
Iole and
Unalmis
The sweet juice soured as he swallowed, and as each of their ‘closeknit’ company seemed most intent to be the first to stalk away.
Unalmis now had a sticky hand, from where he had slammed it on the table, and proceeded to rub at the scarred palm distractedly.
“
Well, nobody should be leaving,” he rolled brown eyes, and did not even expect to be heard against the backdrop of
Cali and
Trev taking turns to act the most offended. It was very tempting of course to point out that he had not in fact either grumbled or glared, not until
Trevadir had proven so utterly impossible. But retorting back ‘well, he started it’ would be a line too far. They were not children any more. Which was the other thing. They were grown now, they were supposed to have more wits about them. So the Ranger really didn’t know why they were all making such a noise about having to spend any time together when their younger selves had managed to do it without even trying. Since when should he have to blackmail and encourage his friends to have a good time ? When the sun was shining, and the music was spritely, and .. this was all wrong. This was not how it had been supposed to go at all.
And then just when he thought it could not have gotten any worse,
Eryn spoke her piece as well. Talk about your terrible first impressions ! He had so wanted to save her from having a miserable time, left by herself, and instead, the youngest of them all was stood here and declaring she would rather not spend time with them. He couldn’t bring himself to meet her gaze when she stood up. His clutched at the drinking glass then with both hands, so hard that it might as well have shattered but he could not make the words work to respond.
Not at least before
Trevadir got there first, apparently having decided that he would disagree with everyone and anyone this day.
Nal released his drink before he broke it, found his own feet, and began “
Now wait just a moment ..” But the fury floundered into nothing .. with no argument to be found. Confused, he watched as the air of the conversation started to shift on it’s axis, and felt
Iole take his hand, almost as though she feared he was now rising to make an escape. For all that
Unalmis had said of
Trevadir running off, he was not exactly known for facing uncomfortable truths himself; far rather preferring to distract or divert away from any issue that was ‘better left alone’. Between the pair of them,
Iole could not fathom which of the two apparent ‘men’ was worse. But when their estranged member mentioned some ‘tremendous mistake’, she squeezed the hand in her’s as though she might urge
Nal to wake out of this fool daze and realise a chance that might be seized upon. But there, alas, he was not part of their little conspiracy …
Instead, he raised their hands up, still clasped together in between them, and glanced at her confused. In sheer exasperation, and perhaps exploiting her strongest ‘superpower’, the young woman brewed tears that might speak for her. Words had not turned out so well for them thus far. ‘Struggling’ to pull herself together,
Iole covered the awkward silence as best as she could, when no example could be found of what fun they had once had. And, turning her face away in apparent distress that she could not even look at the two idiots, she crossed the two longest fingers of her free hand, as a sign that
Cali hopefully would see, in response to the smith’s subtle smile, and then buried her face in that hand. Refusing to let go of
Nal from the other, who was left tethered to her bawling in his grasp.
Eryn’s mention of their spilling blood for this friendship was a pivotal moment, and as though she might impress the thought more deeply,
Iole pressed her palm hard against that of her friend. Come, she besought him silently in her now pounding mine of thoughts. ‘Remember .. ‘
For
Cali has baited the trap which
Eryn had readied. The mood had shifted back and forth between them all, like a roiling ship, thrashing from port to starboard. Sooner or later though, the waves would have to settle. And it still remained to be seen whether their group of friends were sunk or saved when that end came. ‘Please please remember …’
Iole loosed
Nal’s hand, that he might have the memory in sight. If he would .. only …
“
Wrong,” he said. And turning his liiberated hand as proof,
Unalmis turned back defiantly from
Iole to face
Cali, almost fired up from the thought of proving that he knew better. “
It was Trev’s handkerchief. Not Ryn’s,” he informed the smith, rather triumphantly, what she already knew. “
You think your brother ever owned a handkerchief that wasn’t full of frogs or marbles or ..”
Everything was quiet.
Iole didn’t dare seek out the face of
Eryn or
Cali, for fear they would be, even now they’d come this far, undone. But a short laugh escaped
Unalmis as he kicked the grass, not violently, but evasively, rather than raise eyes and find
Trev’s expression before he was finished. “
Grammyu wanted to ground you for life,” he remembered. And fell into the way they’d always referred to
Trev’s Grandmother. His own had been, by contrast, ‘Grammyo ..’ They couldn’t have been more than seven or so when they’d spent an entire afternoon making up their own language for every word that they could think of, only to recall next to none of it the next morn. The names for their respective grandmothers though, .. those were all that had stuck. And later confused both the old women when they heard the boys refer to them as such. “
She’d only given it to you that morning,”
Unalmis mentioned, not yet looking at his once best friend, but still clearly steering his recollection toward him. “
We had to convince her that you’d saved me from outright bleeding to death before she’d stop fussing about it.”
“
You were lucky you didn’t bleed to death,”
Iole put in with a sniff. “
I can’t think whose idea it even was now ..”
Unalmis knew. He glanced over to
Trevadir despite his best defiance. They had overheard Grammyo talking about what
Nal’s uncle and his best friend had done, years before, to bond their friendship. And rather than noting the disapproval in their guardians' tone, had immediately leapt upon the excitement of such a prospect. When the eavesdropping pair of grandsons had excitedly told the others, together, the knife had felt like the winged crown of Gondor in his small hands. In the end, and thoroughly carried away, his ceremonial contribution had made quite a mess. And by the time he’d tried to wrap the sluicing laceration in his sleeve, and stifle it still further in his shirt, Grammyu had taken one look at all the many blood stains and believed that
Trev’s handkerchief had certainly sacrificed itself in valued service of the other small boy's life.
“
I’m sorry ..”
Nal began, but turned to
Eryn. “
.. that you feel like I would ever intentionally turn on you. But I’m sorry too ..” another pause, and as though she suspected he was doing it on purpose,
Iole wiped her eyes furiously to cover how she shook her head, as ever, in despair of boys. “
That you would just make out like you could turn your back and that be it ?” the Ranger asked of .. well, he was looking at
Eryn. “
You could really do that ? Just shrug and say ‘oh its too hard’, and there’s some risk. I thought you wanted to be a ranger one day ?” He sat back down, as though on principle and concluded. “
I mean, you don’t fight ‘against’ the things that matter. You fight ‘for’ them. You fight ‘with’ them. Or at least you should.”
Iole realised she’d been holding her breath a while by this point, and so released it. Tucking her dark hair behind her ears she sat down next to
Nal and took up
Trev’s hat which she set back firmly into place. Though if parts of her pale face were ruddy now, it was no longer the sun could be entirely held to blame. “
I hate when we fight,” she added, quietly.