Sakuma
New Member
Morei's mouth tightened, but he gave no other indication of his grief.
"It was not intentional," was all he said.
Truthfully, that hatching ground was only likely to be viable for another fifty years regardless. Whether Yasen interfered or not, the Ferenden people probably only had a few hundred years left before they died out. The laser may have quickened things along, but the outcome was the same. With as much misfortune as the tear brought, it was also their only chance at salvation.
"I know what an ocean is, in theory, but it is different to see it," he said slowly. "The idea that you cannot even see the bottom is bizarre."
Renza watched Morei and Vanya for a moment, then turned his attention back to Dmitri.
"Right. I agree," he said. They did need to get ahead of it and control the narrative.
Still, he couldn't help stepping up next to Morei and Vanya to see the scenery as they landed. He lived in a rural area of Albaques, but it was closer to a prairie than anything. The mountains and trees were worth admiring.
"Why would she greet us?" Morei asked, curious. He was still getting used to the concept of marriage. Back home, mates were taken seasonally. Sometimes, people would choose the same mate over and over again out of fondness and a sense of partnership, but it wasn't the same.
"Hospitality is very important to vampires, if I'm not wrong," Renza explained, looking to Dmitri for approval.
He jumped a foot in the air when a little girl who was not there just a moment ago was suddenly standing next to him, but Morei just looked confused.
"Kas is the one who left with the little prince, correct?" He asked Renza, and the priest grit his teeth as he gave him a sour look. God, he felt like he just had a heart attack.
"Yes," he said drily, then turned a winning smile on Iona. "My name is Renza. We should listen to your dad before we talk more, though."
"It is strange how you do that," Morei mused aloud. "Change from one face to another depending on who you're speaking to."
Renza pointedly ignored him as they got off the ship. He could tell that Morei was playing cool, but the girls had thrown him off balance. He wasn't used to children that young. From what Renza understood, Ferenden children didn't really start interacting with the general public until they were around fifteen or twenty years old, and had developed a proper exoskeleton.
He followed after Renza obediently, though was clearly enamored with the trees. Even after seeing them in memories, being surrounded by so much plantlife was mind boggling. He was almost happy to get into the house and away from it all, even if the house itself was still strange. It was stone, at least, which was familiar, but there was so much more furniture and decoration than he was used to. He tried to pay attention, but he kept getting distracted by different furnishings. He looked up from where he was examining a pillow on the sofa to eye the twins, reaching out just the slightest tendril to identify their mental signature. Barely enough to be felt as more than a shiver, he filed the information away to identify them in the future.
"Iona and Leksi," he clarified, pointing to them in turn to make sure that he had it correct.
"It's nice to meet you, Elder Zmey," Renza said, moving into political mode once he was certain that Morei wasn't going to do anything stupid and Vanya was busy being accosted by her siblings. "You have a lovely home, and lovely children. I wish we were meeting under better circumstances."
He sat down on the couch, motioning for Morei to do the same. He did so after a moment's hesitation, then jumped back up almost immediately with a Ferenden curse.
"Why is that so soft? It feels like it's trying to absorb me," he growled. Renza blinked, then remembered a brief memory of a Ferenden creature than imitated rocks and ate whatever sat on them. Right. The couch was a bad idea.
"You can stand, too," Renza offered, but Morei was already staring at the couch with distrust before he turned to examine a different piece of furniture. The wooden side table seemed to fascinate him.
Turning back to Yva, Renza offered his winning smile once more.
"Water will be fine, for both of us," he said, because he wasn't sure what kind of food vampires would have on hand, and Morei was clearly not going to give an answer.
Settling into the couch that Morei was now giving a very wide berth, Renza took a deep breath. Now was the time for getting ahead of things. Right.
"I know we still need to explain the situation to your wife, but if you have a signal capable of reaching Albaques, we might need to use it. Fenrick is in a secure location there, and it would be best if we got a recorded statement from him to explain the situation. He's got a way of putting people at ease, and that would be helpful."
"I wish to speak to the little prince as well," Morei chimed in. "I trust that your 'Kas' is looking after him, but I want to know his strategy for the duel, if I am to be his second."
Fenrick nodded.
"Plant, yes. Kind that grows on rocks," he explained, then hummed. "Yes, ceiling. Hmmm... To compare to Albackee, ceiling would be what we stand on? Underneath is hollow, and then way way down is where we live. That is theory, though. Nobody knows for sure. Going to ceiling would need many resources, and we have not had those for long time."
He grinned sheepishly, rubbing the back of his head.
"Your people are more advanced, have more... understanding? More knowledge. We have theories, but no proof. Research is about water and rocks, and preserving nest grounds. Other things are not important."
Fenrick's smile faded, growing more wistful.
"I not always think like this. Before, I thought I know better than everyone. I thought I could be good leader because I am strong. Losing to Montrose made me realize being strong is not enough," he said with a sigh. "I am not glad to be hurt, but I am glad he beat me. I would have made things worse back then. Not being able to walk for year gave... perspective? I never needed rely on others before, but then I did. If I was not prince, if Jona and Riel had not been my friends, I would have died. It was scary."
He took in a deep breath, his grip tightening on the door of the car.
"I just not want anyone else to feel like that. I still not know if I can be good leader, but I will try. It feels good that you believe in me so much."
After a second, he smile returned.
"I am also glad to have you and Vanya helping me. And Morei and Renta. I could not do this alone."
Seeing that they had pulled into the parking spot, he gazed up at the supermarket with wide eyes. Even with his background knowledge, it was still so far from everything he'd ever seen before.
