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    1. eclecticwitch 6 yrs ago

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3 yrs ago
Current Why is it laundry takes forever?
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5 yrs ago
I just bring watched ALL of the new Dark Crystal! I now have nothing left to live for. I need more!
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5 yrs ago
Time to play some catch up after my short vacation! I just wish I wasn't so exhausted~!
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5 yrs ago
Need to write but my brains is all fried
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5 yrs ago
@CaptainCrunch - Do eet gurl!
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Mona Windrider



Location: Room 847 - the Ramblings
Skills:





She winced as the girl screamed for everyone to just shut it. She hadn't thought they had been all that loud, but being a creature of the night could change a person in many ways. Mona wasn't the most familiar with all of the things a vampire could do, but she was damn certain the girl was one. Her eyes followed Sylvi as she crossed the room to lay down on the bed and the young man soon followed.

Cocking her head slightly she looked from Sylvi to Tate to Myth and back. She was thinking, the odd little cogs in her head whirring and ticking on the theoretical applications she could use a stone to help a vampire's blood lust. Her face took on a blank, distant expression as she thought. She stayed in silent stillness for at least two minutes while things happened about her.

At last, when she popped back into reality she said, without regard to what might be going on otherwise, "I t'ink I could poss'bly make an ar'teh'ficial sor o' blood. Echantin' a wee stone or po'shun. Yeh knu. May tek sum time teh fig'yur oot." Her voice was rushed which only worsened her accent. Her cheeks flushed with the excitement of possibility.


Location: Outside the Eyrie




She nodded in response to Jandar's mention of the two men who were to be her allies. The tension between them was bitter and thick. She sighed as she touched the wound at Jandar's side. Her fingers sank slowly into - through - his skin and began the process of knitting together the rent flesh. She did not speak during this, her concentration fully on Jandar. When she felt the wound was now stable and would not come apart at the tiniest provocation, she removed her hands and paid attention to her nose whilst her companion took care of changing his clothing.

There was a sickening crack as she held her broken sniffer between her hands and forced it back into place. Fatima winced and allowed herself one small whimper before holding a single hand over her nose. She closed her eyes and let her instincts take over, flowing through her as she mended cartilage and bone. Within a few moments, her nose was good as new and it only took as long as Jandar needed to change his clothes. She summoned one of her handkerchiefs and wiped the blood from her face as well as she could. Her nose was still tender so she was extra careful around it.

She allowed Jandar to help her up, giving his hand a firm squeeze once she was on her feet. She removed herself from his grasp and turned to Xandar and the brothers as they approached. Despite the redness and swelling the crying had done to her eyes she still managed to hold some air of regality. A smile found its way to her lips as she greeted them in turn. "Thank you all," she said, her voice still harsh from her sobs. The smile grew to a wry smirk as she considered both Xandar and Jandar's words. "I've found that, if you are wanting to run away and avoid capture, it is best not to know where you are going yourself." She was serious though her tone offered a bit of playfulness. "I believe the two of us are already packed, having just arrived." She gestured between Jandar and herself. Her eyes then fell on Jassen. Her breath hitched and she had to close her eyes to keep the tears from falling anew. When she opened them again, she allowed herself to speak.

"If there would be anyone kind enough to help me, I wish to burn my loyal companion and carry his ashes with me. He should be buried at home. Not out here among strangers." Hey eyes flicked between the men. She planned to use witch's fire, naturally. However, wood would be required to encase the body and allow proper heat to disintegrate flesh. "As for the other dead," her eyes moved toward the literal killing field. The other bodies were gone. Someone had already taken care of the situation. She frowned as this would not have the effect on those that came for them that she desired. No time to think on that now. Jassen first. "Never mind," she mumbled.




Location: The Casino
Skill:




After she was sure Jack was going to make it, Bobbi did the only thing she really wanted to do. And that was sleep. For a couple of days straight. She awoke only to get something to drink or eat, and then went right back to bed. Today she was feeling a bit better. She had greater control over the bizarre flood of emotions she had been dealing with. The rest had been quite helpful.

She showered and dressed in her usual daisy dukes and t-shirt before grabbing her gear. Leather jacket, helmet, wallet, keys, etc. She hopped on her bike and made her way back down to the Casino. It was about time she put in an appearance. As she walked toward the doors she noticed a single, familiar face. "Logan?" she whispered before she removed her helmet and ran up to the feral Canadian. "Oh fuck, it is you!" Her voice was permanently accented with some of that Cajun she had come to acquire from her false memories. She dropped the helmet and flung her arms around his neck.

