The Young and Foolish
co-written between @InfamousGuy101, @Bingelly and @Enmuni
Dusk stepped back from the canopy, giving it a quick once-over before wiping his hands on his fatigues. It wasn’t much, but it was coming along. His eyes then drifted toward the shade nearby.
Two Kiellar stood out immediately, they were talking and watching.
He caught their glance, maybe it was directed at him, maybe not. Hard to tell.
Either way, they weren’t exactly blending in with the rest, or helping. Dusk exhaled quietly, then made his way over.
“Hey,” he called out, stopping a few paces short.
“We’ve got a canopy going up over there. Enough for a few people, not all of us yet.”
He jerked a thumb back toward the half-built shelter, “Could use another set of hands making it bigger.”
A brief pause, grimmacing at the sunlight's glare, “No point standing around cooking out here if we don’t have to.”
Ruvulla’s eyes snapped to Dusk, then towards the precious shade she had acquired for herself and her fellow Kiel.
“Indeed. Hence the shade,” she responded matter-of-factly.
Dusk's expression tightening just slightly. The answer from the Kiel was not something he had expected.
“Yeah,” he nodded once. “And we’re trying to make more of it.”
He glanced back toward the canopy, then back to her.
“Not just for a few people but for everyone.”
His tone stayed even, but it was clear there was a hint of hold back frustration in it as the sun kept searing the back of his neck.
“We’re all stuck out here the same. Whole group does better if we actually act like one.”
"This is temporary," Vaehach interjected, "The others should be back before sundown, then we go into town and find water and work... and hopefully air conditioning. Sit down and take a break."
The male kiellar looked over to the half built structure and sighed. "It beats sweating to death."
Dusk’s jaw set for a moment, but he let it pass.
“Maybe,” he said, keeping his tone level, “Still better to have something than nothing if they’re late.”
He shifted his weight slightly, then straightened, “Name’s Dusk by the way, United States Marines."
He approached the male Kiel and extended a hand.
"Didn’t really get a proper introduction earlier.”
Vaehach's eyes darted to Ruvulla. His left-hand rapped against his thigh again as he stood before he returned his attention to the interloper. The sands shifted slightly under his weight.
Stepping forward, he firmly cusped the human's forearm in his hand in a rapid motion. "Vaehach aep Samla."
Ruvulla followed Vaehach’s example and stood, but offered no handshake. “Ruvulla aep Rarvaum,” she drawled.
She looked Dusk up and down properly, then made sudden, piercing eye contact. “I gather you’re a human, then? So what brought you all the way out here?”
Dusk blinked once at the grip, then returned it, adjusting to the forearm clasp without hesitation.
“Good to meet you," he didn't bother trying to pronounce the name but gave the Kiel a solid nod.
He let go and his attention soon shifted to Ruvulla. He caught her measured if a bit cold look, but didn’t react to it.
“You gathered right,” he said, “Human."
He smirked as he seemed proud to say that.
“UN convoy detail. Part of Earth's humanitarian support to help stabilize our sister Galaxy, help everyone we can, whatever species they may be. 'Every world matters', that's our motto. Wasn’t the heat that brought me, that’s for sure.” There was a faint edge of dry humor in his voice.
He straightened a bit, "Unfortunately it seems not everyone is in agreement with what we're doing and my unit fell under attack... I survived."
A brief pause, then he glanced between the two of them.
“What about you?”
Ruvulla smiled. It shifted as Dusk explained his background from wry to one of condescending feigned sincerity, like that of an adult listening to a child explain something.
“My research station was raided.” Her smile faded, replaced by the same firm, cold blankness that her initial introduction had offered. “A shame we lost as many great minds to a raid by some vainglorious warlord-aspirant.”
Vaehach neutrally listened to the other two. His expression remained impassive, or perhaps he was simply unimpressed with the human.
"I was just a prisoner of war. I was at the wrong place at wrong time. " he added bluntly. "I'm far from the only one in the galaxy with that story.
Dusk listened without interrupting, eyes moving between the two as they spoke.
“Yeah…” he nodded at Ruvulla, “Too many people out there looking to take instead of build. Doesn’t really change no matter the galaxy.”
He gave her a softer look in spite of her blank, almost unsettling stare.
"I'm sorry about your people. Losing minds like that…” he shook his head slightly, "That’s the kind of loss that sticks. But maybe you can still put that to good use out here. Help someone those who need it.”
His attention shifted to Vaehach, there was a bit more familiarity in his tone.
“POW, huh? Pretty much the same for me,” A faint smirk, “Guess you and I are not so different then.”
He shifted his stance, “Either way, we’re all here now.”
A short pause, he glabced back at the canopy then bsck to the pair, “Shade’s coming together, but it’s not enough yet. Could use the help of two good people like yourselves,” He gave a smile, “Whole group benefits if we get it done quicker.”
“Best practices would be to let the Dhasath continue building while the rest of you rest in what shade there already is,” Ruvulla advised, “They’re more suited to this heat than you or I. And, if you’re anticipating we’ll need shelter, then you’ll also know people will need to keep watch at night. Kiellar are most suited. Thus, we’ve been resting here in anticipation.”
Vaehach seemed to stew for a moment. Heavy eyebrows frowned deeply, and his tongue slipped freely.
"So you've seen a Ragon tear your comrades apart in the melee, Dusk?" He nearly sneared, and cocked an eyebrow inquistitorally. "Disembowling them? Tearing limbs off whole? Or perhaps you have seen the aftermath of an orbital bombardment on a urban block?
Ruvulla let out a dry, cold laugh as her eyes narrowed. “Indeed. I lost siblings and cousins in the Ragon War. And now? I have children who are dead. Children who I’ve had to fight. To
kill. And to say nothing of my grandchildren and great-grandchildren. And I’m a combat medic by training. Not infantry. Not artillery.”
She held her hands up expectantly.
“You’ve gotten a taste, maybe, if that, but you’d do well not to pretend you understand what you’ve gotten yourself into. We’ve fought to the death on more planets than you may well have ever even seen in your brief existence. You’d do well to remember that.”
Dusk didn’t answer right away. Vaehach’s words hit, but it was Ruvulla’s that lingered. The way she said it, what she described and the subtle scorn in her voice towards the human.
For a moment, the marine just looked at her, something unsettled crossing his expression before he pushed it down.
“Yeah,” he said finally, pursing his dry lips, “I haven’t seen what you’ve seen. Not like that.”
He gulped and resdjusted his thoughts.
“But I’ve seen enough to know war is a terrible thing..."
He meet their gazes again, as if holding his ground.
“I’m still a soldier. Same as you and right now that means putting our differences aside and focusing on staying alive.”
He glanced between them, then back toward the canopy.
“That’s all I’m trying to do. Didn’t mean to step on anything,” he added, more subdued in his tone, “If I did, that’s on me.”
He took a step back, “We’ll have a fire going by nightfall. You both are welcome to it.”
Dusk gave a small nod, then turned away, heading back toward the canopy without another word.
Vaehach sighed deeply as he watched the human turn away. He slowly returned sat back down in the cool sand under their scrap of shade.
"Only the young and the foolish are proud of their service," Vaehach muttered as he turned his gaze upward to the sky. "I fear he might be both, but I hope he finds some comfort in it."