42nd of Autumn, 519 AV
(Continued from A New Perspective Part III*)
Imogen's cheeks turned pink as she shook her head at Aster, folding her arms over her chest, her mouth wavering as she struggled to decide if she wanted to smile or frown. "You don't have to lie, you know. I know it's not good."
Aster shook her head vehemently, dropping into a crouch so that she was more on-level with the girl, resting her hands on her thighs as she looked at Imogen. "I'm not lying. It might not be very good in terms of materials or skills, because you're learning and using what you can. But I can guarantee you that this is the most beautiful garden I have ever, or will ever, see."
"How is that possible?" Imogen scoffed, kicking her toe in the dirt. Aster was silent for a moment as she struggled to gather up her emotions and form them into proper thoughts, and those thoughts into coherent words that Imogen would understand.
"It's not always about how good the final product looks," Aster said, slowly, as she strung together the words in her head. "Or how good the tools you have are, or how skilled you are. Sometimes what matters most is effort."
Imogen frowned at Aster, and then rolled her eyes. "That's dumb," she said, turning away from Aster. She walked over to the rickety wooden bench to pick up her watering can.
"It's not dumb," Aster defended, standing from her crouch.
"It is," Imogen insisted, her voice harsh. "Tools and skills are what keep you alive. It doesn't matter how much effort you put into a knife fight, if you have a shitty dagger that you can't use, you're going to end up dead. And then what good is effort?"
Aster faltered. For all the light and positivity she still retained, Imogen was still a Sunberth street child. Aster could see the pained expression on her face as the girl warred between survival instinct and emotion.
"Well, I did say sometimes," Aster said gently, walking over to pick up the shears. "There are exceptions to everything. But Imogen, that's exactly why this garden is so amazing."
"I don't get it," she frowned, finally walking past Aster to a patch of somewhat scraggly flowers, beginning to sprinkle whatever water was left in the can over them, pausing every so often to sift through the dirt with her fingers and spread the dampened soil.
Aster followed, and knelt by the edge of the patch. Placing the shears to the side, she began to sift through the grass for any weeds. She didn't know much about gardening, actually growing plants or herbs, but it only made sense that weeds would be unwelcome, and it was an easy enough task.
Well, she thought so, at least, but she was having trouble determining if some of the green poking up from the ground were actually weeds, or maybe just growing flowers, or if they were perhaps supposed to be there.
But she continued to talk as she sorted through the grass with her fingers, yanking out an unruly leafy looking growth. "Sunberth isn't exactly a very nice place, is it?" She asked, and Imogen frowned down at the flowers she was watering, shaking her head.
"No, I guess not," she agreed, emptying the last of the water from the can and returning to set it back down on the bench. She came back over and knelt beside Aster, helping her weed.
Imogen giggled slightly as Aster yanked a green stem, reaching over to pluck it from her hand. "That wasn't a weed, it was a flower. Look," Imogen said, pointing at a tiny green bulb at the top that Aster had missed.
"Oh. Sorry," Aster smiled faintly, the expression sheepish. Imogen waved her hand and set the stem aside.
"That's okay. It can be hard to tell sometimes," she assured the Eth. "It's good to pull out the whole weed either way, though. Make sure to get the roots. Otherwise it'll just grow back, I think. You might have to dig a little to do it."
Aster nodded, smilingly slightly to herself as Imogen explained without second thought. The next time she came across a weed, she did as the girl had explained, scraping her fingers down into the dirt slightly to loosen the roots before yanking the weed, roots and all, and setting it aside.
Word Count: 728