She wouldn't call herself the hugging type, not normally. (And goodness knows Logan sure as hell isn't) But this was a special, fucked-up occasion. So the times seemed to call for it.
Mona Windrider



Location: Sylvi and Tate's Room
Skills:





The sight of the young blonde drinking blood straight out of the freshly dead man had Mona backing up a few paces. Should she 'Woosh' out of here again? Should she 'Woosh' Myth with her? The woman seemed to know these people and she imagined this was something they normally didn't do. This was further determined through Sylvi's action of scooting back away from the body with blood all over her face like a small child who had just dug into a mincemeat pie.

Now, Mona would never claim to be smart. She didn't have all of that book learning that many others had. She couldn't even necessarily call herself naturally clever. She had a few things she was very good at and often a hard time following lines of conversation. However, mere hours ago... days? How long had they been in the future place? Did time flow differently? Well, however long ago it had been, and it had not been that long, Mona had seen a slew of vampires draining blood from corpses. And lots and lots and lots of corpses. And many, many deaths. In this case, there were far too many puzzle pieces already in place for her to miss the picture.

She frowned at the young man as he tried to make excuses. Something about weird rituals. This only further confused her. And he asked her to drink blood? Was into some sick vampiric cult thing? Did he get off on watching women drink blood? Fucking weirdo. Mona slowly shook her head and said, "Tha' dere waif be a fookin' vam'pyre."





Location: Serval Industries - Training Room
Skills: Void Reach


Sapphire took advantage of her weakness and Bobbi didn't do much of anything to stop it. She winced and hissed in pain as she felt the boot connect with her knee and she went down with a loud slam as her back hit the floor. There was a dizzying moment where she wondered if her head had hit the floor as well. Bobbi stared up at the ice woman and let her say her piece.

She didn't get it. They would never get it, would they? She had just summoned the stupid weapon that, according to Watts (as well as herself) had been a partial means of murder for a teammate. That thing had played a part in Andrew's death. It was her fault and she was loathe to see it. But she said nothing, she stared at the woman for a long time until she removed herself from Bobbi's person. She stood and swiped at her back end to remove any particles of dust that might have lingered there.

Watt's entry into the room was indicated only by the rush of wind at first. She grimaced at the sight of him, barely able to tolerate the man's presence as much as he hers. She caught sight of Wesley as well and offered him a small smile before concentrating on what the pair had to say. She wrinkled her eyebrows together at Watts' statement that made nearly no sense. Andrew? Alive? No.... Evelyn offered more explanation and offered out the files. Bobbi took hold of them, beginning to flip through them. Her hands were shaking badly and Wes took the papers from her so that they could be more easily read with steady hands.






Location: Serval Industries - The Hallway --> Training Room
Skills:


He cringed in sympathy with Bobbi's thump to the floor. He couldn't hear what was being said but he could tell from the chilled, sour expression on her face that she did not like it at all. He walked further into the room just as a certain speedster made his grand entrance. Wes could not keep the scowl from his face, even as Bobbi smiled at him. He listened intently to the small number of facts offered to them.

Shock rattled through his spine and splintered across his nerves. Andrew couldn't possibly be alive, could he? And all this time the grief Watts had poured over himself and Bobbi. For what? No, he shouldn't think about the man, that wasn't important right now. What truly mattered was saving Andrew. He voiced his desire to join before Evelyn added in her bit.

"I'm with you," he said to Watts, voice laced with cool detachment.

He stood beside Bobbi, looking over her shoulder at the files she had taken from Evelyn. It became obvious that she could not hold the items in any way that was helpful to the group, so he took them from her and held them out in his more steady hands, his eyes scanning over the facts laid before them.




Location: The Hallway ---> Outside of the Compound Baton Rouge, Louisiana
Skill:




Bobbi was very concerned by the amount of blood that was soaking through her make shift tourniquet and his not letting her do much else. There was no time to argue as she followed the others past the carnage Casper had invoked. She did not spend much time on it, didn't look too carefully. She'd had quite enough dead things for one day.

