Whatever Shiress may have thought she knew about monks, Shade belied every notion. Then again, she didn't have much, if any, knowledge of the religious brotherhood. In Shiress's mind, A monk was a quiet, slow-walking man with religion oozing from his very skin. Shade...was not that.
Shade was kind, soft-spoken, and thoughtful, and the man possessed an earnest aspiration to calm Shiress's mind. An ambition that the Zeltivan was finding extremely easy to succumb to, along with the sudden realization that the monk must think her nearly unhinged.
He probably wasn't far from the truth, and Shiress thought she was about to undoubtedly solidify Blade's assessment with her attempt to explain who Rhysol was because she barely knew herself.
"Rhysol is the God of chaos and evil." she said, looking somewhat uneasily at Shade, "I found myself, and a few others, suddenly summoned by The Voice, a consort of his, I think, and shortly after, Rhysol himself appeared there, too, and that's when I asked him for protection."
Shiress quieted, considering for a tick before continuing on like she hadn't just told Shade that she had made acquaintances with the God of all things unholy.
" And, as far as knowing that I survived the stabbing, I would say that is highly probable, considering the man who attacked me was killed that night by a friend, and his body was dumped into Lake Ravok."
She conveniently left out the part about that friend being a spy planted into the Lark family by the Nitrozians. Kylar had saved her life that night, and Shiress would take his secret to the grave.
Shiress grimaced, "Looking back, I guess faking mine and Ian's death would have been a smart thing to do, but I did the same as I always have. I ran." she shrugged "In my defense, though, Nolan was adamant about us leaving quickly, he didn't even allow me to say goodbye to my family," she paused, thinking over her thirty some odd days flight from Zeltiva to Syliras, "While in the caravan, Nolan did all the talking per his orders, while I kept to myself mostly. It was a worrisome journey, but I don't think anyone knew who I or Ian were, but not long after we set sail, I introduced myself to Mistress Hess and the captain, and I didn't hide who I was." Concern crossed Shiress's features, and, lifting her eyes, she caught Shade's gaze, "Do you think that will be a problem? Will they tell someone if they come asking?" Shoulder's slumping, she added, "I didn't even think to keep such things to myself."
The more the woman tried to explain her life, the more complicated and convoluted her past became. It all sounded unbelievable, even to her own ears, and she had actually lived through it all. But yet, she continued to share with Shade all she could think of to help the monk better understand who he had agreed to help. Shiress couldn't help but feel sorry for the man.
"As for the why," she shrugged, frowning, "it could be because I maimed the grandson of one of the most powerful families in Ravok, or it could be because they thought me a valuable possession." Leaning over, Shiress hiked up the hem of her skirt to her knee, revealing a silver root etched into her skin, extending from her ankle to midway up her calf. "It's Bala's first mark of cultivation." dropping her skirt, it swayed back into place, and she straightened. "With this mark, I can cause any crop, plant, or even an apple to become fully bloomed or ripened with a touch.
"When the Lark's owned me, I was forced to work daily in this floating garden type boat thing, and it brought a lot of coin to Lark purses. It could all be the Caldera's and their crazed notion that killing Ian will also kill the curse that's plagued them for generations." Shiress shook her head, "I'm just guessing though, and I'm just guessing about Hadrian, also. He may not be part of the Ebonstryfe or whether or not he was even in Zeltiva. I just assumed he was by the way Nolan spoke of him, but I very well may be mistaken."
Shiress jumped slightly at Opal's arrival, then smiled big at the bird's antics as she fussed at Shade. For the life of her, she'd never get used to an animal talking, but for Opal, the bird was beyond clever in her own right and beautiful.
"So, this place is a little off, then." she said, casting a wary glance around. Shiress was surprised that Opal's speaking ability was a recent occurrence, but she was even more surprised by Shade's easy acceptance of it. Did anything raddle the monk? For some reason, Shiress hoped she'd never find out. The monk might be a kind and quiet man, but in Shiress's experience, those were the dangerous ones.
