Priskil. The name alone caused Larina to perk up and pay rapt attention to what Stitch had to say next. She watched as the man again issued forth a soft glow from his hand, allowing her a fair look at the brilliant vortex on its back. Her eyes locked in on the light with an almost magnetic force, and even as he spoke, Larina could not help but stare at the mark. Of course. How could she have been so blind? Her mistress often mentioned having been given a gift by the goddess Priskil, but not once did Larina imagine that other people had also been given similar powers. “I-I did not realize that you were bound by her as well,” she murmured, still glancing at Stitch’s hand long after he stopped using his luminance. Inwardly, Larina chided herself at how dense she could be sometimes, especially when things were so very plain. He was tied to Lady Priskil in the same way Ilahi was, and it should have been little wonder that his display of radiance would bring forth her old mistress. They both served the same goddess. “You are like a Kelvic! You obey the wishes of your goddess, no? And your loyalty is rewarded in full through the gift she has given to you. I mean, a goddess cannot scratch you behind the ears or patch up your wounds or make you acorn pancakes in the mornings. But, ah, I understand it.” Larina gave him a definitive nod and hoped that he wouldn’t be offended that she had just related him to her own animal race. From atop her shoulders, she felt the weight of an additional garment and glanced up to see Rhuryc adjusting his own fur cloak around her smaller frame. She gave him an almost embarrassed murmur of thanks, both grateful and a bit ruffled at his concern, while she listened to Stitch’s explanation of his Auristics. Benign, though the made them out to be, she wondered what exactly he could see in different auras. And he then answered her unasked question: her hurt. She floundered for a moment, very unused to having her emotions laid bare, especially before a complete stranger. But before she could offer up a rebuttal, Stitch spoke on. Scrunching her nose, Larina mulled over Stitch’s words about her departed mistress, trying to reconcile their meaning with her woefully basic view of the afterlife. If one looked hard enough, they might actually be able to see the cogs turning in her little Kelvic mind. “She lives on, huh? In us? Maybe... she gave some of her Djed to me. I-It can do that right? Kinda split off from the core and go elsewhere. I don’t really get how, or if a human can even do something like that, but I like the sound of it. Like part of her is here.” Whether or not this was actually true, or even feasible, Larina didn’t know, but she also didn’t care. The thought gave her strength and kept her legs steady as they walked towards the barracks, a timid smile on her face that was meant for no one but herself. They made quite a spectacle plodding through the training grounds: a girl in an oversized fur coat flanked by a blind man and a blacksmith who looked like he would pounce on you if you gave him a shifty glance. The Kelvic felt a bit embarrassed for being the cause of such a sight and also for being fussed over, but the sheer gusto to which Rhuryc gave to his role as protector made her grin and silenced any of her protestations. The immediate warmth of the barracks along with the exercise of moving around the rooms helped to reinvigorate the girl and return the flush of her cheeks. She was willfully led to the sparring room and settled herself on the edge of the ring, listening to the words of the blacksmith. “Yes, I do think that Stitch may be who I was searching for.” Larina nodded and gave the blind man a half-grin before turning back to Rhuryc. “But thank you very much for your kindness too! Truly. You’ve been nothing but a help to me, and I repaid you by causing quite a scene. Ah, I’m sorry, really, for making you fret. It was never my intention to be such a burden…” Folding her hands behind her back, the girl tugged at the buckles securing her gauntlets. She would have to make up for her blunders to the both of them somehow, prove that she was not a complete lout. But not now. Lout she would stay for a little while longer, since she had now to beg for yet more scraps of their assistance. Shifting back to Stitch, her golden eyes grew wide as she went on, “I was hoping, Sir Stitch, that you might be affiliated with Priskil worshippers. Well, you are one, yes. That is affiliation in and of itself. Right. But, um, I had heard that there were many in this area who followed under the goddess, and I was wondering if you might know where I could seek them out. My mistress too, you see, was a follower of the lady of light. And I was wanted for some information regarding her…affairs.” |