[He meant it earlier about not complaining about being hungry, ma'am.
Anyway, whenever she's properly set to go, Weir grabs his riding cloak which he had lain on the table just the night before. It's dark and heavy, falling over his broad-shouldered form; clearly he's prepared for the early morning chill, which greets them unflaggingly as they set out the front door and along the wildflower-dotted hill.
It's not a long walk to the market, but it's still a walk, since his home is at the far southern end of the village. There's time for idle chatter if either party is keen for it. Weir, clearly, is not, skulking down the gently curving path without so much a word.
The view's nice, at least. It always is. Even the hoarfrost caught in the leaves of plants and blades of grasses shine and glitter. There's already movement down in the market square below, little people moving in and out beneath the cover of colorful thatched and shingled rooftops. Vivid blue flowers dot the valley hills on either side, swaying en masse when an ample breeze passes through.]
[Lucinda takes a slice of bread spread with cheese before following Weir out the door, taking small bites as they walk to the village.
While it is almost bone-chilling weather she just lets it wash over her without a word. The final remnants of sleepiness are shed away as her eyes take in the morning view. Southern California this is not but that may be a good thing. There's not as much smog, the air smells crisp, and the flowers are the deepest enchanting blue.
For her first foray into another world, she appreciates that she fell into a beautiful one.
But the world isn't just Turner's Vale now is it?
Notably, when they pass by some vendors, many of them light up when they see Lucinda.]
"Good morning, Lucinda!"
"It's cold today, so make sure you add some layers dear."
"Top of the morning, m'am! Do you want me to send word to the merchant that's in town to give you a discount on a cloak?"
"Lucy, have you had breakfast yet? Here, take this meat pasty, I insist! Oh, and how was the bread yesterday?"
[Lucinda really has grown on some people in the Vale it seems like. She returns all the greetings with a smile and a brief but genuine exchange so as to not hold her and Weir up. Some of them look like they want to ask her about Weir but she quickly adds that they were going on an errand together today and need to make use of the daylight.]
[Of course they light up when they see her. Lucinda has already taken to these people, just as they've taken to her. All the greetings wash over Weir and roll straight off his back, though it's not hard to mostly ignore them, given their attentions are focused solely on the newcomer. He's a welcome sight, but a normal one to see prowling around town. She, however, is not.
At some point, he pulls his hood up. Anti-social vibes at their peak when she's spoken to by at least the fifth vendor on their way to the local tailor.
(These people, the effusiveness, bothers him. There's something about their kindness that is hard to parse, dream-like as though to fit in with the rest of this town. They've been nothing but polite and generous to him, of course. But instinctively, it sits at odds with him, and he cannot quite understand why. He feels grounded; they do not.
It would be interesting to ask her opinion on the matter, a woman who hails from another world altogether, without really asking.)]
Gods, woman, have you spoken to the entire town?
[He mumbles at her as they take a shortcut in a little alleyway.]
Oh. Well. Thank you for the commentary Flora and Feather. Lucy doesn't respond to their remarks as she finishes the meat pastry she was gifted. She only replies to Weir when he mumbles at how she's taken to the town.]
What am I supposed to do? Depend on you exclusively for riveting conversation? But no, I haven't spoken to the entire town, not yet.
My opinion... Well, answer this question for me first Weir.
[She keeps strolling languidly behind him and only she of all people could casually ask something so morbid.]
Have there been any deaths of loved ones recently? Any graveyard of sorts? Actually, this world's customs around death would be most fascinating to learn about!
[He doesnโt stop, but he does turn his head to look at her. The clothier should just be right around the corner, so best get all the morbidity out of the way.]
Why? [Warily-] You hope to track down any lingering spirits in this town?
[The problem being that it isnโt an out at all. Not really. How can he say โnoโ that there isnโt a graveyard when every village and town has one? How can he say โI donโt knowโ when he has claimed to live here all of this life?]
โฆNo one has died recently that I know about. [Heโs only been living in this town for a few months, help.] But I donโt make a point to keep my ear to the ground regarding everyoneโs business.
And of course thereโs a graveyard.
[This, he knows. But heโs never bothered to investigate further; why would he? Every headstone would just be etched with names he wouldnโt recognize.]
Yes. Of course. The corpses do need their beauty rest.
[Lucinda ups her pace so that she's closer to him.]
