As the girl pressed her head into the folds of his feathers, lifting his wing to create a darkened cavern within its depths, the eaglet found himself squawking in an undignified manner. Pulling away slightly, his feathers fluffed up in defense as he stared at her in surprise; his frame unused to another’s touch. He would never say that his father was rough with him, but being brought up in the Inartan culture meant that children were often left to their own devices and usually only felt the touch of another if they were being reprimanded for acting out. Thus, as he watched her with an unblinking stare, studying the way she smiled so innocently up at him, the girlish giggle tingling in her throat and tickling his ears, Edric realized that his new friend had no intention of hurting him. Taking a quiet breath, he dropped his stance of wariness and relaxed back into her touch, muttering a quiet, “Gentle, Fishy,” in a curt explanation of his withdrawal before allowing her to maneuver the frame of his wing once again.
When she was satisfied and stuck her head back in-between his feathers, jiggling her pretty baubles, the eaglet let out a gleeful screech when they emitted a light glow. Determined to see them from a better angle, he tucked his head close to hers, brushing her soft flesh with the bristles upon his face. The sensation sent an unconscious shiver down his spine and the eaglet couldn’t help but look up at his fishy and wonder what she thought, too. She seemed undeterred by his closeness as she continued speaking about her race, her quick speech overwhelming his senses as he attempted to decipher all the words spilling from her lips. She spoke so quickly that he really was having a hard time of it, but from the way she swung her arms around extravagantly as she talked, the Kelvic felt like he was able to understand her. When she looked up and made eye contact with him, Edric was again reminded about how close they were.
Glancing back down again at the glowing baubles, he remembered his earlier inclination to touch them. Back then, she had been new and unknown, but now that she was invading his space, didn’t he deserve to do the same? Besides, he thought childishly, his beak moving down to stroke the pretty things that made her so different, she was his, after all. Touching the baubles gently, the eaglet let out a quiet squawk of delight when they jiggled at his touch, their glow flitting across his feathers and creating shadows upon their enclosed features. Moving forward again, he stroked them eagerly, rubbing his beak against each one and watching as they responded to his touch. The rubbery texture was so new to him; the fish he usually caught scaly and rough. But this blubbery-like sensation was delightful and the oversized bird wanted to roll in it and keep it as a pillow. Idly, he wondered if the rest of her felt just like her jewels, but before he could investigate, his fishy pulled away, her mouth yammering on once again.
Somewhat distracted by the new question that was overtaking his mind, the instinctual bird followed her retreat until he was once again close to her; removing any of the distance that was between them. Her speech about Laviku and the oceans was rather intriguing as he had no familiarity with any of those terms, but each answer she gave simply brought more questions to the forefront of his mind. Frowning inwardly, the eagle narrowed his eyes in frustration. It was annoying that he couldn’t understand all these things his fishy was talking about! Glancing back at her slyly, Edric felt some bitterness grow within him at his need to find answers relying solely on the Charoda beside him. Couldn’t he figure stuff out on his own, too? Watching her baubles sway with her unconscious movement, his golden eyes began wandering over the rest of her body, his mind once again thinking about that rubbery texture earlier.
“What’s coral?” He asked; his voice distracted as he rested his beak gently against her flesh, this time rubbing his full head over her shoulder, “How can plants make houses?”
Letting out a little sigh when he realized that she was just as soft all over, the eaglet plopped his head against her tiny shoulder like an obscure version of a dog and continued to rub his feathered head against her. Content for a tick, he idly wondered how else his fishy was different from the other fish. Figuring that she’d only answer his new questions if he answered her own, the eagle let out a rumbled screech of contentment before starting the tale of their origins.
“We’re special to the Inarta because we were raised from the ashes of their people,” he recited, the natural chimes and chirps of his language crystal clear in her mind, “When the Valterrain occurred, the gods asked for the Inarta’s help and the people gave it freely, sacrificing their life to the gods. As the bodies of many dirtied the floor, the gods were determined to reward the race that dedicated their lives to the skies by finally giving them what they always coveted – an escape from land. Thus, their dead were reborn as Wind Eagles, a majestic creature whose wing span blackens out Syna’s reign and frees the people from their earthbound chains.”
Having stumbled over quite a few of the words as he had conversed within her mind, the eaglet still distracted by the flesh beneath him, he idly stated, “We’re gifts from the gods, Fishy. We’re special. ”
There was a definite note of pride in his voice as he spoke that was obviously misplaced considering that the young rapture had not participated in any sacrifices or quests, but it was present nonetheless as he recited a story he had heard since fledging. The storytellers of Wind Reach spoke so passionately about his origins that the Edric could not help but feel special; knowing that the Inarta praised him and respected him just because of what he was. Rubbing his head against Fishy once again, the eaglet’s one track mind finally came full circle again as he thought about Una once again. He knew that she had called herself an amphibian, but why were they so different from fish? He realized now that their textures were different and that she wouldn’t die out of water, but what else was there to know? She seemed smarter than the silly animals that wiggled in his talons when he caught them, and she had pretty baubles that he still found himself staring at covetously.
But what else was there?
Staring at her flesh again, the eaglet cocked his head to the side as his tummy rumbled. Glancing at her, he looked back down at her shoulder, and then back at her face again. Slowly, as if his motions were hindered by the weight of time, Edric leaned in, opening his beak and closing it shut.
Around her shoulder.
She didn't taste that good.