"There is one thing," he admitted timidly. "I not know if I can eat it, but I want to try apple."
"It was not intentional," was all he said.
Truthfully, that hatching ground was only likely to be viable for another fifty years regardless. Whether Yasen interfered or not, the Ferenden people probably only had a few hundred years left before they died out. The laser may have quickened things along, but the outcome was the same. With as much misfortune as the tear brought, it was also their only chance at salvation.
"I know what an ocean is, in theory, but it is different to see it," he said slowly. "The idea that you cannot even see the bottom is bizarre."
Renza watched Morei and Vanya for a moment, then turned his attention back to Dmitri.
"Right. I agree," he said. They did need to get ahead of it and control the narrative.
Still, he couldn't help stepping up next to Morei and Vanya to see the scenery as they landed. He lived in a rural area of Albaques, but it was closer to a prairie than anything. The mountains and trees were worth admiring.
"Why would she greet us?" Morei asked, curious. He was still getting used to the concept of marriage. Back home, mates were taken seasonally. Sometimes, people would choose the same mate over and over again out of fondness and a sense of partnership, but it wasn't the same.
"Hospitality is very important to vampires, if I'm not wrong," Renza explained, looking to Dmitri for approval.
He jumped a foot in the air when a little girl who was not there just a moment ago was suddenly standing next to him, but Morei just looked confused.
"Kas is the one who left with the little prince, correct?" He asked Renza, and the priest grit his teeth as he gave him a sour look. God, he felt like he just had a heart attack.
"Yes," he said drily, then turned a winning smile on Iona. "My name is Renza. We should listen to your dad before we talk more, though."
"It is strange how you do that," Morei mused aloud. "Change from one face to another depending on who you're speaking to."
Renza pointedly ignored him as they got off the ship. He could tell that Morei was playing cool, but the girls had thrown him off balance. He wasn't used to children that young. From what Renza understood, Ferenden children didn't really start interacting with the general public until they were around fifteen or twenty years old, and had developed a proper exoskeleton.
He followed after Renza obediently, though was clearly enamored with the trees. Even after seeing them in memories, being surrounded by so much plantlife was mind boggling. He was almost happy to get into the house and away from it all, even if the house itself was still strange. It was stone, at least, which was familiar, but there was so much more furniture and decoration than he was used to. He tried to pay attention, but he kept getting distracted by different furnishings. He looked up from where he was examining a pillow on the sofa to eye the twins, reaching out just the slightest tendril to identify their mental signature. Barely enough to be felt as more than a shiver, he filed the information away to identify them in the future.
"Iona and Leksi," he clarified, pointing to them in turn to make sure that he had it correct.
"It's nice to meet you, Elder Zmey," Renza said, moving into political mode once he was certain that Morei wasn't going to do anything stupid and Vanya was busy being accosted by her siblings. "You have a lovely home, and lovely children. I wish we were meeting under better circumstances."
He sat down on the couch, motioning for Morei to do the same. He did so after a moment's hesitation, then jumped back up almost immediately with a Ferenden curse.
"Why is that so soft? It feels like it's trying to absorb me," he growled. Renza blinked, then remembered a brief memory of a Ferenden creature than imitated rocks and ate whatever sat on them. Right. The couch was a bad idea.
"You can stand, too," Renza offered, but Morei was already staring at the couch with distrust before he turned to examine a different piece of furniture. The wooden side table seemed to fascinate him.
Turning back to Yva, Renza offered his winning smile once more.
"Water will be fine, for both of us," he said, because he wasn't sure what kind of food vampires would have on hand, and Morei was clearly not going to give an answer.
Settling into the couch that Morei was now giving a very wide berth, Renza took a deep breath. Now was the time for getting ahead of things. Right.
"I know we still need to explain the situation to your wife, but if you have a signal capable of reaching Albaques, we might need to use it. Fenrick is in a secure location there, and it would be best if we got a recorded statement from him to explain the situation. He's got a way of putting people at ease, and that would be helpful."
"I wish to speak to the little prince as well," Morei chimed in. "I trust that your 'Kas' is looking after him, but I want to know his strategy for the duel, if I am to be his second."
Fenrick nodded.
"Plant, yes. Kind that grows on rocks," he explained, then hummed. "Yes, ceiling. Hmmm... To compare to Albackee, ceiling would be what we stand on? Underneath is hollow, and then way way down is where we live. That is theory, though. Nobody knows for sure. Going to ceiling would need many resources, and we have not had those for long time."
He grinned sheepishly, rubbing the back of his head.
"Your people are more advanced, have more... understanding? More knowledge. We have theories, but no proof. Research is about water and rocks, and preserving nest grounds. Other things are not important."
Fenrick's smile faded, growing more wistful.
"I not always think like this. Before, I thought I know better than everyone. I thought I could be good leader because I am strong. Losing to Montrose made me realize being strong is not enough," he said with a sigh. "I am not glad to be hurt, but I am glad he beat me. I would have made things worse back then. Not being able to walk for year gave... perspective? I never needed rely on others before, but then I did. If I was not prince, if Jona and Riel had not been my friends, I would have died. It was scary."
He took in a deep breath, his grip tightening on the door of the car.
"I just not want anyone else to feel like that. I still not know if I can be good leader, but I will try. It feels good that you believe in me so much."
After a second, he smile returned.
"I am also glad to have you and Vanya helping me. And Morei and Renta. I could not do this alone."
Seeing that they had pulled into the parking spot, he gazed up at the supermarket with wide eyes. Even with his background knowledge, it was still so far from everything he'd ever seen before.
"There is one thing," he admitted timidly. "I not know if I can eat it, but I want to try apple."