Once outside she was nearby to help Jack as he fell, so that he did not slam into the earth. Ben and the tentacles gathered up the young man and they were running again. What had they said about extraction? Where were they supposed to go? Her thoughts were so jumbled up she was having a hard time remembering. She decided to just follow the group. Someone else would hopefully know what was going on.
Mona Windrider



Location: The Palace Courtyard --> A near stranger's house
Skills: Teleportation Magyk





Mon considered Myth's words a few moments, rubbing her chin thoughtfully. "Well, ma'am. If we got over tah deh stables we could take mah horse, Cadance. How'er that would be a might an' a half time consumin'. I could just 'Woosh' us dere, but dah jour'nay jus' ain' as fun." She looked up at the beautiful blonde before she nodded, the look on the woman's face telling her enough. "A'ight, a'ight. Tah 'Woosh' it be den."

Mona stood very close to Myth, wrapping an arm about her waist with an apology. "Beggin' yer pardon tah touch, ma'am." She then began to draw little symbols in the air, more something to help with her concentration than any need for it in the spell. "Dough tah wea'der be fair an' fine. To me bonnie lass I mus' go, a'fore tah winds deign ne'er to blow. Up an' a'round an' a skip an' a jump. O'er tah waves an o'er tah land. At her bonnie blue door do I stand." There was a swirl of colors and from there they went to here, in the middle of someone else's house.

Mona felt as if her head was spinning. She wasn't fond of this sort of Magyk. "Tah 'Woosh'" she said, as if an explanation was needed. She turned her attention to the the pair in the room. And... the other (mainly dead) things in the room. She looked from Myth to the pair and then back to Myth. "I... see."





Location: Serval Industries - Training Room
Skills: Void Reach


It seemed that the ice queen was amenable to fighting her. Bobbi grinned, glad that some was taking her up on the offer. "Of course, naturally," she responded in a light tone. She shrugged off her leather jacket to make it easier to move. She made sure her boot laces were tight and did a few minor stretches like Wes had taught her.

Once she felt prepared, Bobbi stepped into the 'ring' so to speak. She rolled her shoulders before she reached into the void. The light formed around her arm and she grasped about for her dearest companion - Captain K.O. She wrapped her fingers about a stem and pulled. As it came through the void the weight felt very off. She frowned as she watched the stupid, idiotic squeaky hammer come through. She stared at it in disbelief for a few moments as tears pricked the corners of her eyes. Stupid stupid stupid. In anger she threw the hammer at Sapphire.






Location: Serval Industries - The Hallway --> Training Room
Skills: Military sneaky sneak


As he moved stealthily through the hallways he had the supreme misfortune of hearing that awful voice. He froze in place, unwilling to breath much less move. He listened as her voice slowly departed and feeling returned to his legs. He breathed in sharply, his heart hammering in his chest as if it were threatening to break free.

He dared not follow her closer. Not without back up anyhow. He'd learned his lesson the first time. It did not take much longer until he came to the training facility. He opened the doors just in time to see Bobbi throwing a toy hammer at Sapphire. He winced, wondering how much it must have hurt Bobbi to pull that cursed item from the beyond. Someone was toying with her.






Ahh, the Queen chastising that prick of a Prince was truly glorious. Really, what had the Dea Al Mon been taught that he believed he could chastise her so harshly? True, she’d put herself at harm’s risk, and Jandar himself certainly intended to discuss proper battlefield protocol with her at a later point in time, but that Dea Al Mon in all his supposed rationality couldn’t seem to grasp the simple fact that this was not the right time for advice, nor had he taken the correct approach (that is, one that would yield the desired results), never mind that he was a stranger. Jandar was mentally shaking his head, but on the outside, he was tranquil, ignoring everything but Fatima. After a lengthy tirade in which he proclaimed he would not serve Fatima (the hasty fool) and implying he intended to remove Xandar (mad idiot), the Prince left in what to Jandar seemed an almost childish fit, sulky and resentful.

After that little distraction, Fatima turned to him and sat herself in front of him, within his arms’ reach. “Only a shallow wound, nothing that won’t heal on its own, not to worry,” Jandar answered with a vague gesture to his left side. The Queen put her hands briefly over his, then laid a gentle hand on his cheek, and apologized. Jandar blinked at her once, then clasped her remaining hand in between two of his own, keeping a firm grasp on her. “You are doing very well,” he commented. Truthfully, he’d been expecting much worse – but perhaps, now that they were alone, she would take a turn for the worse? Those doubtful thoughts were the last thing she needed to hear, however, so the Warlord simply put on his best neutral expression – because he didn’t know how to make a properly comforting one – and raised an arm to the palm with which she was still cupping his cheek, patted it once, then coaxed her hand off his face, guiding it to his lap, with her other one. He squeezed both of her hands once, lightly, then offered her an awkward hug. “Come on,” he said, extending his arms loosely around her, not yet touching, but simply offering.

