Spring 60, 514
The Spring-Pool,
House of Lives Lived,
Abura
Even in the heat of High Spring, Minnie felt a chill, though she attributed this mostly to the lack of a skirt - how people survived in only trousers was mysterious to her, and she felt a great pity for the poor sods who had no choice but to wear them. The trousers were at least of a good make, but if they were under her dress, she would have left them unbuttoned, to give her a bit more room to breath in the belly.
“Semiyr? Ms Semiyr?”
She stepped forward from the little alcove of the Hall, and saw Mother Semiyr lying, still as death on the bottom of the pool, her eyes open and unblinking, her wings spread wide behind her. The water trembled slightly, making the Akvatari’s face waver. She looked, for the world, as if she’d drowned.
Minnie waved shyly at her, and Semiyr’s eyes closed, opened again, slowly, before she rose slowly up through the shallow water. She broke the surface and took a breath so long, Minnie found herself wondering if it was a trick. The other woman’s eyes softened as she smiled, “But, silly, thou canst not swim in a blouse. Well… thou COULDST perhaps, but it would just flap about like a fish with a torn fin.”
“I… I haven’t anything else.”
SEmiyr nodded a moment, “Let me see…”
She floated in front of Minnie with an appraising eye, raising her hands to the sides of Minnie’s chest, measuring. She nodded, then, and said, “Close enough,” before fluttering off toward the hall. She reappeared a few moments later with a neatly folded swath of fabric, dyed a deep grey.
“There, now, put this on. Why thou wouldst wear sleeves to the wrist in this weather is a mystery!”
Minnie took the fabric, and unfolded it, and… it did not fold into any garment she could see, just a long strip of fabric, with a fine tasseling along the edges. She looked at Semiyr, then at the strip of fabric around the Akvatari's breasts, and her eyes went wide.
“Oh… oh, no, I… I couldn’t…”
“Tut! Come now! Thou hast seen my body? Noone would think ill of thy belly. Its practical, that’s all.” she took the lowermost button of Minnie’s blouse and began undoing it. Minnie froze, paralyzed, and her eyes telegraphed terror, but a particularly strange terror, childlike in its cowering, like a girl waiting to be whipped. Semiyr furrowed her brow, and stopped. She spoke, then, softly, drawing her hands back.
“Philomena… Philomena, where art thou gone to? What is wrong?”
Minnie tried to speak, but she had lost her mouth, and her fingers struggled with the button, unable to stumble it back into its hole. She trembled.
Semiyr lay a gentle hand on Minnie’s cheek, and landed on the ground, curling her tail to rest on it and bending to put her eyes just at the level of Minnie’s. She was silent a moment, looking at the small woman, gauging her level of upset. Finally, very softly, she began to sing:
[i]Long ago, on the edge of the sea,
Thou camest to me,
Thou camest to me.
I’d carried thee far in a swollen seed,
And sprouted thee up like an alder tree.
Thou camest to me,
Thou camest to me.
We pledged each other, hast thou forgotten?
Child of my First birthing—“
She stopped abruptly, the song catching in her throat, and moved the hand on Minnie’s cheek to squeeze her shoulder gently, averting her own eyes, for a moment as she blinked, the sadness passing over her with a breath of a shuddered brow.
Minnie blinked a few times, and turned around to face away, breathing deeply. Then with shaking hands she unbuttoned the rest of the buttons., and dropped the blouse off her shoulder. Her shoulders started to shiver uncontrollably, and she folded her arms over the bustline of her thin chemise, coloring pale instead of blush. The black inked words were clumsy on her upper back, always a hard place to paint.
“Oh…” said the Akvatari.
“Please, I know its a stupid thing, I just—“
She stopped, feeling lips against the painted space between her shoulder blades.
“Come, now, my friend. With this, we’ve somewhere to swim to, Dr. Lefting.”
“Say… say my name again, please.”
“Philomena, then.”
“Please they are not… my words, they are private, my…”
“Shh… come. Please, a favor to me, hmm?”
And very gently, Semiyr took the grey cloth, and wrapped it around Minnie’s breasts, leaving the chemise on until she had securely tied the binding in place, thin carefully tugging it out and over Minnie’s head, so as not to uncover anything in the process. Then she lead her to the waters edge, and gently slithered in, tail first, turning deftly about.
“Now. Come in, doctor, and we shall see about teaching thee the water.”
