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[personal profile] smithereens
someone told me there's a girl out there
with love in her eyes and flowers in her hair

standing on a hill in my mountain of dreams,
telling myself it's not as hard, hard, hard as it seems


.

“Are you never going to tell her?”

Damiyr narrows his eyes at Shahzadeh over the rim of his mug; to his chagrin, the woman’s grin only widens as Tabazin and Barzayn try not to look too interested in the proceedings, gazes averted and meekly sipping their individual mugs even though he can feel the raptness of their attention on him. They’re too consummately professional to ask the question of him themselves, but that doesn’t stop them from listening in if someone else asks it, someone who has no such qualms.

He glances over at Cleo, sitting some distance away with Arim, wholly focused on their conversation. She smiles and laughs at something that Arim’s said, and Damiyr pulls his gaze away quickly before she notices his stare.

Luckily, Shahzadeh shows uncharacteristic discretion by asking in Nerahati; Cleo might be learning their language, but she is still far away from being able to follow everyday conversation.

“Tell her what?” he says, just to be obtuse.

Shahzadeh rolls her eyes. “She doesn’t see the things that are obvious to the People--your colors, the respect we show to you. She really has no idea.”

“I didn’t expect her to have an idea, Shahzadeh.” His tone is clipped without him quite intending it, but rather than dissuading her, her eyebrows lift in faint surprise.

“You don’t want her to know.” It’s not specifically a question.

It’s also not something he can find an easy answer to. He’s met very few people who don’t immediately recognize his status, unless he goes out of his way to hide it, for one reason or another; the vast majority of people who don’t are foreigners unfamiliar with the ways of his people, the colors, clothing styles, and hallah that herald a Nerahati’s place in their society. She traced with her fingers the damn hallah that marked him as brother to a Shaharin prince and never suspected a thing!

There’s freedom in that. There’s freedom that he’s longed for his entire life, even if it comes by way of a small lie of omission to a person whose feelings he never thought he would consider when he, typically, ignored the inconvenient fact of his princehood.

He didn’t think it was important. He never thought it was important, though his society tended to disagree with him.

“I don’t see how it makes a difference whether she knows or not,” he says finally, testily. He feels pressed back on his heels in spite of his justifications, and it’s not making him feel charitable.

“She calls you by your given name, without honorifics. Like a wife,” Tabazin puts in, almost anxiously. To Tabazin, who loves the inside of the boundaries set by her rules, the implied insult of his name without affectations must chafe at her, each and every time. Only her respect for him has kept her from saying anything before now, he suspects.

She makes quite a pair with Shahzadeh, who doesn’t care much for rules unless they suit her.

“When we find her father, she’ll return with him to Elyium, and it won’t matter at all what she calls me,” he says, frowning around the rim of his mug as if it’s the wine that tastes bitter, and not the future. “There’s little point in doing anything about it now.”

They each look doubtful in their own way, Barzayn with his brows knit, Tabazin with her lips pursed; Shahzadeh looks like she wants to say more, her mouth quirked, but she shifts in her seat and seems to think better of it. Of all people, she knows the limits of his patience, given how often she’s tested them.

“Well, it’ll be quite shocking for her if she does find out,” Barzayn says with his customary good humor, barking out a laugh.

“Yes, quite shocking,” Shahzadeh says wryly, but Damiyr chooses to ignore it and that’s the last they speak of it for quite a while.
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[personal profile] smithereens
i.
i'm a satellite heart, lost in the dark
i'm spun out so far, you stop, i start


.

“So what is your opinion of our kumani?” Shahzadeh asks one night, pressing a tabard of mulled wine into Cleo’s hand. They’d come upon a village large enough to have an actual inn, or what Cleo figured served as their equivalent, with enough space for a small tavern underneath the rooms.

Cleo had never been happier to see a real bed.

Kumani?” she repeats clumsily, with an uncertain sip of her wine. To her delight, it’s much sweeter than the drink they pass around the fire at night, and she thinks that she could actually get used to this. “You mean Damiyr?” She’d heard the others call him that, in what snippets she could catch of their conversations, and had assumed that it meant something akin to captain.

“Yes. It is hard to meet a person that does not already have their opinion.” Shahzadeh’s eyes are dancing with amusement, something Cleo is given to understand as the default state of them. “So what is yours?”

“He is…” Cleo wants to say rude, but it feels equally rude of herself to say it; she glances surreptitiously—because he always seems to sense her stare, much to her chagrin—over at Damiyr, across the room, sipping his own mug. “He’s very… brusque.”