Fatima closed her eyes as Mikhail's words struck her like swords. She felt like her heart was breaking. Even more, if it were possible. Each sentence caused a flinch from her whole body. She opened her eyes and looked down at her hands wrapped in Jandar's. She was glad to hear that he was not horribly hurt. She wasn't sure she could take it if he were. He was being kind to her but she could hardly understand what was going on. Mikhail's words seeped under her skin. They crawled through her veins like a vile poison and suckered themselves into her stomach. It burned hot inside of her and spread as fire through her nerves. Another mistake in a line of many.

She resisted at first, the hug. She had to be strong and she was afraid that if she let herself be held now she would melt down into sobs. But her body could not deny the warmth of contact. When she was feeling bad, when her mother had been especially volatile, Jassen had been one of the ones to hold her when she was little. Her body was weak. Her heart was weak. She leaned against his chest, resting her face against his shirt. Her hands snaked around his middle and she hugged him tightly. She was shuddering. She would not cry. She would not cry. Something hot spilled over her cheeks and she worried it was blood. She leaned back, hands moving up to her face. Not blood. Tears. No no no no. She looked up at Jandar, the pain and horror of the situation stitched over her face. "Jandar," she said in a shaky, whispered sob.

When Fatima acquiesced to the physical contact, Jandar held her lightly, stroking her upper back. She’d held back for a moment – perhaps because she didn’t quite trust him yet. But that was alright. If his presence could stabilize her than that was fine. “It’s alright,” he told her, echoing his own thoughts. The Queen didn’t hold him for long, though. Sooner than he’d expected, she wrenched herself free of him, and looked up at him. She was terrified. She was suffering. But she was still trying to hold back. Why? Why did she seem astonished at her own tears? What was she attempting to convey to him when she called his name so?

Jandar knew that warriors like himself were trained never to show outbursts of emotions, because it was a weakness an enemy could and would exploit. Was it the same for Queens? Did Fatima want help controlling her feelings? He thought hard, laying a hand on her shoulder as a reassurance while he tried to find a solution. Well, whenever he was in pain, he converted all that wretchedness to anger, tightly controlling it and focusing it on a goal. However, mourning was different, was it not? The Queen was mourning the loss of a loved servant. She may even be pained due to that idiot of a Prince rejecting her so harshly. There was no goal here she could focus her sorrow on. So, instead of trying to hold back, failing and getting overwhelmed, possibly risking being broken more easily whenever the next tragedy hit, wasn’t it better if she just…“Let it go,” Jandar said, with a surprising amount of confidence given his own uncertainty.

“You can cry now,” he asserted in a murmur. “Cry as hard as you can now, and when you have no tears left to give, the pain will be lesser. And you will be stronger. Because if you choose a moment to be weak, you can be strong the rest of the time,” Jandar suggested, not entirely certain where this advice and assurance was coming from. No, actually, he had a fairly good guess. His mother. His experience with being comforted, years and centuries ago, when he’d been but a little boy, young enough to be allowed to cry on occasion. And it had been his mother who’d soothed him, who’d offered a small but incredibly wise piece of advice on courage and strength. It wasn’t about never feeling afraid or never being weak. No, it was about knowing how to deal with it, how to face and overcome their own shortcomings. And as far as he was concerned, it was acceptable – nay, expected – for a female to cry. “Just let it go,” he repeated, giving her shoulder a tender squeeze, then rose his hand even higher, slowly, until he was able to lay it on her head. “I will watch over you,” Jandar assured her, petting her hair lightly, and offered her a small smile.

As he spoke his words with such care and kindness, the tears continued to spill from her eyes. She made no sound just looked up at him, shock evident on her face. The hand on her hair was what undid her. "I can't," she whispered. But obviously she could. Her face contorted as a screaming sob released itself from her chest. She burried her face in her hands. The sounds of her grief echoed through the Eyrie exterior.

Fatima leaned against Jandar again, pressing against him. She moved her arms around his back and held on. Her hands fiercely gripped the back of his shirt as she let go, just as he has suggested. Her body shook with each wretched sob that broke into the air. She hardly noticed the pain from her broken nose or the blood which renewed itself. Fatima could hardly breathe and between each desperate wail was a gasping plea for air. She knew that she was being very un-Queenly right now. If her mother could see her what chastisement she would receive. She was a horrible, ugly mess in her supreme agony. A man who had been her father figure was gone and now she was alone with strangers in a strange, strange land with an even stranger destiny before them.

