rabbit, and had larger claws. They could be used as needles, once carved correctly. She took a smaller, finer knife, and using her thumb pressed hard on the foot pad to push the claws out as far as possible. Slowly, she severed the nerves and cartilage until the claws each popped off individually. Some sweat beaded on her face due to the concentration, but she could wipe it without getting even more blood on her face.
That taken care of, all that was left was to graft the meat from the spine, and salt it. Using the filet knife, she cut along the jagged knobs of the spine to free the back muscles from the vertebrae. Once fully finished, the spine was tossed in the stew pile with the other miscellaneous bones with too much meat on them to throw away. For this portion though, she would need clean hands. Pulling the water bucket from below the long table, she dipped her hands in elbow deep, rubbing at her skin with her fingers, bringing them up and drying on a thick white rag that has seen better days. She placed the brine bucket on the table, using the already dirtied knife to toss the two medium size filets in the bucket, mixing them deep in to the salts. She used her hands to work the salt deep into the flesh once they were well coated. By the time she took them back out, they looked like meat shaped cakes of salt.
"Hey, could you go ahead to the Food Store?" She asked Edric breathily. Some hair had fallen forward on her face, stuck to the blood on her cheek. When breathing on it didn't move it, she delicately took a salt caked finger and brushed it behind her ear. "I need to place this in the Curing area, and drop off some dried meats ready to be stored."
She scraped the legs and other stew worthy bones into a copper pot with a large handle and cover and placed it on a clean table. For a rabbit, it was heavy.
Once Edric scampered off, she moved to the Curing Closet in the hottest corner of the room; it had vents to help remove moisture, and was naturally heated by the magma within the volcano. On the colder winter days, the workers would often take turns curing the meat just to share the warmth. She placed the salted rabbit on the nearest hooks, and checked some venison that'd been in now for over two days. It felt dry and tough, and when she sliced it open, no moisture or blood poured out. She hacked the meat into personal pieces, about twelve or fourteen, and placed them in their proper bin to be carried to the Processing Center.
As she unearthed herself from the comfort of the curing closet, she was simultaneously delighted and angry as her shift assistant Denmi showed up. "Where in Caiyha's name have you been?" Ainyi glowered at the woman. "I've been here alone all day." The girl, only freshly graduated from Yasi status, hung her head in guilt. She knew better than to offer an excuse to Ainyi. Ainyi rolled her eyes, turning to go to the Food Stores, until she heard noises.
“Why hello there,” Edric silkily began. Ainyi heard the sound of a struggle. “Little mouse, whatever are you doing here?”
Petch. Someone was stealing from the food store. The Chiet put the meats back in the curing closet, and locked it. Darting back to Denmi, she called with quiet conviction, "A thief here. Get an Endal. Now."
The shy girl nodded her head vigorously, and scampered off quietly. Ainyi grabbed Yasa, and threw her quiver belt over the meat apron. She strung the bow and dipped low, weaving her feet in a quiet grapevine, sneaking as she did in the Warrens with a knocked bow. As she came around the corner, she drew her bow on the waif of the Dek, shortly after he was scared beyond speech. Edric had him pinned with a spider knife.
“I will take him to the authorities. Perhaps their methods will bear more interesting fruit than my own attempts.”
"I say no," She curtly denied, eyes sharp on the Dek. "Listen to me, Dek. You've said enough, that I know you work for the Despised. You're going to answer some questions for me. Every question you don't answer, I take a limb. I shoot your shoulders, your hips, your knees. I suggest kindly that you answer them honestly."
Ainyi paced herself ten feet from the Dek. He began crying, whimpering. "None of that, now," She added with little sympathy. "Be good, and you leave here unharmed. Now then. You work for the Despised, yes?" The Dek nodded hesitantly. "Very good. See? This isn't so hard. Now. Have you heard the name Braghna mentioned, among his followers? Perhaps by the Despised himself?"
"I-I-," the Dek stammered. Ainyi drew the arrow to her chin, watching it whimper. "Yes or no?" She interrogated harshly. "Yes!" he cried in a high pitch voice. Ainyi lowered her bow. Once the Dek caught his breath, he added, "Yes, yes I have. This One has not met the Master. But Braghna is a known name."
"Why do they talk of that name, Dek? Was it negative? Was their talk of killing himl?" The Dek hesitated again. Angrily, Ainyi's fingers twitched on the bow.
Right as she meant to draw the bow and give the Dek a permanent shoulder injury, loud harsh footsteps rounded the corner. Naime, the Endal Ainyi met in her encounter with Turrin. The woman's eyes blazed past her, to violently grab the Dek. At least, blazed past her for a second.
"You, I will deal with in a moment," Naime told the Dek, forcing him on his knees. "You chit, however," she added, directing her gaze back at Ainyi. "A Dek caught in the food stores? Stealing? How the petch could you let this happen?" Naime looked at the bloody smears on both their faces, and scoffed. "Honestly, what were you doing? Were you two too busy playing with blood to realize-"
"No, we weren't," Ainyi interrupted sharply, emerald eyes ablaze with anger. "In case you didn't notice, the supervisor never showed up for shift today. Neither did my Shift assistant, until a chime ago. You can't expect a single person to do all of the duties."
Naime shrugged, shaking her head. "Very well. I'll have a word with your supervisor. But watch yourself, Chiet. Remember your place." She moved to take away the Dek. Ainyi should have shut up. But when did she ever do what she was supposed to?
"I wasn't finished questioning that Dek," She stated, puffing her chest out. "I need to-"
"No, you don't need to do anything," Naime countered. "I remember you. You're that chit Turrin's taken for an apprentice. Well, whatever Turrin saw in you, I don't. You're the dirt on my boots, and whatever you want from this Dek isn't as important as it's punishment." Naime shoved the Dek along, and pulled Ainyi in on her way out. "I don't know what you're investigating in your off time, but I don't like it. It smells of trouble. Whatever it is, I don't want to hear of it again," The woman told her, just loud enough for Edric to hear.
Naime nodded to Edric, with a face that didn't care about the previous events. "Good day, Hunter. Keep up your work." With that, The Endal walked off briskly, Dek in tow.
Ainyi's bow was lowered. Her knuckles were paler than white as they gripped the bow's handle. Her other was balled in a fist by her side. She bit her bottom lip so hard, it nearly bled. Shakily, she took a deep breath, and kept her head hung for a moment.
"I-," She tried to begin quietly, but couldn't. Breathing in again, she raised her head, looking at Edric's feet. Caiyha knows she wouldn't be able to look him in the eyes right now. "I'm sorry you saw that. Perhaps - thank you, for staying to visit. I, I think I need to get back to work."
She felt stupid even saying that. What work? Chopping more boredom? She had dealt with caste shame before, but after that moment - that fleeting, tingling moment gazing in his eyes - it was as though that shame and embarrassment consumed her. She just wanted to hide her face from Edric on this moment. It was so hot with rage, she felt the blood dry and crack.
The gorgeous boxcode above was made by the lovely Edreina.