As a woman who quite literally possessed a second skin, Zavya didn’t seem so convinced, eyeing Einar doubtfully as he went on about the necessity for armor. She supposed it made sense to reinforce the squishy human parts with something a little stronger, but the Kelvic could never see herself getting used to it. The tigress had no fondness for clothing in general, much less clothing that weighed her down so heavily. As soon as they were out in the woods, she had every intention of peeling away every hateful layer and feeling the earth beneath her paws once more. The sooner they could leave this rancid pile of human waste behind, the better.
“I’m not some thoughtless murderer, you know,” Zavya snapped back at him with a glare when he started scolding her about not killing anyone she didn’t have to. “Do you really think now that there’s no collar around my neck, I’m going to just go hacking your ax around the canals of Ravok? Come on, now. I know you can’t think much of me, but give me a little more credit than that.”
The mercenary’s warning about his horse had her rolling her eyes. “I might not be a murderer, but I am a predator, Einar,” she reminded him with the barest hint of a sneer. “It’s not my fault your horse smells so petching delicious.” Zavya made a point of licking her lips before smacking them with a noise of appreciation. She cut him a sidelong look before she added, “But fine. I won’t try to eat him again. Can’t say I won’t bother him, though. I won’t go out of my way to bother him, mind, but animals like that… grass eaters… they tend to get a bit jumpy when I’m around, even in this skin. The hunted always know the hunter.”
After that, she went quiet again, watching her surly companion finish gathering up his gear with an unreadable expression. Gonna be a long few weeks with all this bickering, she thought with an imperceptible sigh. Maybe if I don’t talk, he won’t either.
When everything seemed to be put away, Zavya wordlessly grabbed a couple of the bags and slung them over her shoulder before looking at Einar expectantly. There wasn’t much more to be done here as far as she could tell, and his packing had seemed to signal the end of their brief stay. She had no wish to waste any more daylight. The Kelvic stepped back for him to precede her, then followed out the door behind him.
It wasn’t long before the unlikely pair found themselves back out in the winding streets and canals of the city, Zavya doing her best to look as Einar said—mean, scowly, and disinterested as if there was no one out for her blood. She wasn’t sure how successful she was, but if the measure of her heart’s pounding was a determining factor… it wasn’t very.
Calm down, she told herself, fist clenched tight around Einar’s poleax. Remember what he said. You can’t let them see.
The tigress kept her shoulders hunched and eyes on the ground in front of her, pulling the mantle up around her face to draw attention away from the telltale eyes. She shifted one of the packs over her shoulder and kept close to the man warding her, but not close enough that she was like to trip over him at any moment like before. Just keep walking. Just keep breathing. It’s a day like any other. Everything is fine.
Those four sentences she kept repeating in her head, over and over and over, until they lost their meaning and just became a string of nonsense. But it was a string of nonsense that kept her sane and kept her moving in spite of the lead that seemed to weigh down her feet. It was better than nothing.
“How long is the walk from here?” she asked in a low murmur, trying to keep her voice low and gruff—hopefully convincing enough to sound more like a man in case anyone was listening. “I haven’t been in this part of the city before.”