Minnie, more clumsily, sat on the pools edge, and lowered herself in backwards. The ink on her back began to soften and dissolve in the water.
x
The Spring-Pool,
House of Lives Lived,
Abura
Even in the heat of High Spring, Minnie felt a chill, though she attributed this mostly to the lack of a skirt - how people survived in only trousers was mysterious to her, and she felt a great pity for the poor sods who had no choice but to wear them. The trousers were at least of a good make, but if they were under her dress, she would have left them unbuttoned, to give her a bit more room to breath in the belly.
“Semiyr? Ms Semiyr?”
She stepped forward from the little alcove of the Hall, and saw Mother Semiyr lying, still as death on the bottom of the pool, her eyes open and unblinking, her wings spread wide behind her. The water trembled slightly, making the Akvatari’s face waver. She looked, for the world, as if she’d drowned.
Minnie waved shyly at her, and Semiyr’s eyes closed, opened again, slowly, before she rose slowly up through the shallow water. She broke the surface and took a breath so long, Minnie found herself wondering if it was a trick. The other woman’s eyes softened as she smiled, “But, silly, thou canst not swim in a blouse. Well… thou COULDST perhaps, but it would just flap about like a fish with a torn fin.”
“I… I haven’t anything else.”
SEmiyr nodded a moment, “Let me see…”
She floated in front of Minnie with an appraising eye, raising her hands to the sides of Minnie’s chest, measuring. She nodded, then, and said, “Close enough,” before fluttering off toward the hall. She reappeared a few moments later with a neatly folded swath of fabric, dyed a deep grey.
“There, now, put this on. Why thou wouldst wear sleeves to the wrist in this weather is a mystery!”
Minnie took the fabric, and unfolded it, and… it did not fold into any garment she could see, just a long strip of fabric, with a fine tasseling along the edges. She looked at Semiyr, then at the strip of fabric around the Akvatari's breasts, and her eyes went wide.
“Oh… oh, no, I… I couldn’t…”
“Tut! Come now! Thou hast seen my body? Noone would think ill of thy belly. Its practical, that’s all.” she took the lowermost button of Minnie’s blouse and began undoing it. Minnie froze, paralyzed, and her eyes telegraphed terror, but a particularly strange terror, childlike in its cowering, like a girl waiting to be whipped. Semiyr furrowed her brow, and stopped. She spoke, then, softly, drawing her hands back.
“Philomena… Philomena, where art thou gone to? What is wrong?”
Minnie tried to speak, but she had lost her mouth, and her fingers struggled with the button, unable to stumble it back into its hole. She trembled.
Semiyr lay a gentle hand on Minnie’s cheek, and landed on the ground, curling her tail to rest on it and bending to put her eyes just at the level of Minnie’s. She was silent a moment, looking at the small woman, gauging her level of upset. Finally, very softly, she began to sing:
[i]Long ago, on the edge of the sea,
Thou camest to me,
Thou camest to me.
I’d carried thee far in a swollen seed,
And sprouted thee up like an alder tree.
Thou camest to me,
Thou camest to me.
We pledged each other, hast thou forgotten?
Child of my First birthing—“
She stopped abruptly, the song catching in her throat, and moved the hand on Minnie’s cheek to squeeze her shoulder gently, averting her own eyes, for a moment as she blinked, the sadness passing over her with a breath of a shuddered brow.
Minnie blinked a few times, and turned around to face away, breathing deeply. Then with shaking hands she unbuttoned the rest of the buttons., and dropped the blouse off her shoulder. Her shoulders started to shiver uncontrollably, and she folded her arms over the bustline of her thin chemise, coloring pale instead of blush. The black inked words were clumsy on her upper back, always a hard place to paint.
“Oh…” said the Akvatari.
“Please, I know its a stupid thing, I just—“
She stopped, feeling lips against the painted space between her shoulder blades.
“Come, now, my friend. With this, we’ve somewhere to swim to, Dr. Lefting.”
“Say… say my name again, please.”
“Philomena, then.”
“Please they are not… my words, they are private, my…”
“Shh… come. Please, a favor to me, hmm?”
And very gently, Semiyr took the grey cloth, and wrapped it around Minnie’s breasts, leaving the chemise on until she had securely tied the binding in place, thin carefully tugging it out and over Minnie’s head, so as not to uncover anything in the process. Then she lead her to the waters edge, and gently slithered in, tail first, turning deftly about.
“Now. Come in, doctor, and we shall see about teaching thee the water.”
Minnie, more clumsily, sat on the pools edge, and lowered herself in backwards. The ink on her back began to soften and dissolve in the water.
x