Coming from me, an outsider, Turner's Vale and its townsfolk feel like a place that was made to live comfortably in. It is a wealthy place; not the gaudy kind that people with too much money would rather drown in rather than do anything good with.
[Lord knows she's encountered many of those and sometimes the Collective works with them too often.]
There's just enough. Again, very comfortable. And a life where you're provided with what you need and just a bit more would lead to a kind populace.
So really, I've no complaints or reason to find anyone or anything suspect. That's why I'm interested in the nature of the dead here, Weir.
[Her smile is lovely but...]
It would be like turning over a rock to find all the bugs underneath.
[... But that loveliness is dark and tainted by the shadows that whisper to her, telling her of the injustices, indignities, and cruelties of their life. Their anger, their sadness (and though uncommon, joy) are amplified through her because she is one of the few to exist between life and death.]
... Weir. For someone who's lived here so long, it appears to me that you haven't turned over that rock.
[Comfortable is a word for it. Probably the best one to describe it. Comfortable and well-provided for. Beautiful. Surreally so. And is that not all he wished for himself? To live an easy life, filled to the brim with said comfort, doing as he pleases, only when he pleases. Answering to no one, and no city farflung from where he lived.
And yet.
Turning over a rock to find all the bugs underneath. He wonders if that's the case, if there's something beneath the gilded veneer. However, it should be him turning that stone over, not hers. On his terms only should things unwind if there's anything to unwind; he cannot have her nosing about, upending everything.]
แตแตสณสณโฑแตแต? If she finds the ugly parts beneath, what will you do, River-child? Oh, but we ask as though you have not already given it THOUGHT.
[Yes, yes. Of course he has. The more complex this gets, the more trouble it is. And for what? When does the need for answers stop being worth it?]
You should consider that I might prefer keeping my hands out of trouble. As should you.
[You don't want him paranoid, Lucinda. They'll see exactly how much trouble you'll cause him, won't they.]
Unless you want to dash the rest of the way, we're taking the fastest route there.
[And indeed, just through the alley out into the fringes of the market square, rests a small clothier shop. Weir leads her in, where they're greeted by the owner, who recognizes Weir's face and brightens when he sees Lucinda.
Weir explains what they're there for; the shopkeep chuckles lightly in agreement that Lucy will need something a bit more suitable for trouncing around in the forest in these temperatures. So, it's off to find some outerwear already prepared; something that needs no tailoring for how it'll fall across her.
So, she'll end up with a riding cloak, too, long and dark to match Weir's, though lined with fur along its edges. She also gets a new pair of boots and an overcoat to wear beneath it, one that reaches down past her knees. Sturdy, leather gloves. The huntsman supposes that's the benefit to having a leatherworker nearby, too.]
There. That should suit you well enough for now. How does it fit?
["Ah, not quite yet. You mustn't forget a scarf for this weather -- the both of you could do with one." The shopkeep says as he brings out two long, blue scarves from the back of the shop, in a vivid royal blue color. The sort that match the flowers soon all over the village.]
I already own plenty of scarves.
["Not in this color, you don't! These are freshly dyed, too, in preparation for the upcoming festival. A bit of an early treat for you and your friend; it'll be our secret."]
[Lucinda graciously accepts the clothing given to her. She looks over them and nods in approval at each. It's more than suitable (Flora grumbles about being covered up. Fang hushes her).
She tries on the riding cloak hugging it around herself as if it's a blanket. Don't go to sleep now, Lucy.
The sight of the blue scarves catches her interest.]
They're a lovely color, sir. It's from the Vale's flowers, isn't it?
[And a festival, huh... Lucinda makes note that if the duration of her stay is indefinite, she will venture down and enjoy the celebration. She can ask the other villagers about it after they return from their trip. Weir will most likely skulk away from such events.
Speaking of. Lucinda grins at Weir as she touches the scarf to see how it feels.]
["That right," the man says, smiling genteel. "The Vale's very own Sapphires, as you'll see them grow just about all over the valley. There are no flowers like it anywhere else in the world, you know. Which makes this particular shade of blue just as unique amongst the lot of us."
Flowers which decidedly did not exist in the world before this one, Weir thinks, but it's simply one more aesthetically oddity piled onto the rest. He has no reason to think anything more of them.
He hikes up a dark brow when she grins at him.]
You'll be sick of that color by the time you're done with this village.
[The shopkeep just laughs, light and airy. As ever, the people here seem undeterred by his blunt manner.]