Shahzadeh looks confused, and it takes Cleo a moment to realize it’s because she doesn’t understand the word.

“Very serious,” she supplies instead. “He doesn’t smile very much, does he?”

Shahzadeh laughs. “Not if he can help it. That’s our mysterious kumani.”

“Mysterious?”

“I suppose he just likes to be… quiet about himself. He speaks to you more than I’ve seen him speak to any stranger—I think it’s only because there are few of us who speak your tongue.”

“It’s only to order me around,” Cleo mutters darkly, “or to tell me what I’m doing wrong.”

“He’s a hard master, I know,” Shahzadeh says, wrinkling her nose. “He has no remorse. But it’s not because of unkindness, I promise you.”

“He could’ve fooled me.”

Shahzadeh looks at her thoughtfully, her eyes heavy-lidded and a smile playing on the corners of her lips. Just when Cleo feels the silence grow protracted, Tabazin comes up behind Shahzadeh and snakes her arms around the woman’s middle, asking a low question in their language.

Shahzadeh laughs and replies in a mash of lilting sounds, so quickly that Cleo can’t find the end of one word and beginning of another, even if she could speak their tongue.

“She asks if I am harassing you,” Shahzadeh translates for her, leaning back in Tabazin’s embrace. “I said that you would know very well if I am harassing you. Besides,” she adds wryly, “I think kumani-samar would not appreciate it much if I did.”

She smiles in a way that makes Cleo doubt that she got the complete translation—but Cleo finds that talking to Shahzadeh usually makes her feel that way, like there is some nuance that the other woman finds delight in hanging just out of her reach. Judging by the severity of Damiyr’s frowns around Shahzadeh, Cleo guesses that he feels the same.

“I don’t think he really cares that much,” Cleo says, leaving off about me in fear of the weakness in it, a weakness Shahzadeh would surely pick up on.

“Our kumani has ways of fooling us,” Shahzadeh says conspiratorially. “For your safety, I recommend you do not assume too much of him.”

She leaves with Tabazin then, slinging her arm around the other woman’s waist, and Cleo feels her eyes drawn to Damiyr—to her surprise, the subject of their conversation is staring right at her, and Cleo turns away quickly, flustered, covering her embarrassment with a long swig of her drink.

The sweetness is almost sickly on her tongue, and she tells herself that Shahzadeh is wrong.

She’s nothing much more than a nuisance to him.

.

ii.
and i don't blame you dear
for running like you did all these years
i would do the same, you'd best believe

and the highway signs say we're close
but i don't read those things anymore
i never trusted my own eyes


.

The more time they spend in the desert, the more villages and towns they pass through, the more Cleo feels her otherness begin to wear on her. It’s lonely, listening to the others laugh and joke in their language, to imagine them trading stories over the campfire that she can’t understand. It’s frustrating, to hear their conversations with the villagers, to not know whether they exchange simple pleasantries or clues about her father until Damiyr or Shahzadeh see fit to translate. She doesn’t suspect them of withholding anything about her father from her, but she is so desperate for information, any information, that she wants to scream.

Worse, she is desperate for belonging, and that’s something she doesn’t think even learning their language could ever correct.

But it’s a start.

“Can you teach me how to speak Nerahati?” she asks, willing the uncertainty from her voice so all that’s left is stubbornness.

Damiyr considers her from atop his horse, two or three hands taller than hers. It makes her feel even smaller.

Then he pulls down the keffiyah that covers his face. “Arim.”

Behind her, Arim starts in surprise, then clumsily urges his horse forward to Damiyr’s side, asking him a quiet, earnest question in their tongue. She doesn’t know if she could even place Arim’s voice, since he speaks so unobtrusively or not at all, at least when she’s around. Usually, he is busy listening intently or writing on his parchments at a lightning pace, and so Cleo takes him to be some sort of scribe or record-keeper.

They speak some more in their language, for long enough that it feels like Damiyr had ignored her request completely, and was moving on to some other problem he actually felt like handling.

Cleo opens her mouth to interrupt when he beats her to it.

“Arim will teach you,” he says. Beside him, Arim has his head down, almost sheepishly, glancing at her out of the corner of his eyes.

Cleo hesitates. “Only if he wants to.”

Damiyr raises his eyebrows, almost in amusement, and looks over at Arim. “You’ve made her nervous, Arim.”

