Victor tried to repeat the last two words of the Lhatvian phrase, but it came out sounding more like gibberish, or maybe “Muddy pumpkins!” Nonetheless, he seemed genuinely interested in saying it correctly, in making his own lips form the smooth and beautiful words that had fallen so effortlessly from Seven’s. Hoping to distract from any mistakes as soon as he had made them, he laughed at the cheerful evasion and said with plain old Common on his tongue, “No, really, what do you mean by worlds? Tell me what you said. Are high worlds on mountains?”
He followed Seven’s eyes upward. For a moment Victor wondered exactly how far up the stars were. Alas, as he could not see the shapes in the stars or predict their progress, his eyes easily parted from any view of them to glance at Seven, who was speaking and looking beyond him at the Symenestra woman. He regarded her with a quick, blithe flip of his head. Then he heard the end of a story he did not know, an explanation like a hidden secret. Whether it was jealousy or selfishness that inspired him to speak up then, he would never know, but his jaw suddenly felt stiff for one of the other.
Answering her tease, he pushed the subject to himself. Smiling contempt frothed on his voice as he replied with no more concern for its volume, “I could stand, but I had the weight of a water bison fall on my spine, didn’t I!” He exhaled audibly. Perhaps he should not have spoken even that vague admission of discomfort. He might have been able to stand, but it was rising and moving that pained him. Lying down was easiest. It gave him time to recover. “How in the world did you manage to pull up such a weight?”
Then he took the opportunity in the question to grasp her peculiarly powerful hand, which had lain limp beside his empty one. At first he was cautious and gentle as he turned over her palm, the one at the end of an arm which he could not have known was injured, and examined it. “I mean, how could you climb so well?”
To his wandering fingers, her hand seemed as smooth as Seven’s, but under his urging he noticed a few tiny hair-like protrusions rise up and catch on the infinitesimal folds on his fingertips. Intrigued, he slipped from the warm grasp opposite in order to scrutinize the appendage in both hands. In his rising curiosity, he was forgetting to be kind; he pressed his fingers on and between the long bones of her hand which seemed so impossibly fragile and yet were apparently so strong...
And suddenly one of the tiny, invisible bars gave beneath his careless strength with an audible crack.
“Oh, petch!” He exclaimed, laughing apologetically as he instantly released her hand. It had grown suddenly warm with the panicked rush of blood beneath her skin, and within seconds he thought he could see a black blemish begin to grow. He did not seem to realize that he had committed a worse offense than breaking a toy, but still he had the courtesy to ask through his grin, “Are you alright?”