Relief was almost a foreign emotion to Tazrae, but she embraced it. His voice held meaning to her, not his words – not exactly – but the rich pitch and tone that identified him solely to her as Alric did. She quietly listened as she roamed until slowly the words sank in and she began to hear his thoughts instead of just hear the music of his deep rumble. Her eyes flicked to his again and she realized he was telling her she was welcome here. She knew that, somehow, though it felt strange. The air was too dry here. Hot and dry were foreign to her, with the smells of desert not jungle. Hot needed to be wet and filled with the scent of life everywhere. That was proper. That was home. This place was filled with smells of Alric and Lys, whom she’d never met except through his memories.
The silence that followed his words was a relief to her. It was a bit hard listening to the individual words. It was a lesson she learned in Syka trying to be around people who simply didn’t know her. Approaching them, their conversations would just drift off and awkward silence would replace their words. It was hard for her to greet them, to find an easy way to slide into a conversation without it being awkward. A distant memory told her that such things used to come easy to her.
The Ixam were far more welcoming. She missed the pictures in her mind, the shared tastes and sounds the Ixam were capable of communicating to each other. It made things easier, conversations more complete, if they communicated that way. Alric’s way was familiar, but harder.
She noted when the Mussurana joined him. The snake felt happy, or at least that’s what he sounded like when she reached out with her djed to augment her ears with hearing instead of pooling djed in her eyes. The snake sounded happy, content, comfortable. There were no pressures on him here that existed in the jungle. He had free reign of the house and went where he willed. The snake, Twilight, had a job and he patrolled his territory with the dedication of a young male just coming into his prime. That pleased Tazrae. Rodents weren’t good for buildings. Snakes were. And Twilight could hear Alric’s djedsong as well and liked warming himself up on the human male’s body. Taz could relate.
Listening to the snake with Auristics lasted a heartbeat or two, for Alric’s own music drowned out almost anything she’d care to look at through no fault of his own. The music of the Nymkarta, Taz thought, was strong bold full-throated. His djed sang to her and distracted her. It was a siren song, not for its power, but for its tones and tempo. She blinked, dismissing the power, letting it fall away like a towel slipping off a body it was encasing.
“I’m glad to see you too.” She said, parroting his words slowly, as if getting a feel for it. The pause was longer this time as if she gathered her thoughts.
“I needed to see you.” How to explain that one? How to convey how much she thought of him. “You come into my mind so often. Sometimes… sometimes I talk to you as though you are there with me. I know you are not, but it is in times I need to feel you close. I hope that is okay. Sometimes I even hear you answer me, but not as if you are standing there. I am not … crazy. My mind calls up of memories of you saying or doing something and it almost becomes a… a response to what I say aloud.” She tried… she really tried to explain.
“I’ve been with creatures that aren’t human. They speak differently… pictures, colors, tastes, sensations… sounds… it’s more complex and at the same time simpler than humans communicate, Alric. It is hard to switch back and forth.” She said softly, opening her mouth as if she’d flick out her tongue, though she didn’t go that far. “They are like Bree. Though Bree doesn’t know me. She pretends to be a wild one among them when I am around. I know she is affected by whatever is happening to us all.” Taz said again, her voice stronger now, making more sense.
She moved fast. One moment she was across the room, the next she was standing before him. Her hand reached out, and she ran the tips of her fingers across the tattoo on his pectoral. Her eyes were wide, pupils slightly dilated, as she took in the vibrant image but she also saw the healing wounds around them. She leaned close and laid her lips on the tattoo, placing a kiss on it softly. “Zatani. We are family.” She said softly, then stepped back, out of his space, returning to her end of the couch. “You are becoming the mage, not just using the magic.” She said thoughtfully, tilting her head in an inhuman way for a moment.
“I don’t like the cuts. From the fight with the Commander?” She asked, taking a deep breath and relaxing a bit more. It wasn’t a question really, just more of a conclusion reached that was asked in a question format. The answer was something she already knew. This conversation wasn’t as hard as she imagined. It was driven by a need for her to know and that made her words come easier.
She watched him make the ball, her eyes aglow with pride. “So smooth. It answers to you quickly, the djed does…” She said, offering him a tentative smile. “I knew it would. You were born to hold power like that in your hand. It will be like breathing for you. There are old stories of mages like you, from before the world tried to die. It’s good that mages are coming again, real ones, not ones that lurk in the shadows afraid of their power. I’ve learned recently that all things have power, djed is in all of us. We learn that when we first learn magic, but …. most people don’t understand it really. But you can feel it, like I do.” Tazrae said softly, watching him carefully, knowing full well how she sounded. But she couldn’t seem to help herself. He’d forget anyhow, all of this, and that was something of a comfort in the moment.
