His world tasted of blood marinade, a bitter spice he swallowed sparingly between staggered breath. What viscous liquid he hadn’t ingested formed a murky pool beneath a bended knee and slackened jaw, silver strings of saliva hanging from his bottom lip like loose threads from a broken spider’s web. Even the smell of blood mixed vaporously with his own body odor, Indryio’s clothes lacquered with sweat that seeped down every inch of tanned flesh. He was a pitiful mess, but nothing appeared to be broken; a good sign he wagered given the circumstance. Every attempt to move had been met with his body’s refusal. Where before the rush of adrenaline had been his catalyst, what remained was no more than a lump of wiry flesh supported by a bag of bruised bones. He may as well have been unconscious for all the good he was now, eyesight hampered by one that was swollen to a bloody pulp with the other drenched in salty sweat. Even if he had the faculty of his legs to bear him, he wouldn’t know where to go. A prospect he would have found humor in were he of a more discerning mind. Alvadas was, after all, not a place even the seeing could navigate. A sudden sound of shuffling movement appeared beside him just when his arms were shaking from their final stand against gravity. Initial instincts had him grabbing defensively at the man’s offered sleeve, ineffectual in its purpose other than to make helping him a greater chore. But when he realized a moment later that it was a helping hand serving him, Indyrio’s grip loosened and recognition floated to his creased brows. Muttering a word of gratitude through a thick slough of blood, he found the world dizzying upon his feet, doing his best not to impede on the other’s own. “I… I don’t even… know your name. But I thank you… stranger.” For all the halfblood knew, he could’ve been in the caring arms of Smirk and was being led to a back alley to be beaten to death. But the proportions that carried him didn’t seem to match the larger sum of the brute he’d winded within the first second of contact. Something felt genuine, if not slightly off kilter with this one. Indyrio owed him a debt of gratitude, whomever he was. |