Jandar hugged Fatima to himself once again, though his grasp this time was firmer than it had been the first time, the gesture no longer as awkward. As the Queen cried her heart out, the Warlord remained vigilant, listening to her sorrow and waiting it out, though he slowly stroked her hair and upper back, a repetitive but calming motion. It took long, long minutes for Fatima's sobs to calm, and even then, he still felt her shudder in his arms, and his shirt was getting soaked with her tears, snot, and blood. Jandar frankly didn't care. He could stay there, kneeling at his Lady's side for another hour - or longer - if he needed to. But he didn't think he would. As time passed, Fatima eventually calmed, and Jandar could feel her breath steadying. He slowly moved away; not far, just a few inches, so he could see her face. He laid his left hand on her right arm, then used the right sleeve of his shirt to wipe her face as best he could. "You'll need to get that healed by Faeril when she's available again," he commented, a hint of a smile playing about his lips. Looking her in the eyes, concern replacing the brief moment of humour, he asked: "Do you feel any better now?"

When she was finally done being a blubbering idiot, she lay for a moment in Jandar's arms. She was catching her breath, each inhale of air a shuddering struggle. As he leaned back from her so to did she from him. Fatima was ashamed at what her face must look like. Eyes all swollen and bloodshot, making the white gold of her eyes seem paler. Her face covered in various fluids. She must have looked a might more frightening than one of the demon dead.

She expressed her outrage as Jandar wiped at her face ever so gently with his shirt, by struggling to pull away. She made little noises of derision. "No," she said in a shaking voice that was rasped at the edges due to her little meltdown. "You're going to get dirty!" And then she spied the right proper mess she had created on his shirt. She cried out in embarrassment. "Ah! No! I'm so sorry Jandar!" Her voice was becoming a croak due to her shredded vocal cords. She placed a hand against his chest and pulled backward. With her hand came the muck and fluids. It left his shirt cleaner than it had been. She dashed the ick away. "I'll give it a proper clean later. You may not know this but I am also a healer in my own right. Quite a good one too! Let me see your cut and I will tend to the brothers as well." She was feeling quite a bit better now. Calmer and much more in control of her feelings. She would give a kingdom for the raging headache to leave her though.

"Don't be silly, Fatima, this is nothing," Jandar smirked at her, but it was well-intentioned. He remembered how frantically she'd cleaned that spilled drink in the bar downstairs (how long ago that seemed!), so perhaps she really was overly sensitive about such things. "I can clean my own shirt, and believe me when I say this is a very minor stain compared to what one can suffer in combat." He shook his head lightly, still in disbelief at how worried the Queen was about such an insignificant matter. He was just glad she'd let him put her at ease and help her.

"Oh, I did not realize you had such a skill," he replied, looking at her curiously, unfastening his leather vest. The long-sleeved undershirt that had suffered the brunt of Fatima's tears and such followed. Jandar crossed his legs under him, getting into a more comfortable sitting position. "After you fix me, perhaps you could do something about that nose of yours, hm? Or would a mirror be needed for that?" he was both genuinely wondering if she could heal herself and teasing her that she should.

The Warlord then looked on at her. Though Jassen's corpse was still laying there, not yet buried, the overall mood was now much better. Jandar judged that now was the proper time to at least alert Fatima regarding their situation. She'd probably sensed the unrest, but they'd have to properly think on it and discuss it, though the latter would most likely be left until Faeril was awake and coherent enough to participate. "My Lady, I don't intend to be impertinent, but I feel I should caution you on our situation nonetheless. We will likely discus this in depth with Faeril, however, I do suspect we may travel or otherwise co-operate with each other for at least a short amount of time. Personally, I more than welcome the Black Widow, however the Dea Al Mon Prince is...Well. You've heard him; he'll likely go after Xandar at one point or another. And such division from the inside when we face opposition from the outside, frankly, is a folly we cannot afford. I doubt a man such as himself will let himself be convinced to act in any way differently than how he'd proclaimed he would. Regardless, if you could think of a solution to our dilemma, that would be...good. I hate to put such a burden on yourself, but you, as a Queen, have perhaps the best chance to resolve this, regardless of that Prince's opinion. Perhaps in conjunction with a word or two from the Black Widow," Jandar pursued his lips in thought, pondering if there was anything else after that bit of monologue.