As soon as he put the orb down, she immediately leaned forward and snatched it up. It went into the pocket of her bright dress, forming an odd little bulge off her slim hip. She then reached down the front of her dress and pulled on a chain that was lost in the confines of her hair. A blue crystal hung from it wrapped with wire to form a lovely pendant. It had been nestled against her skin, between her breasts. “You made this first. I carry it… I carry you… with me.” She said softly, letting it fall on the top of her dress, where he could see it. “Syka has a jeweler now. He wrapped it for me. I wouldn’t let him make a hole in it.” She whispered with a soft smile. “You have too many pieces taken out of you already.” She added.
“You made the cuts on us, that day…. I was grateful.” She said dismissively. The cuts weren’t what she was meaning anyhow. “I was not myself during that moment. I didn’t understand how it felt to teach someone else to make Res with your whole body. I loved that, being inside you with my power, showing your power how to be different… how to be more. I loved holding you so close. I should not have liked it that much, but it was you and we are more together somehow at times.” She said, not offering any additional information, not explaining further. She really couldn’t.
“I know you know the limits of power in my mind. But I still worried. My heart is often not reasonable.” She said thoughtfully, then shook her head. “If I stayed and you slept, you would have woken to a stranger. I fear that, not seeing recognition in your eyes. But this time… was different. You don’t know me but you know me. What changed?” She asked, curious. Was it just reading the letters repeatedly that was assisting him? Was it his sketch? The one he’d showed her that was enough like her that she could even recognize her own face in his markings?
He took out the pipe. Gods, that pipe was always her undoing. She relaxed immediately and her tense coiled nervousness at the end of the couch turned into a relaxed recline. She let her eyes drift close and she inhaled deeply. Her glances at the doorway eased and she focused wholly on him when she lifted her lashes again.
“I know you asked in your letter. But I just read it. I just saw it, before you woke. The words coat me like water sometimes. It takes time… to soak in, to hydrate, to understand them.” She said softly. “I wasn’t going to come back. I tried to stay away. Those people who hunt you would like us together. I don’t want to please them. Their ideas aren’t good ones.” She said again, thinking of all the reasons why.
“I came before because I had promised you the induction. I will never break a promise to you. I came today to make sure you were alright. And I wanted to look for a letter. I come here sometimes, to the Outpost. I always come by here. Often there is light and someone is home. I thought no one was home today because there was no light… no fire. I didn’t stop by because I didn’t know before the letter, that you wanted to see me.” Tazrae was getting more articulate by the moment, even if her sentence arrangements were odd and her pattern of speech was slightly off. “Lys is your family now. You have someone. I am so glad of that. And Jade.” She said, though she was unsure of who Jade exactly was.
She watched him rise and tensed immediately. Taz didn’t look for places to flee too, she knew the apartment well enough that wasn’t necessary. But still she watched him cautiously as he gathered supplies and set paper down in front of her on the coffee table. She looked on, curious, the smoke from his pipe still doing its work. Then he explained something, and she didn’t understand at first what he was asking her to do.
Taz picked up the pen and a piece of parchment, turning the pen over and over in her fingers rather than making a motion to uncap an inkwell, dip and write. Instead, the items in her hand just seemed to empower her somehow. “Its easier because your eyes are hard to meet sometimes.” She said carefully. “They distract me and they tell me so much, your face too, about what you are thinking and feeling. I know I see more in your eyes than others do.” She added, not exactly bragging, just knowing it was true. Carefully, she set the paper down, back into the neat little stack he’d made and she rose up and shifted so she wasn’t at the other end of the couch, but beside him, tucked up against him, where she couldn’t see his face and read his expression without turning her head and actively looking at him.
The quill she kept, almost as a crutch of some sort, as if it gave her free reign to speak what she’d write.
“I would write that I was doing okay. Not good. Not bad. But that life is different now.” She said softly, twisting the quill in her hand as if it was actually doing its job instead of just being clutched like a child clinging to an emotional support blanket for comfort when it was blazing hot outside. “The good things are that I’m learning my way around so much better than I ever did before. I am of the jungle, not just someone who can survive the jungle. I fit seamlessly.” She breathed. “Now it is Syka that is a bit foreign to me. The cobblestone path, the buildings, the way people talk like this. It’s all familiar, but in a stranger way than it ever was before.” Taz slowly leaned against him, the tension moving out of her, the more she spoke.
