When Caspian wakes on the first day, he’s mostly sure this is a terrible prank.
It’s the clothes thing that gets him, or, really, the lack of them, that makes him feel like someone has done this to him on purpose. Someone who knows that his complicated outfits are his facade, his armor, that even on a warmer day he’ll wear fabrics in plurality down to his wrists and button down tight. It’s hard to say why he’s of the proclivity; he supposes it has something to do with being born in snow, where being bundled up is a fact of life keeping death at bay. And in Sunberth, though much more temperate, it had felt just as necessary for his health to don as many barriers as possible against the city’s storms of filth and grime.
So it’s a horrible and nauseating proposition, waking up naked on a forest floor. Without his clothes, his beloved magical transforming party suit, he’s just an under-grown, knobbly excuse for a man who looks painfully liable to being knocked over by a feather. He can feel every rock and leaf cutting up beneath his back and something like – bark? Ugh, what if it splinters – jabbed right up his –
“Oh, petch me – “
Caspian bolts up, his head snapping towards a grimly familiar voice. A few yards to his right is Taalviel, leaning against a tree and just as naked as he is. She presses a hand lightly to her head. There’s no blood when she pulls away, but from the way her head lolls back against the trunk, she’d somehow been struck hard enough to daze.
“If this is your idea of a joke,“ Caspian begins, heaving himself up to his feet, “can I just say that no one expects you to have a sense of humor, and it hurts us all to see you try.”
“Shut up,” she says, with an alarming lack of vitriol, suggesting that her injury isn’t a very good one.
“Are you alright?”
“What do you think?”
Being a Kelvic, Taalviel cares not one drop for her nakedness, nor his own – but being a mongrel human, and a dermatologically anxious one to boot, he hesitates for a moment before approaching her.
“Caspian,” she growls, reaching blindly for him, having guessed what’s holding him back.
“Fine, fine.” Grimacing, he crosses the forest floor to her, wincing with every unprotected step. She takes his hand – doesn’t haul herself up as readily as he’d hoped.
“My head,” she says. “I don’t know what happened. I must have flown right into a tree.”
“Remember that time you flew right into the second-story window?”
“That never happened.”
“Um, I’m pretty sure that was you – “
“Caspian – “
“Yes, fine, I’m here. Can you get up or not?”
It takes a bit, but she can. She has one arm slung over his shoulder, swaying unsteadily. He tries not to think about how much of her skin is pressed up against his own. Though family, they don’t touch even with all their clothes on.
“Where are we?” Looking at the forest, at least, means he isn’t looking directly at her.
“No idea,” she says, scanning the forest, though her eyes are unfocused and she near immediately sighs and shuts them again.
The trees are densely packed here, the boughs twined densely overhead. Sunlight filters through, dappling them with soft light, and it really is a shame he doesn’t have his clothes on or any idea how he got here, because he might have found it rather pleasant instead.
“What if,” he says, head tilted up towards the light, “you flew up through the top to see if there’s anything recognizable? So we can wander in a somewhat orderly direction?”
“Flew?” Leaning back to match his eye line had her nearly toppling over. Again, if the situation weren’t so dire, he might have found this enjoyable, watching her in a rare moment of deep disconfiguration. “Flew – “
“Yes, flew, that thing you can do that I cannot, or else I would not bother asking.”
“I – “ She swoons, and he catches her just in time, hooking her arm around his shoulders once more. “Sorry,” she mumbles, and that’s how he knows she’s really in dire straits.
He’s not going to panic. He just isn’t. He kind of already is because, first of all, he isn’t a doctor, and he’s never seen her this way and he can joke about it from dawn through dusk but the joking, really, is to hide the fact that he began panicking the moment he opened his eyes and felt something with too many legs scuttling across his lips. He’s going to find somewhere to set her down safely because it’s hard, thinking and holding her up at the same time. But where –
A bag hanging on a low-slung branch of a nearby tree catches his eye. Odd. It isn’t his (it is now?).
“Can I park you here for a second?” he says, and she’s unable to do much else but dazedly wave him off. She wraps her arms around a slim tree trunk and presses her forehead to the bark.
He looks around quickly, as if the owner of the bag might return any moment. Though he’d welcome the intrusion, maybe, if only to find someone who could give them some answers.
But no one comes, and in the bag he finds flint and steel, a bow, four arrows with stone heads, a clay mug, and a ruddy rabbit pelt.