Wrap it 'round your neck. You might as well use it if you have it. [And he'll do the same with his, a vivid blue against his otherwise dark attire. He will not acknowledge matchies.] You ready, then?
[Weir is already credited for a bit of coin, courtesy of a prior trade, so he doesnโt have to pay upfront today. Theyโre out of the shop in relatively record time.
After that, itโs farther north they go โ following the main road that runs parallel with a river cutting through the middle of town, before it branches off and leads straight towards the woodlands ahead.
The forest awaits them, still and calm. The breeze whispers through the treetops, and itโs easy to see that this forestโeven here at its edgeโis very deep, and likely very easy to get lost in if one did not follow the road out.]
We would usually take a mare if we were to tread deeper into the forest, but I donโt plan on taking us far. Still, you had best not wander off. If you get lost, youโre on your own, and that would be a waste of my coin purse on your new clothes.
[Yes, he will leave someone to the proverbial wolves for not heeding his instructions.]
[While he supposes that might work, he still makes a face like itโs cheating or something.]
You say it like itโs thatโs simple. This forestโฆ
[Is odd.]
Youโll see. First on the list are the herbs I gathered yesterday. Dry them out and they fetch a fair price outside of the Vale once a few vendors make their trade trips beyond the village. If youโre going to live under my roof, this is the best way you may contribute.
[And like that, he treads out farther down the path, expecting her to follow.
The further they go in, the stranger it feels in this woodland. Itโs very still for too-long stretches at a time, like all the birds and insects and wildlife were holding its breath; and then sometimes Weir has to raise his voice over the cacophony of life that resounds in echoes through the trees, unseen but definitely heard.
And sometimes, it just feels like walking through a lucid dream.
But eventually, he stops. Shows her a clearing where these herbs grow, encircled by trees. Teaches her how to pick them without tearing too much of the root away. Offers her an empty satchel to store it all in. Eventuallyโ]
Still paying attention? Or are you daydreaming of bed?
[Despite being loquacious around certain people and specific company, Lucinda knows how to fall back and be quiet when instructed on something she isn't as knowledgeable about. At the same time, she's taking in the growing denseness of the forest and the air it exudes. Her friends are still as if trying to make sense of the atmosphere around them. Quiet, but alert.
When they stop in the clearing she nods at Weir's instructions and explanations. Her eyes follow the herbs and she's definitely listening; she probably just looks dozy because of her exhausted eyes and her deliberate movements as she accepts the satchel.
Her reply to Weir when he checks for attention?]
Con ฤang nghe mแบน ฤรขy.
[Said to him with direct eye contact and a smile.]
[Cutting herbs isn't nearly as foreign to her as he may think. In her adoptive parent's garden, they cultivated and grew Vietnamese herbs such as heart leaf, pennywort, perilla, and the like. Shame they wouldn't have any of that here unless she can be surprised. Those herbs are better grown in warmer conditions. She works deftly and carefully and some tufts of green start to peek out of her satchel.]
Do I sound that different here? Oh, probably. I haven't given it much thought.
[Vietnamese first and then English later. She's still more than proficient at the former. The latter was learned through lessons, lots of Hollywood blockbusters she watched with River, and BBC dramas. Her word choice and cadence are flowery for a reason.]
[He might not comment on it, but he notices her familiarity with cutting herbs; he thinks she could have mentioned any experience earlier and save him the breath. But that's just him being a grump about things, as per usual.
The branches of the trees overhead shudder a little.]
You sound like a foreigner, yes. [Weir might not be flowery, but his cadence is that of a BBC drama, tbh.] You're lucky the people of the Vale aren't much the questioning sort. Otherwise you'd be subject to the friendliest interrogation you could stomach.
[He can't imagine. That just sounds awful to him. He opens his mouth to say something else off-handedly while he stuffs herbs into his satchel, but stops when-
The atmosphere changes, so very subtly. Like a storm about to roll in; like something in the veil tearing open. Like a dream starting to overcome two people just trying to collect herbs--
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Make sure to grab your breakfast on the way out.
[He meant it earlier about not complaining about being hungry, ma'am.
Anyway, whenever she's properly set to go, Weir grabs his riding cloak which he had lain on the table just the night before. It's dark and heavy, falling over his broad-shouldered form; clearly he's prepared for the early morning chill, which greets them unflaggingly as they set out the front door and along the wildflower-dotted hill.
It's not a long walk to the market, but it's still a walk, since his home is at the far southern end of the village. There's time for idle chatter if either party is keen for it. Weir, clearly, is not, skulking down the gently curving path without so much a word.