“But there’s such a sense of wrongness to Syka. No one is comfortable there these days. And it is a very comfortable place by its nature. It’s not a physical discomfort. It’s a spiritual one.” Taz knew she sounded crazy. It was crazy. Saying her home felt spiritually devoid was about the wildest thing she could say. “I am a Guardian but there is nothing to fight. I can’t summon a totem to protect us from a feeling.” She added, then shifted, so she was snuggled into his side. She nuzzled under his arm by his heart, rubbing her cheek against the tattoo the cloth of his shirt concealed.
He tumbled words out to fast for her to follow even though she tried to listen. Only part of what he said made sense, but she caught a welcoming uneasy of time passing feeling from him. “Something is wrong.” She agreed. “With me. With Syka. With the people I care about. You don’t feel wrong though. You feel like you.” She offered, thinking that at the very least that was a positive thing. She played with the fabric of his shirt with her lips, inhaling his scent and just relaxing. He’d left it unbuttoned so she eventually nosed it apart until she was against his skin with her lips and tasted him there, a gentle kiss, a lick, then a nibble with her blunt human teeth.
He could feel the moment the last bit of tension left her with a small sigh and she reached out and set the quill down on the table and picked up her wine that he’d poured a bit ago. She lifted her head, sipped at it, and then contemplated the taste of it. “Each time I come here; you have better wine.” She said, as if it was an epiphany, as well as a statement about him as well. Then she set the glass back on the table, and nuzzled at his chest until she had his skin bare against her cheek again.
“I wanted… to be at your side… when you confronted him.” She said slowly. Tazrae was speaking roughly and at a much longer more drawn-out tempo than she had ever used with him before. “I’m sorry I was not.” The Innkeeper whispered, her voice dropping low. “I cannot… imagine how scared… how angry you were. Which… which won out? Fear… or anger?” She asked, her voice sad but curious.
“So much has happened to… you. You deserve a life full of so much more… more than fear and pain and the worry of what tomorrow will be.” She added, lifting her hand up and stroking his chest in a soothing gesture. Her tone was apologetic. “My family has cost your family so much.” Taz added. She was ashamed at it, at how one group could do so many horrible things to another group.
She listened to what he said about Croix and Vas teaching him lessons. “You have always been more … than enough.” She affirmed, licking his chest again, not even noticing she was doing so. Her mind was lost in thoughts. “I think your djed, your power…. has a say in it. I’ve recently learned that it… can have a mind of its own too. That it can have a will power and a stubbornness that matches those that house it. If you are not enough, it will rule you. If you are more than enough, it will work with you.” She said softly, nibbling on him affectionately like one Ixam would nibble on another.
“I am cursed, but I am not dead. I can still see that. You are the equal of your power. You will not …. “ How did she say this… how did she vocalize what she knew? “You will not be ruled by it and it will not rule you. You will work very well together.” She said with conviction.
“I know.” She said softly at his last words. “You are the most precious thing I have.” She said simply and let the silence draw out.
But then, after a few heartbeats… a few chimes, she continued. “I thought this curse was affecting others about me, but leaving me untouched. But that is not the truth of it. It is taking things I hold close and twisting them. I brought the key here, to this place, because I was going to leave it with a letter.” She said, digging the key out of her pocket and setting it on the table. “I wanted to make a gift of it to Lys, so she could call something in this world her own. A home is so important. You know that when you do not have one. With my key… my half… she’d have one.” Tazrae said thoughtfully, then seemed to run out of words. She reached out from her reclining position and picked up the quill again.
It was a crutch, instead of allowing her to walk it allowed her to speak. Alric could see her using it to recapture the part of her brain that involved human communication. She twisted the quill pen in her hand, studying it, before she explained.
“I don’t want this curse to twist you. You have too much twisting you already, Alric.” She grew more eloquent under the quill’s guidance and he realized she was simply speaking aloud what she’d write with the quill had she been composing a letter. “I want to be always that person that helps you, not hurts you like the rest of my bloodkin have. You have so many worries already, please don’t let me be one more. It would hurt me knowing that I was. I can survive this transformation. I can thrive on the path this curse has put me on. But its going to cost me everything. It’s even going to cost me you.” She said, knowing if she accepted it and she went with all the changes that were happening, she’d not remotely recognize herself on the other side of the changes.
“I need you to tell me that it is alright. I need you to help me accept this, because I don’t know how to live a life without you. And if you can’t do that, I need you to help me stop it. Because I’m doing a terrible job of it.” She whispered, staring at the quill still in her hand.
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