And, on roughly creased parchment, a map.
WC: 928
It’s the clothes thing that gets him, or, really, the lack of them, that makes him feel like someone has done this to him on purpose. Someone who knows that his complicated outfits are his facade, his armor, that even on a warmer day he’ll wear fabrics in plurality down to his wrists and button down tight. It’s hard to say why he’s of the proclivity; he supposes it has something to do with being born in snow, where being bundled up is a fact of life keeping death at bay. And in Sunberth, though much more temperate, it had felt just as necessary for his health to don as many barriers as possible against the city’s storms of filth and grime.
So it’s a horrible and nauseating proposition, waking up naked on a forest floor. Without his clothes, his beloved magical transforming party suit, he’s just an under-grown, knobbly excuse for a man who looks painfully liable to being knocked over by a feather. He can feel every rock and leaf cutting up beneath his back and something like – bark? Ugh, what if it splinters – jabbed right up his –
“Oh, petch me – “
Caspian bolts up, his head snapping towards a grimly familiar voice. A few yards to his right is Taalviel, leaning against a tree and just as naked as he is. She presses a hand lightly to her head. There’s no blood when she pulls away, but from the way her head lolls back against the trunk, she’d somehow been struck hard enough to daze.
“If this is your idea of a joke,“ Caspian begins, heaving himself up to his feet, “can I just say that no one expects you to have a sense of humor, and it hurts us all to see you try.”
“Shut up,” she says, with an alarming lack of vitriol, suggesting that her injury isn’t a very good one.
“Are you alright?”
“What do you think?”
Being a Kelvic, Taalviel cares not one drop for her nakedness, nor his own – but being a mongrel human, and a dermatologically anxious one to boot, he hesitates for a moment before approaching her.
“Caspian,” she growls, reaching blindly for him, having guessed what’s holding him back.
“Fine, fine.” Grimacing, he crosses the forest floor to her, wincing with every unprotected step. She takes his hand – doesn’t haul herself up as readily as he’d hoped.
“My head,” she says. “I don’t know what happened. I must have flown right into a tree.”
“Remember that time you flew right into the second-story window?”
“That never happened.”
“Um, I’m pretty sure that was you – “
“Caspian – “
“Yes, fine, I’m here. Can you get up or not?”
It takes a bit, but she can. She has one arm slung over his shoulder, swaying unsteadily. He tries not to think about how much of her skin is pressed up against his own. Though family, they don’t touch even with all their clothes on.
“Where are we?” Looking at the forest, at least, means he isn’t looking directly at her.
“No idea,” she says, scanning the forest, though her eyes are unfocused and she near immediately sighs and shuts them again.
The trees are densely packed here, the boughs twined densely overhead. Sunlight filters through, dappling them with soft light, and it really is a shame he doesn’t have his clothes on or any idea how he got here, because he might have found it rather pleasant instead.
“What if,” he says, head tilted up towards the light, “you flew up through the top to see if there’s anything recognizable? So we can wander in a somewhat orderly direction?”
“Flew?” Leaning back to match his eye line had her nearly toppling over. Again, if the situation weren’t so dire, he might have found this enjoyable, watching her in a rare moment of deep disconfiguration. “Flew – “
“Yes, flew, that thing you can do that I cannot, or else I would not bother asking.”
“I – “ She swoons, and he catches her just in time, hooking her arm around his shoulders once more. “Sorry,” she mumbles, and that’s how he knows she’s really in dire straits.
He’s not going to panic. He just isn’t. He kind of already is because, first of all, he isn’t a doctor, and he’s never seen her this way and he can joke about it from dawn through dusk but the joking, really, is to hide the fact that he began panicking the moment he opened his eyes and felt something with too many legs scuttling across his lips. He’s going to find somewhere to set her down safely because it’s hard, thinking and holding her up at the same time. But where –
A bag hanging on a low-slung branch of a nearby tree catches his eye. Odd. It isn’t his (it is now?).
“Can I park you here for a second?” he says, and she’s unable to do much else but dazedly wave him off. She wraps her arms around a slim tree trunk and presses her forehead to the bark.
He looks around quickly, as if the owner of the bag might return any moment. Though he’d welcome the intrusion, maybe, if only to find someone who could give them some answers.
But no one comes, and in the bag he finds flint and steel, a bow, four arrows with stone heads, a clay mug, and a ruddy rabbit pelt.
And, on roughly creased parchment, a map.
WC: 928
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