Her hands made their own flutterings, spread across his chest in worried peace, reassurance, apology.
Apology. As if she had been the one to have done something wrong.
"Shahar," Love, lack of understanding, too fast. His blurring signs were escaping her, and he didn’t know if he was farther upset or if he was relieved. "Shahar." Can't tell what? "Please." Want to understand, want to help. She separated herself from him, leaving only her hands on his skin, tracing wordless patterns with her fingers as her worry instead moved to speech. "I want to understand, Shahar. Please, maybe I can help."
My fault! It was nearly a shout. Pain and guilt returned, laced with fear circling above like a vulture. They were wide, non-specific signs; his emotions were running high, out of control, loosed from their tight cages and running out of him like vengeful beasts, but it wasn’t about children, or what Naiya had asked for. No, this was about something else, a wrong Shahar had silently done her that had managed to get hold of his conscious mind and was hauling itself to the surface.
Shouldn’t have, should have told, done you wrong, I’m wrong, something wrong with me.
The slope was slipping underneath him, and he was desperately trying to stay away from the dropoff. He should have know. The moment he stepped into the seamstress’s pavilion, he should have known better. He wasn’t supposed to marry. He wasn’t supposed to have children. With Khida, there had never been a need to try. It should have stayed that way. Why hadn’t he known to keep away?
Why did he have to fall in love?
He had been selfish. Naiya was better than that. His love for her had tricked him, because the kindest thing to do would have been to have let her remain free, let her remain unbound to something like him. But no, his love had pulled him towards her, and now she was shackled in marriage. She, who was like fire, and like autumn leaves, and like a warm bedroll that drove away the cold in an instant.
She, who was whole.
And he, who was not.
She asked to know. She asked to help. She asked to see into his mind, and into the black bag, and into the eyes of the grinning demon who was throwing off the cairn stones and crawling back to the forefront. She wanted to know his pain. She wanted to know the truth.
Fear, was his response. Fear of himself, fear of his demon, fear of Naiya, fear of what Naiya would do if he told her. Fear you knowing. Past. Pain. Didn’t tell you. Fear, you know, love ends. I’m all wrong. The scars on his arms––why were they itching so badly?
He pulled away from her, hands dropping sign in favor of digging into the skin of his forearms––why did they hurt all of a sudden––scratching at the scarred, distorted skin, but his fingers weren’t enough. The scars burned, and so he bit at them, trying anything to make them stop.
Apology. As if she had been the one to have done something wrong.
"Shahar," Love, lack of understanding, too fast. His blurring signs were escaping her, and he didn’t know if he was farther upset or if he was relieved. "Shahar." Can't tell what? "Please." Want to understand, want to help. She separated herself from him, leaving only her hands on his skin, tracing wordless patterns with her fingers as her worry instead moved to speech. "I want to understand, Shahar. Please, maybe I can help."
My fault! It was nearly a shout. Pain and guilt returned, laced with fear circling above like a vulture. They were wide, non-specific signs; his emotions were running high, out of control, loosed from their tight cages and running out of him like vengeful beasts, but it wasn’t about children, or what Naiya had asked for. No, this was about something else, a wrong Shahar had silently done her that had managed to get hold of his conscious mind and was hauling itself to the surface.
Shouldn’t have, should have told, done you wrong, I’m wrong, something wrong with me.
The slope was slipping underneath him, and he was desperately trying to stay away from the dropoff. He should have know. The moment he stepped into the seamstress’s pavilion, he should have known better. He wasn’t supposed to marry. He wasn’t supposed to have children. With Khida, there had never been a need to try. It should have stayed that way. Why hadn’t he known to keep away?
Why did he have to fall in love?
He had been selfish. Naiya was better than that. His love for her had tricked him, because the kindest thing to do would have been to have let her remain free, let her remain unbound to something like him. But no, his love had pulled him towards her, and now she was shackled in marriage. She, who was like fire, and like autumn leaves, and like a warm bedroll that drove away the cold in an instant.
She, who was whole.
And he, who was not.
She asked to know. She asked to help. She asked to see into his mind, and into the black bag, and into the eyes of the grinning demon who was throwing off the cairn stones and crawling back to the forefront. She wanted to know his pain. She wanted to know the truth.
Fear, was his response. Fear of himself, fear of his demon, fear of Naiya, fear of what Naiya would do if he told her. Fear you knowing. Past. Pain. Didn’t tell you. Fear, you know, love ends. I’m all wrong. The scars on his arms––why were they itching so badly?
He pulled away from her, hands dropping sign in favor of digging into the skin of his forearms––why did they hurt all of a sudden––scratching at the scarred, distorted skin, but his fingers weren’t enough. The scars burned, and so he bit at them, trying anything to make them stop.