Hi there. *says the author sheepishly*
Sorry about the wait, I know it was waaaay longer than usual. I was going to keep going and make it a really long one as compensation, but who knows how much longer that was going to take. So here she is, the seventh installment. Got comments, advice, criticism, good intentions, milk? Always, always welcome and needed. I prefer 1%.
Bon Appetite, mes petits choux.
yours, enithermon
***
Thea rolled onto her back with a groan and wiped the stingingly cold snow off her face, sputtering. The night sky gazed back down on her silently, its twinkling landscape framed by the bare frozen arms of the trees that stretched heavenward around her.
A voice filled the air somewhere behind her head.
"Better, but you're still relying too much on your strength. You can't invest so much forward momentum in your attacks, a half decent fighter will just use it against you and it will be over before it begins. As the weaker opponent, you need to rely on speed and agility, not brute force."
She sighed. "Not everyone is as strong as you. I'm as tall as most men."
"These Southerners perhaps, but not the Huroth."
"When did you say you were leaving again?"
A face appeared over her, blocking out the stars and grinning a sardonic, fanged, upside down grin.
"Sick of me already?"
"I'm sick of getting tossed around like a rag doll in the snow is more like it." She said with a sigh and sat up, turning her head to look back up at him over her shoulder. "Don't you get tired?"His grin faded to a smirk.
"Every so often." He offered his hand. "If it is any consolation you're starting to get harder to throw around." She shook her head and took his hand.
"It's not." He chuckled and hauled her to her feet. She shivered and wiped her red hands on the legs of her pants, and looked around her feet for her lost knife. He tapped her on the shoulder with it and handed it back when she looked up. "I think I'm done for the night." She said as she wiped the slush from the blade and put it back in its sheath.
"But I was just getting warmed up?"
His face was serene, but she caught the twinkle in his eye.
"You may be, but I'm going to turn into an icicle if I spend any more time rolling around in snow banks."
"Then stop letting me toss you in them." His eyes still glinted mischievously. She scoffed.
"Doesn't the cold bother you at all?" She asked, turning more serious as she rubbed her arms to keep the blood flowing. He'd been coming back between his excursions to the local villages to 'investigate' her disappearance and had, as promised, given her more thorough instructions on how to defend herself. So far all she felt like she learned was how to land without knocking herself out in the process. That, and how to treat frost bite. The weather was getting damn cold as winter drew on. She rubbed her arms. He shrugged.
"No."
"Lucky you." She appraised him. There was still so much she didn't know about him, about what he was, and what he was capable of. There were things she was vaguely aware of, his speed and silence and strength, but she knew nothing about where his limits were, or what else he was capable of. As her comfort with him had grown, so did her curiosity. "It seems like there isn't much you can't do." She muttered in what she hoped was an off hand manner.
He returned her gaze, his expression muted. They stood there in the snow watching each other silently until Thea felt the oppression of her unasked questions weigh down on her. He smiled grimly, but his eyes were still dark and inscrutable.
"Fishing for your opponent's weaknesses?" She let out a dry laugh.
"Or something." She offered. Her smirk faded and she cleared her throat. "I guess we should head in then?"
He shook his head. "You go on. I'm leaving for the city."
"Now? To speak with them?"
He nodded.
She swallowed feeling a strange distance in the empty space between them that she hadn't experienced for quite some time, that strange sense of a widening, bottomless chasm. She held her breath as she took the first step towards him, pushing through the thick bubble of tension, and half expecting there to be no solid ground under her feet. She was almost surprised to find she wasn't plummeting into an abyss when she reached for him. She laid her hand on his chest and tilted her head up to graze her mouth tentatively against his bottom lip. He brushed her back, moving as slowly as melting ice, the fingers of one hand touching her face in the barest hint of a caress.
"Good luck." She whispered, their lips still making contact.
His lips moved away from hers, and stroked over her cheek to her jaw. Her eyes fluttered closed and she sighed out her held breath. He feathered his mouth and fingers over the lines of her face and brow before finally settling his mouth against hers, not hesitantly, but carefully. She felt her throat close and her eyes burn inexplicably.
His mouth brushed her ear. "Watch yourself."
She nodded silently against his shoulder. She felt him release her and pull away, but when she blinked her eyes open, he was gone.
Something tickled her neck and she reached up to brush it away and her hand hit something cold and metallic. She looked down, surprised to see a necklace resting across her collar. She reached back to remove it.
She'd never even felt it go on.
It looked almost insubstantial, held together as it was by fine interlocking swirls of silver which reminded her of clouds or whirlwinds and was studded with jade and another pinkish red stone she'd never seen before. It was terribly beautiful. She wondered if it would be appropriate to put back on. Was it hers? Had he put it there as a gift?
'Well why else would it be there?' She mocked to herself.
Still, she felt a pang as she replaced it and tugged her cloak so that it was covered. He'd never given her anything like that before, excepting the pearl perhaps, but this was different. She wondered what had compelled him now.
Regardless, the gesture warmed her. Not least because it came on top of all that he was already doing to help her. He had never actually expressed in words affection for her, barring that first vague 'I liked you,' which now in retrospect sounded charmingly boyish to her. Her lips quirked as she fingered the lacy bit of jewelery. However, the fact that he'd been helping her, as if he'd never contemplated doing anything else...well, that spoke loudly enough.
"Thea!?"
She blinked and looked up.
Berin's face appeared from behind the door.