It was strange, wasn’t it? Seeing her express sympathy for the plight of a slave. The concept was as foreign to him as a surprise was. Just didn’t happen and didn’t quite connect when he saw others go through the motions. Where was she from that they didn’t keep slaves? Syliras being the only other city he knew of; his experience was not vast. However, his upbringing in Sunberth left him feeling he had a very solid grasp of humanity. That generosity was a luxury few could afford. When it came down to it. After the lot had been cast people would act in their best interest. He was alright with that. Reed could understand that. Looking at her, he thought she could too. But why speak of what simply exists? His own motivations were far from sympathetic for those who shared his plight. If he was being honest with himself, he would take more joy in depriving the slavers of product than he would in setting them loose himself. It was his burden, and perhaps why he found it so hard to adjust to the tenants the Knights tried to drill into him.
“I don’t think I left the first level for a season when I came here.” Reed said, flashing a humorless grin. It was just to fill the void as he watched her pace languidly backwards. He almost forgot to continue scrubbing himself as he thought about her guarded response. How it spoke to him more than sympathy ever could. The line between him and Merdem was thinning it seemed. There was a spasm of disgust from his brother at that thought, one he surprised by dipping his head underwater before coming back up again. Wicking the water out of his eyes, he turned his head to watch her make her way back over to him. His eyes once again alit on the tattoos he could see. He could feel his own marks burning staring at hers. Reminding him of his place, his heritage, and... Reed didn’t carry the thought. He didn’t have to when the whole city was a glaring reminder of that thought. This city was too well put together for broken things.
“Value is a fickle thing in the hands of a madman. Those that choose to own fighting slaves could all fit into that basket.” He said, talking so he didn’t have to think. Just see her and speak his mind. Reed had dredged up enough of his old life for today. Shifting around, he walked towards the edge of the pool so he could get at his legs with a coarse rag.
“You have a keen instinct. If Sunberth is to change. To really change, it will be at the edge of a blade. That blade would have to be kept at their throats for centuries, until everyone who knew the old way was dead and forgotten. Even then, it is not guaranteed. They are a stubborn people.” Reed said, his smile a touch more genuine this time. Hiking a leg up onto the edge of the pool, he scrubbed at his shin thoroughly before moving on to the next.
Looking over at her he saw a fraction of a hint. An errant emotion that passed too quickly beneath her smooth features for him to interpret. She plunged into the water before he could examine her any further, and his thoughts blinked out with it. Prying wasn’t in his nature. Neither was chasing ghosts of what-ifs. He thought of himself as a practical man. Practical in the extreme which is what had carried him to this point thus far.
Her façade shifted underneath those waters. It was all bronze. Shiny and reflecting his words back at him. Then the blows came. Bronze did what bronze does. It bent underneath the strain. Dented until a rough shape of lie beneath started to surface. Emotion. The pure sort that people didn’t reveal often to him. It made him feel strange looking into those eyes of hers. He stopped scrubbing to dip back into the water.
“Better that you don’t change yourself for a city. Simply grit your teeth with the rest of us and perhaps you will get a posting outside of the city.” Reed said, thinking even as he spoke the words of a longing of his own. A yearning to smell the world beyond what could be found across the airy training grounds. “Perhaps we could go on an excursion soon. Into the wildlands I mean to learn the waystations on the Kabrin.” He asked, the suggestion already germinating in him an impulse to go ask Kaer about this soon. The knight had been invaluable in his introduction to the knighthood so far and was always the first person he thought of when he needed help.
“It has been some time since I have been out to the wildlands. I think it might be nice to get out and stretch my legs again.” He said, even as he plunged deeper into the pool. Into the weightlessness that released the slowly building ache in his lower tendons. His mind was everywhere and nowhere as he looked at her. Wondering from what land this strange fighter had come.
“I don’t think I left the first level for a season when I came here.” Reed said, flashing a humorless grin. It was just to fill the void as he watched her pace languidly backwards. He almost forgot to continue scrubbing himself as he thought about her guarded response. How it spoke to him more than sympathy ever could. The line between him and Merdem was thinning it seemed. There was a spasm of disgust from his brother at that thought, one he surprised by dipping his head underwater before coming back up again. Wicking the water out of his eyes, he turned his head to watch her make her way back over to him. His eyes once again alit on the tattoos he could see. He could feel his own marks burning staring at hers. Reminding him of his place, his heritage, and... Reed didn’t carry the thought. He didn’t have to when the whole city was a glaring reminder of that thought. This city was too well put together for broken things.
“Value is a fickle thing in the hands of a madman. Those that choose to own fighting slaves could all fit into that basket.” He said, talking so he didn’t have to think. Just see her and speak his mind. Reed had dredged up enough of his old life for today. Shifting around, he walked towards the edge of the pool so he could get at his legs with a coarse rag.
“You have a keen instinct. If Sunberth is to change. To really change, it will be at the edge of a blade. That blade would have to be kept at their throats for centuries, until everyone who knew the old way was dead and forgotten. Even then, it is not guaranteed. They are a stubborn people.” Reed said, his smile a touch more genuine this time. Hiking a leg up onto the edge of the pool, he scrubbed at his shin thoroughly before moving on to the next.
Looking over at her he saw a fraction of a hint. An errant emotion that passed too quickly beneath her smooth features for him to interpret. She plunged into the water before he could examine her any further, and his thoughts blinked out with it. Prying wasn’t in his nature. Neither was chasing ghosts of what-ifs. He thought of himself as a practical man. Practical in the extreme which is what had carried him to this point thus far.
Her façade shifted underneath those waters. It was all bronze. Shiny and reflecting his words back at him. Then the blows came. Bronze did what bronze does. It bent underneath the strain. Dented until a rough shape of lie beneath started to surface. Emotion. The pure sort that people didn’t reveal often to him. It made him feel strange looking into those eyes of hers. He stopped scrubbing to dip back into the water.
“Better that you don’t change yourself for a city. Simply grit your teeth with the rest of us and perhaps you will get a posting outside of the city.” Reed said, thinking even as he spoke the words of a longing of his own. A yearning to smell the world beyond what could be found across the airy training grounds. “Perhaps we could go on an excursion soon. Into the wildlands I mean to learn the waystations on the Kabrin.” He asked, the suggestion already germinating in him an impulse to go ask Kaer about this soon. The knight had been invaluable in his introduction to the knighthood so far and was always the first person he thought of when he needed help.
“It has been some time since I have been out to the wildlands. I think it might be nice to get out and stretch my legs again.” He said, even as he plunged deeper into the pool. Into the weightlessness that released the slowly building ache in his lower tendons. His mind was everywhere and nowhere as he looked at her. Wondering from what land this strange fighter had come.