It was clear that she agreed with the sad-eyed animator by the cant of her chin, too proud for so little a girl, so monstrous vivid a thing in this city of pallid elegance, long of limb and sharp of claw. The red bird continued to be coddled, cradled in her hands until she lifted it to a perch on the slope of a tea cup shoulder. Later, she would share her dinner with it. Duvalyon would be less than thrilled, but then, she thought, maybe he would love it. It was bright and littler than she, and it sang pretty, far prettier than she would ever be able to. It probably would not ask him a thousand and one questions either. Virates help her, Duvalyon might like the little bird better. The thought amused her enough to throw a startling smile across her mouth as she returned her attention to the animator and the little human he held. "How do you make them move?" She wanted to know. "Do you put pieces of your own soul into them? Does it birth new souls for them? Or do the gods give them souls after you make them? How does that work?" The tips of her fingers brushed the front of the girl figure, head tilting in a decidedly avian fashion. "You're free with gifts," she hedged at him. "Freer with souls." That last was half a question if one tangled it back into the nest of her others. |