The view's nice, at least. It always is. Even the hoarfrost caught in the leaves of plants and blades of grasses shine and glitter. There's already movement down in the market square below, little people moving in and out beneath the cover of colorful thatched and shingled rooftops. Vivid blue flowers dot the valley hills on either side, swaying en masse when an ample breeze passes through.]
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While it is almost bone-chilling weather she just lets it wash over her without a word. The final remnants of sleepiness are shed away as her eyes take in the morning view. Southern California this is not but that may be a good thing. There's not as much smog, the air smells crisp, and the flowers are the deepest enchanting blue.
For her first foray into another world, she appreciates that she fell into a beautiful one.
But the world isn't just Turner's Vale now is it?
Notably, when they pass by some vendors, many of them light up when they see Lucinda.]
"Good morning, Lucinda!"
"It's cold today, so make sure you add some layers dear."
"Top of the morning, m'am! Do you want me to send word to the merchant that's in town to give you a discount on a cloak?"
"Lucy, have you had breakfast yet? Here, take this meat pasty, I insist! Oh, and how was the bread yesterday?"
[Lucinda really has grown on some people in the Vale it seems like. She returns all the greetings with a smile and a brief but genuine exchange so as to not hold her and Weir up. Some of them look like they want to ask her about Weir but she quickly adds that they were going on an errand together today and need to make use of the daylight.]
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At some point, he pulls his hood up. Anti-social vibes at their peak when she's spoken to by at least the fifth vendor on their way to the local tailor.
(These people, the effusiveness, bothers him. There's something about their kindness that is hard to parse, dream-like as though to fit in with the rest of this town. They've been nothing but polite and generous to him, of course. But instinctively, it sits at odds with him, and he cannot quite understand why. He feels grounded; they do not.
It would be interesting to ask her opinion on the matter, a woman who hails from another world altogether, without really asking.)]
Gods, woman, have you spoken to the entire town?
[He mumbles at her as they take a shortcut in a little alleyway.]
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๐ ๐ผ๐ฝ๐ป๐ช๐ท๐ฐ๐ฎ๐ป ๐ฒ๐ท ๐ฑ๐ฒ๐ผ ๐ธ๐๐ท ๐ฑ๐ธ๐ถ๐ฎ.
๐๐ธ๐ฝ ๐พ๐ผ๐ฎ๐ญ ๐ฝ๐ธ ๐ด๐ฒ๐ท๐ญ๐ท๐ฎ๐ผ๐ผ ๐ธ๐ป ๐ช ๐ด๐ฒ๐ท๐ญ ๐๐ธ๐ป๐ต๐ญ.
๐ค๐ท๐ช๐ฌ๐ฌ๐พ๐ผ๐ฝ๐ธ๐ถ๐ฎ๐ญ? ๐ค๐ท๐ฝ๐ป๐พ๐ผ๐ฝ๐ฒ๐ท๐ฐ ๐ธ๐ฏ ๐ด๐ฒ๐ท๐ญ๐ท๐ฎ๐ผ๐ผ.
๐๐ฟ๐ฎ๐ป๐๐ธ๐ท๐ฎ ๐ฒ๐ผ ๐ด๐ฒ๐ท๐ญ, ๐ผ๐ธ ๐ด๐ฒ๐ท๐ญ.
๐ข๐ฑ๐ธ๐พ๐ต๐ญ ๐๐ฎ ๐ซ๐ฎ ๐พ๐ท๐ฝ๐ป๐พ๐ผ๐ฝ๐ฒ๐ท๐ฐ ๐ฝ๐ธ๐ธ?
Oh. Well. Thank you for the commentary Flora and Feather. Lucy doesn't respond to their remarks as she finishes the meat pastry she was gifted. She only replies to Weir when he mumbles at how she's taken to the town.]
What am I supposed to do? Depend on you exclusively for riveting conversation? But no, I haven't spoken to the entire town, not yet.
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[Then again-]
Not that it's hard to do. Tell me, what do you make of everyone here? You have an opinion by now, I imagine.
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My opinion... Well, answer this question for me first Weir.
[She keeps strolling languidly behind him and only she of all people could casually ask something so morbid.]
Have there been any deaths of loved ones recently? Any graveyard of sorts? Actually, this world's customs around death would be most fascinating to learn about!
