The square was rainy and cold. The sullen droplets of water that fell from the sky created a steady pit-patter on the broken cobblestones. The sound was much more defined and quite a bit louder than if they'd been in any natural part of the world, where it was water against tree canopies or muddy earth. The stone basins had filled with water and were beginning to overflow, lining the divots between the stones with shining silver. Normally, the square would've been filled with the city's children-- but it seemed it was just too cold and unpleasant for them today. That, or their parents shut them in regardless.
It was perhaps for this reason of solitude and seclusion that her mother was here, sitting beneath a decrepit stone pergola with a creeping, branching tree twined around it and offered at least some shelter from the rain. Cairo stood on the steps that lead down into the square, lips tight as she blinked at the form of her mother alone. But she would not be alone for long. The timber girl stepped down and crossed the square, ignoring the rain that caused her speckled fur to separate and spike. If she agreed, Cairo would move beneath the pergola to sit down beside the warrior. There were a million things in the girl's head, and she was certain there were at least a million and one things in her mother's. Where to even begin. Ankh had told Cairo of her plans -- even before she had told Nassar. ----------------------------------------- It was a test. "What do you think?" Ankh asked, and Cairo could feel those sharp and calculating pink eyes heavy on her auburn crown as she stared at the ground. Ankh wasn't really asking what Cairo thought, wasn't asking for her input -- Cairo knew this. This was a gauge -- she wanted to see if Cairo had the proper response. She was used to Ankh's little tests (hell, they all were), but for some reason it struck differently this time. Cairo was used to knowing exactly what the correct answer was, had no problem stating her beliefs with a puffed out chest and a satisfied smile as a reward. But now? Her honey eyes stared hard at the ground as her mind raced, reaching for the correct answer -- but for the first time in her life -- she couldn't find one. "I don't think Mother will agree to this." Cairo said, buying herself time as it was the only true thing she knew at the moment. Ankh frowned, and a piece of Cairo shriveled within her. She was not used to Ankh's frowns. ---------------------------------------------- Cairo leveled her eyes with her mother's, if Nassar would allow it, searching. There was no rebelling against the Matriarch's word, they all knew that. Her mother was trapped, truly this time. And seeing Ankh's frown at Cairo -- a thing she was not accustomed to and had quite hated -- the girl could now just begin to imagine all the things her mother had gone through -- was currently going through. It was no secret Nassar's marriage to Kohl was not a blessed one, nor was Ankh's ire toward the pair. Nassar had endure it all the while-- and Cairo never truly understood. She felt... stupid. When Ankh had tested it, it was perhaps the first time she saw the true Matriarch for what she was. She was not a pure Royalist loyal to the Crown and to the betterment of her family. She was something more, something deeper -- and Cairo had been a fool to think life was as black and white as she always imagined it to be. With that, and the unimaginable death of Kohl (how could he die? how could he lose?), with her brother missing, her sister stepping far out of line -- all of the sudden the world was painted in nothing but gray. She despised it all. @Nassar |
ART➤Amphi STOCK ➤ Dawnthieves @Cairo |
“Of course,” her mother agreed, moving so that Cairo could sit beside her. The timber girl settled next to Nassar so that their pelts brushed. All at once she felt tense and yet also, the desire to melt into her mother’s side as if she were a pup again. To bury her forehead in her mother’s ember fur, feel her embrace and strength and scent of spiced pines. She did not melt, though. Her mother did not need a daughter acting weak and childish-- she needed a pillar, something else to rely on in the wake of their crumbling and morphing foundation. Cairo relied on facts for this, and Nassar only sighed.
“He is satisfied.” she answered, and Cairo’s chestnut ears flicked. Well of course he is, she thought, somewhat bitterly. “Although he was not privy to the arrangement, he will be pleased to have me as a wife, and you and your siblings as children.” Perhaps it was the reference that they would be his ‘children’ that made it entirely more real and abbhorable for Cairo. Her fur bristled in spite of herself, and she leveled her fiery eyes on her mother. “I asked for an annulment.” Nassar said, and looked Cairo straight on. “There will not be one.” The girl shifted somewhat uncomfortably beneath her mother’s gaze, for she felt the probing curiosity. @Nassar |
ART➤Amphi STOCK ➤ Dawnthieves @Cairo |