There was, he realized. He sighed. "I don't wish to admit it, but if we will be facing more situations in which your safety will be compromised as much as it had been today, it would not be unwise for you to learn at least the basics of self-defense, stealth, and perhaps some other combat-related abilities."


Location: Outside the Eyrie




She was relieved that Faeril did not fight her. It made the work she had to do easier. Fatima knelt next to the Widow and breathed deeply, slowly. Each raise and fall a redirection of her power. Each fill of her lung a swelling and each release of breath settled it into place through her limbs. She opened her eyes and set to work straight away. Her hands moved like liquid water over and through the Eyrien Widow's skin. She looked for sore muscles and bruises to mend. She too found the cut on the finger and the rip in her wing. These she fixed as well, but Mikhail distracted her.

Fatima had to pull away lest she accidentally hurt the woman. This left things mostly healed but she was a firm believer in the body's ability to do its own healing. Her whole stature went rigid and she did not move as the man chastised her in much the same way she had the Widow. Her cheeks flushed with her anger and she looked down at her hands which lay palm up in her lap. She was silent for a long while and Faeril imparted a truth that Fatima had already known. This man who so whole heartedly was interested in her safety and then denied his hand in it (all in the same breath) was one of her own. She especially didn't like the way he had spoken out against Xandar with such vehemence. Xandar had said, in not quite so many words, that he was a part of her circle. This man had yet to offer such a thing. Mikhail was both hers and not hers, in a different way than Jandar. No, she would not allow an outlier to speak so reproachfully of someone under her protection.

She was not at all surprised when Faeril fainted. She caught the woman before she fell entirely to the ground and Xandar soon came to whisk her away. She said nothing to him. She did not even look at the Eyrien male. She could not. She was afraid she might vomit or cry if she did. All this time Fatima had been silent. Brewing. At last she stood, covered in blood and streaked with dirt. Still she held her chin high and looked up at the man who dare tell her what to do when he had yet to make himself in anyway a part of her circle. Something caught the corner of her eye.

Jandar. Relief swept through her and she though her knees might buckle beneath her weight. 'Do. not. fall.' she growled to herself. She returned her attention to Mikhail.

"It would do you well to watch your tongue, friend," she said in a voice that was overly calm. Each syllable was measured and the hint of frost pricked the air. "As it stands, Xandar is one of mine. He lay under the wings of my protection." She held the leash for an insurmountably violent man. He was a Warlord Prince. And he was hers. She wasn't going to let someone speak so ill of him, even if she was quite upset with him herself. "If my protection is not one of your jobs then you are under some odd delusion that your word holds weight here." She paused, cocking her head to the side. "Which is to say, the merit of the man you hold in such deep detestation has more worth to me than your own. Think on that before you deliver such words of admonishment unto a person. I believe you a man to be of the sort to think before you act. Perhaps that is a habit you should have taken here." Cold, white gold eyes, which had been eerily unblinking, turned from Mikhail to the body in repose at her feet.

"If you wish to discuss this further, please come to see me later. I am afraid I am far to tired to handle a battle of wits with any modicum of decorum at this present moment." She let her gaze drift lazily to him before it went back to Jandar. Good. He was alive. He was well. She would inspect him more closely for wounds later. She knelt on the grass with as much grace as her protesting body could muster next to the body of the man she had known for all of her long life. She gently swept hair from his oddly pale face. His cheeks were usually so ruddy with drink. She began to tear at her tunic pulling the bottom half of it away. She carefully wrapped it around his mangled neck as if it were a scarf. It hid the disgusting bruises and tearing skin there. With care she gently clasped his hand and lifted it to her face, placing her cheek against the back of the cold hand. She closed her eyes a moment and sighed. Careful, ever so very careful, she placed his hands over his chest, one over the other. She touched his face and fussed over his clothes to make sure not a thing was out of place.

At long last her attention returned to Jandar. She crawled the few steps away he sat to sit on her knees before him. She did not trust herself to stand. Her body trembled as it tried to contain the tidal wave of emotion that threatened to spill from her. Normally it was Jassen who would see her in these moments of weakness. But he wasn't here anymore was he? "Are you hurt?" she asked quietly, feeling guilty she had not asked sooner. Her fingers shakily touched the backs of his palms before a hand reached out to touch his cheek. "I am sorry I am such a mess," she said with a slight laugh that threatened to turn into a sob. She choked it back and offered merely a thin, watery smile.
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