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Why? [Warily-] You hope to track down any lingering spirits in this town?
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Is a sign of life. But you can just say yes, no, or you don't know. Then I'll give you my opinion.
[At least she's giving him an out, sorta but she'll still get to remain enigmatic.]
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โฆNo one has died recently that I know about. [Heโs only been living in this town for a few months, help.] But I donโt make a point to keep my ear to the ground regarding everyoneโs business.
And of course thereโs a graveyard.
[This, he knows. But heโs never bothered to investigate further; why would he? Every headstone would just be etched with names he wouldnโt recognize.]
Need to put the corpses somewhere.
[sir, please]
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[Lucinda ups her pace so that she's closer to him.]
Coming from me, an outsider, Turner's Vale and its townsfolk feel like a place that was made to live comfortably in. It is a wealthy place; not the gaudy kind that people with too much money would rather drown in rather than do anything good with.
[Lord knows she's encountered many of those and sometimes the Collective works with them too often.]
There's just enough. Again, very comfortable. And a life where you're provided with what you need and just a bit more would lead to a kind populace.
[๐ข๐ธ ๐ถ๐พ๐ฌ๐ฑ ๐ด๐ฒ๐ท๐ญ๐ท๐ฎ๐ผ๐ผ. ๐ข๐พ๐ฌ๐ฑ ๐ช ๐ด๐ฒ๐ท๐ญ ๐๐ธ๐ป๐ต๐ญ. ๐ข๐พ๐ฌ๐ฑ ๐ช ๐ผ๐ธ๐ฏ๐ฝ ๐ธ๐ท๐ฎ.]
So really, I've no complaints or reason to find anyone or anything suspect. That's why I'm interested in the nature of the dead here, Weir.
[Her smile is lovely but...]
It would be like turning over a rock to find all the bugs underneath.
[... But that loveliness is dark and tainted by the shadows that whisper to her, telling her of the injustices, indignities, and cruelties of their life. Their anger, their sadness (and though uncommon, joy) are amplified through her because she is one of the few to exist between life and death.]
... Weir. For someone who's lived here so long, it appears to me that you haven't turned over that rock.
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And yet.
Turning over a rock to find all the bugs underneath. He wonders if that's the case, if there's something beneath the gilded veneer. However, it should be him turning that stone over, not hers. On his terms only should things unwind if there's anything to unwind; he cannot have her nosing about, upending everything.]
[Yes, yes. Of course he has. The more complex this gets, the more trouble it is. And for what? When does the need for answers stop being worth it?]
You should consider that I might prefer keeping my hands out of trouble. As should you.
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[She stretches her arms and just yawns. Sleepiness hasn't totally left her yet.]
That's what villains do. Now are we going to make sure I don't fall over and die of cold or what?
[Let's get to that tailor Weir, you can keep being paranoid sweetie,,,]
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Unless you want to dash the rest of the way, we're taking the fastest route there.
[And indeed, just through the alley out into the fringes of the market square, rests a small clothier shop. Weir leads her in, where they're greeted by the owner, who recognizes Weir's face and brightens when he sees Lucinda.
Weir explains what they're there for; the shopkeep chuckles lightly in agreement that Lucy will need something a bit more suitable for trouncing around in the forest in these temperatures. So, it's off to find some outerwear already prepared; something that needs no tailoring for how it'll fall across her.
So, she'll end up with a riding cloak, too, long and dark to match Weir's, though lined with fur along its edges. She also gets a new pair of boots and an overcoat to wear beneath it, one that reaches down past her knees. Sturdy, leather gloves. The huntsman supposes that's the benefit to having a leatherworker nearby, too.]
There. That should suit you well enough for now. How does it fit?
["Ah, not quite yet. You mustn't forget a scarf for this weather -- the both of you could do with one." The shopkeep says as he brings out two long, blue scarves from the back of the shop, in a vivid royal blue color. The sort that match the flowers soon all over the village.]
I already own plenty of scarves.
["Not in this color, you don't! These are freshly dyed, too, in preparation for the upcoming festival. A bit of an early treat for you and your friend; it'll be our secret."]
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She tries on the riding cloak hugging it around herself as if it's a blanket. Don't go to sleep now, Lucy.
The sight of the blue scarves catches her interest.]
They're a lovely color, sir. It's from the Vale's flowers, isn't it?
[And a festival, huh... Lucinda makes note that if the duration of her stay is indefinite, she will venture down and enjoy the celebration. She can ask the other villagers about it after they return from their trip. Weir will most likely skulk away from such events.