By the time they made it to the inn, Shiress felt much more at ease, knowing she and her son would, at least, have a roof over their heads. The room was beyond what she could have hoped for, and she spent quite a while gazing out over the ocean from the room's window. Ian found the bed most interesting after the long voyage and longer nights spent on a hard cot. The toddler sat on the side of the bed, legs dangling and swinging, thumb stuck firmly in his mouth, his monkey clutched to his chest. When Shiress glanced at him, he smiled around his thumb back at her, and she couldn't help but grin back.
"Ready for some new clothes?" she asked, and Ian nodded excitedly. Jumping from the bed, the toddler wrapped tiny fingers around Shiress's hand as she led them from the room. They passed by the innkeeper on the way to meet Shade, and Shiress smiled and waved at her, while Ian got a goofy look and popped his thumb from his mouth to wave at her, too.
"Bye pretty lady!"
The Tropical Fever, as it happened, had absolutely nothing Shiress wanted to wear, or, rather, nothing that would do much to hide the vast array of scars that Shiress obsessively hid behind vast arrays of clothing. She did find a sleeveless shirt and shorts for Ian and, due to the shopkeeper's unwavering insistence, Shiress bought herself a thin, knee-length dress and two tops that she had argued diligently were actually underwear, and the shopkeeper had argued just as diligently that they weren't. For lack of a better word, the tops were both just big enough to cover Shiress's breast in the front and the rest wrapped around to tie at her back. Wearing it would definitely need some getting used to...once she got the nerve to even try. The two pairs of pants she purchased to go along with the tops were of a more modest variety.
Smiling congenially at the shopkeeper, she paid for her items and left, meeting Shade just outside. With two boxes balanced in one hand, the other holding tightly to Ian's pudgy, and somehow sticky fingers, Shiress, Ian, and Shade began their trek back to the inn, and Shiress shook her head at the monk's offer to stop by the mercantile.
"You asked earlier about what my occupation is and my likes and dislikes, things like that." she said, speaking nonchalantly as they walked as if she wasn't ripping open old wounds and bearing her soul to a stranger. She had come to a quiet agreement with herself to just tell the man everything "I'm a medical doctor at The Redynn, in the Outpost. I came up learning all there was to medicine and healing from my mother, a rather skilled nurse at the infirmary in Zeltiva. I was born in Zeltiva with my twin brother, Zane. We both were enslaved at the age of fourteen in 504 after visiting Sunberth, I never heard from my brother again, and I have no idea if he's alive or dead. However, he did have a son named Milo who showed up out of the blue one day." she laughed, because yeah, that had been unexpected, and then she just...left him.
"I managed to escape in 512 and halfway to Syliras I was attacked by a Zith and was left with this," Reaching down, Shiress hiked up the same part of her skirt as she did before, only higher this time. What she revealed was that a large portion of her thigh had been gauged out, leaving a thick, shiny hole that had scarred over. She let her skirt fall back in place as she began walking again. "I made it to Syliras and was happy for quite a while, actually. That is until my old slavemaster came looking for me, and I ended up stabbing him to death. In 516, I was taken by someone I thought of as a friend. She enslaved me to her and tortured me with hypnosis after moving to Ravok. Shortly after, I was sold to the Larks.
Shiress fell silent for several chimes, a sadness filling her that she didn't like.
"I don't have a happy story to tell you, Shade, and I'm not sure I'm going to get a happy ending either. Please understand, I want to be happy, I want to be hopeful and to love life to the fullest, but life has let me down so many times that I guess I just expect things to crash and burn at any time, kinda like they always have seemed to do."
Shiress fell silent again, though not for quite as long before she glanced curiously at Shade. "What about you? I know nothing of Nyka, nor what it means to be a monk." she grinned at him "You just don't seem like the monks I have in my head," her grin widened, "You're a lot better looking for one."
Word Count: 1510