Oluse let her go, still scowling. After she crest the hill he looked the other way, still upset. His anger increased with each yelp of pain Alea let out. He hated her in that moment for what she was doing. He wanted her to give up on her stubborn foolishness and just let him help. He reached down and started picking some sprigs of grass growing from the slope beneath him as he thought. Slowly taring the defenseless plant to bits he chucked the seeds he plucked off of them down the slope toward the roaring waves of the ocean, never quite getting any of the light weight seeds that far.
He thought of how she wouldn't let him assist her, and thought of what he wanted. He wanted her to just let him help. His voice of reason had something to say to that thought. How could she ask for help if he wasn't even there? He countered that he would have to be some pushover or fool to still be around her after she had hit him when he offered help. She had chosen the difficult route, and he knew it wasn't his fault for that decision. He did feel it had been his fault for her fall to begin with, however. If he hadn't have been following her, if he hadn't implied she would need to clean fish guts her whole life she wouldn't have leaped for that ledge.
"No!" He said out loud as he tore a whole sprig in half and threw it aside in anger. No, he continued in his mind, he said what he meant, and she is the one that decided against all warning to injure herself. This made him feel better, because he sensed of ring of truth in the thought. In fact, he felt that perhaps there was more a life lesson, than anything, to be learned there. That he was not responsible for her actions, nor anyone's. Never had he said anything that encouraged her to injure herself, so he decided to refuse guilt for the act. He gave a short smile after coming to this epiphany, and laid back on the stone beneath him, lacing his small fingers behind his head and closing his eyes. He felt better once his mind wasn't defensive over hurting her anymore.
Though, something was still bothering him. Though he couldn't have hoped to stop her from jumping. He in all fact had discouraged her from the act. He still felt it was his duty to help her. He had offered, and she refused, taking offense to something to do with his method of helping. He didn't understand why she would want to walk the above road, when she had had to climb the hill for it, and refuse his assistance. Her lack of logic aside, however, he still knew that he could help her. He opened his eyes and looked up at the clouds overhead. He hated himself for the decision he was about to make.
He quickly sat up, and got to his feet, carefully climbing up to the road. He was a healer, and that meant helping injured people, even when they were selfish mentally retarded girls who didn't know when to listen. He ran down the path after her, one foot after another, careful of his footwork not wanting another injured ankle to deal with. She hadn't wanted to go down, but that didn't mean she didn't want his help going the other way, perhaps her family life was worse than he thought, and he just hadn't tried to understand her hard enough before. He knew he wasn't flawless, maybe she was just more not flawless than him. Yes, that was his logic.
Catching up to her he slowed, only slightly winded from the short sprint. "Alea..." He called, looking at her. Though, he couldn't find any words to say after, he just looked at her. He walked up and offered his shoulder. "This will be easier if I help you, and also we should take that shoe off your swelling foot before we have to cut it off. The show not the foot." He didn't look in the least apologetic. He no longer looked angry, or disgruntled. He looked much how he usually did, kinda goofy with his big ears, and eyes that were just a little distant from any given situation. He was genuine, however, and was wiling to give helping her another try, that is if she decided to listen to his advice about her shoe and let him help her with it.