Speaking of. Lucinda grins at Weir as she touches the scarf to see how it feels.]
So we'll be matching then. Fun.
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Flowers which decidedly did not exist in the world before this one, Weir thinks, but it's simply one more aesthetically oddity piled onto the rest. He has no reason to think anything more of them.
He hikes up a dark brow when she grins at him.]
You'll be sick of that color by the time you're done with this village.
[The shopkeep just laughs, light and airy. As ever, the people here seem undeterred by his blunt manner.]
Wrap it 'round your neck. You might as well use it if you have it. [And he'll do the same with his, a vivid blue against his otherwise dark attire. He will not acknowledge matchies.] You ready, then?
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It's alright. If I get sick of the color, I'll just look at the flowers I already have.
[Despite her dark aura Lucinda's favorite color? Pink. Peony pink specifically which coincidentally is the shape that Flora takes.
The medium smiles at the shopkeeper and gives her thanks before following Weir.]
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After that, itโs farther north they go โ following the main road that runs parallel with a river cutting through the middle of town, before it branches off and leads straight towards the woodlands ahead.
The forest awaits them, still and calm. The breeze whispers through the treetops, and itโs easy to see that this forestโeven here at its edgeโis very deep, and likely very easy to get lost in if one did not follow the road out.]
We would usually take a mare if we were to tread deeper into the forest, but I donโt plan on taking us far. Still, you had best not wander off. If you get lost, youโre on your own, and that would be a waste of my coin purse on your new clothes.
[Yes, he will leave someone to the proverbial wolves for not heeding his instructions.]
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Oh, it's alright. I'll just fly above the trees and find my way back to the lodge. If that actually happens of course. [A la Feather.]
So what's first on our to-do list?
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You say it like itโs thatโs simple. This forestโฆ
[Is odd.]
Youโll see. First on the list are the herbs I gathered yesterday. Dry them out and they fetch a fair price outside of the Vale once a few vendors make their trade trips beyond the village. If youโre going to live under my roof, this is the best way you may contribute.
[And like that, he treads out farther down the path, expecting her to follow.
The further they go in, the stranger it feels in this woodland. Itโs very still for too-long stretches at a time, like all the birds and insects and wildlife were holding its breath; and then sometimes Weir has to raise his voice over the cacophony of life that resounds in echoes through the trees, unseen but definitely heard.
And sometimes, it just feels like walking through a lucid dream.
But eventually, he stops. Shows her a clearing where these herbs grow, encircled by trees. Teaches her how to pick them without tearing too much of the root away. Offers her an empty satchel to store it all in. Eventuallyโ]
Still paying attention? Or are you daydreaming of bed?
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When they stop in the clearing she nods at Weir's instructions and explanations. Her eyes follow the herbs and she's definitely listening; she probably just looks dozy because of her exhausted eyes and her deliberate movements as she accepts the satchel.
Her reply to Weir when he checks for attention?]
Con ฤang nghe mแบน ฤรขy.
[Said to him with direct eye contact and a smile.]
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What?
[Donโt you talk in a language he canโt understand!]
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That was my first language in the country I was born in. Roughly translated, it means, "Yes Mother, I'm listening."
[SMILES.]
I'll start cutting the herbs now.
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He's going to make his way to a neighboring tree where a bundle of those same herbs are growing just near the base, crouching down to root them free.]
That explains your accent.
[(He is referring mostly to, instead, her American accent.)]
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Do I sound that different here? Oh, probably. I haven't given it much thought.
[Vietnamese first and then English later. She's still more than proficient at the former. The latter was learned through lessons, lots of Hollywood blockbusters she watched with River, and BBC dramas. Her word choice and cadence are flowery for a reason.]
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The branches of the trees overhead shudder a little.]
You sound like a foreigner, yes. [Weir might not be flowery, but his cadence is that of a BBC drama, tbh.] You're lucky the people of the Vale aren't much the questioning sort. Otherwise you'd be subject to the friendliest interrogation you could stomach.
[He can't imagine. That just sounds awful to him. He opens his mouth to say something else off-handedly while he stuffs herbs into his satchel, but stops when-
The atmosphere changes, so very subtly. Like a storm about to roll in; like something in the veil tearing open. Like a dream starting to overcome two people just trying to collect herbs--
Ah, hell.]
Wait. Do you feel that?
[that's, um, new]
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