When that was done, it was time for the next step. Seirei picked up one of her chisels, only to set it down again a moment later. It was too big for what she wanted to do. After a moment, she selected another chisel. This one was somewhat smaller than the first. Satisfied that she had chosen the right one this time, Seirei positioned the chisel against the wood. Pressing down on the plank, she put some weight against the chisel, and made the first cut. Seirei followed the outline she'd made with the charcoal as she continued to work. While not strictly necessary for a design as simple as the one she was making, it certainly helped all the same.
Seirei sang quietly as she worked. The song she sang was a simple one. Little more than a child's song, really. But it was one her mother had taught her when she was young. They had often sang it together as they worked. Seirei had a lot of fond memories of singing this song while learning how to carve wood with her mother. Singing it now was bittersweet. It reminded her of happier times, and distracted her from the misery of her present circumstances, and the fears for her future. But at the same time, it reminded her that her mother was gone. They would never sing together while working on a project again.
Seirei faltered in her work. Tears filled her eyes as the feeling of loss overwhelmed her. Rather than brushing the tears away and trying to distract herself with work once more, Seirei let the tears come. Lian wasn't there to see her in a moment of weakness. No one was. She was completely, and utterly alone. Pushing her tears away was the same as pushing her very real grief away. In some ways, that was like denying that she was grieving the loss of her mother. And it wasn't just her mother's death that Seirei was grieving. It was the loss of her beloved older brother, all of her friends...everyone she had ever known. Although she hadn't lost them to death the way she'd lost her mother, they were gone all the same. Despite being alive, they were dead to her. Or she was dead to them. Seirei wasn't sure it mattered which one was true. The end result was the same. Her entire life...everything and everyone she had ever known and loved...was gone. And as much as she desperately wished otherwise, it was never coming back. Though she might try to deny it, deep down, she knew the truth. Her caravan...her family had abandoned her. They had given her a chance to survive, sure. But Seirei had to admit that they must have realized how small a chance she had really had. Seirei didn't know how to ride, and they hadn't left her with a horse even if she could ride. She had had no way of knowing how far she was from civilization, or in what direction she'd needed to go in order to reach it. Nor did she have the skills to keep herself alive out in the Sea of Grass long enough to find civilization. Her own people had abandoned her to die, while making themselves feel better about it by telling themselves that they had left her with enough supplies to give her a chance to survive. And it was all because they believed she was bringing bad luck down on them because she was half Drykas...because she was different from them.
It had been no less than a miracle that Lian had found her out in the vast Sea of Grass. As much as she hated to admit it to herself, he really had saved her life that day...not that she ever planned to admit that to him. He knew the truth anyway, damn the man. Lian rubbed her face in the truth every time she resisted when he forced himself on her. According to him, he was only exercising his rights. She owed her life to him, and so he had the right to force her to spend the rest of her life bearing children for his people. A people that she could quickly come to hate if she allowed herself to. Seirei was willing to admit that she owed her life to the man. Reluctantly, maybe, but she was. And that she owed him because of that. But that didn't give him the right to rape her every night, and to forcibly breed her like she was some kind of brood mare. Seirei didn't even want to think about the idea of Lian succeeding in getting her pregnant. But she knew that it was a very real possibility if things stayed as they were now. Unless she was barren, sooner or later, he would succeed. What would happen if...no, when he did? Seirei didn't want to think about that, either.
So Seirei gave in to the release of tears, and cried. Tears of grief over the death of her mother, and the loss of her entire world. Tears of anger and shame at being raped every night, and being helpless to resist the man that was forcing himself on her. More tears of anger at being abandoned, and left to die, as well as at her captivity, and at the man who was holding her captive. Tears of fear for the uncertain future, and for the children she was going to be forced to bear if she couldn't find a way to escape in time.
Eventually Seirei couldn't cry anymore. She didn't know how long she had been crying. Her eyes ached, and felt dry and swollen. They burned unpleasantly, and Seirei could only imagine how red and blotchy they were. Her head ached as well, and her nose was stuffy. She sniffled as she rubbed her eyes, brushing the tears away. But despite everything, she had to admit that she felt a little better. Her troubled heart felt lighter for the release of pent up emotions that had been building up inside her. |