“I’m sorry, Miss Cleo,” Arim says, with hardly any trace of Damiyr and Shahzadeh’s accents. “I didn’t mean to—that is, I would be very happy to teach you.”

Cleo almost doesn’t know how to react; she knows her mouth is wide open in amazement, but she can’t seem to close it. “You spoke my language this whole time?”

“Yes. I’ve studied for many years.” He looks about to say more, but presses his lips together shyly instead.

“Arim studied at our university in the capital, sponsored by the king himself. He speaks a great number of languages,” Damiyr supplies, and then, a little more quietly: “He would be a much better teacher than I.”

“Thank you!” she says, unable to contain her smile. Arim smiles back, albeit with reserve. “Thank you.”

.

.

.

Arim does turn out to be an excellent teacher, patient and kind. As they ride, he teaches her the basics of sentences structure and verb conjugation; she is surprised to find out that in their tongue the object comes before everything else instead of at the end, so that she feels a little backwards when he asks her to translate sentences into her language or his. He makes her translate a lot, very easy things, so that she must sound like a child first learning to talk to their ears—but in a way, she is.

He makes her repeat everything he says too, sometimes more than once, and points to things and has her name them, their color, what they’re doing or how they look. Vocabulary is the hardest thing for her to remember, but Arim is surprisingly organized with his lessons, teaching her in groups, so that she’ll learn Animals and Future Tense in one day, then Clothing and Past Tense the next. He never gives her more than she can handle.

At first, he hesitates to say more to her than necessary, but as she learns the language, she turns around and asks him questions with the new words she’s learned, and he replies in kind. She does that with the others too, and learns that Barzayn loves to eat almost as much as he loves his wife, and that Tabazin has seven siblings and a pet manul, which Arim described as a wild, long-haired cat.

The time passes more quickly under Arim’s tutelage, and she feels herself learning a lot, even if it still isn’t nearly enough to follow the entirety of their conversations between themselves; she has to concentrate hard to pick out distinct words, though their individual accents can sometimes make it difficult to pick out anything at all, especially when they speak rapidly. At that point, she usually has to give up.

But they try to include her as much as they can, even Damiyr. He quizzes her too, using the words she’d recently learned to engage her in conversation, asking her questions about the day or what she thinks of a village they’d passed through.

Sometimes he even smiles.

.

.

.

“Why did you be a soldier?” she asks Arim one day, in stilted Nerahati, but it’s a question that’s been nagging at her for a while. He is the opposite how she imagines a soldier, soft-spoken and bookish and unassuming. When she imagines a soldier—well, she imagines someone more like Damiyr.

This isn’t easy for her to translate into their language, but Arim seems to sense as much, because he switches to hers, smiling kindly.

“Damiyr-samar and I were friends from childhood,” he says.

Really?” She isn’t so surprised to find out they were childhood friends; she’s more taken aback by the notion that Damiyr was ever a child at all. In her imagination, Damiyr sprang to life fully-formed and scowling.

He nods. “My mother was a scribe in the royal employ—now she’s a librarian in the king’s library. But I met Damiyr-samar when we were nine years old—he scared me very much,” he adds with a soft chuckle, looking ahead at Damiyr’s back.

Cleo follows his gaze, watching the sway of movement Damiyr makes with his horse as they plod through the sand, three or four horse lengths ahead of her. When they traveled through the desert like this, they all tended to make a loose ring with Damiyr at the head and, ever since she began her language lessons, with her and Arim at the back, left to their own devices.

“So you followed him into the cavalry?” she prompts.

“My mother worked for the royal household, but I have two sisters and our father is gone. So she didn’t have the means to send me to the university like I wanted—like I wanted very much.” Arim’s voice is solemn now, but in it Cleo can hear the palpable love he has for his mother, his family, and now— “Damiyr-samar convinced the king to sponsor me, so that she didn’t have to pay for my tuition. Not a single hirmam.”

“Oh.” Cleo doesn’t know what else to say.

“In return for sponsorship, one must serve two years in the king’s army, but I—” he stops, looking sheepish again. “I stayed on longer. I don’t mind, because few others can translate and write as I can, and I’m not doing anything that I wouldn’t be happy to do outside the cavalry.”

“So that’s why you joined.”

“That’s why I joined. I owe very much to Damiyr-samar.”

She falls quiet for a moment, gaze falling on Damiyr again, on the slope of his shoulders, the metallic glint of the scimitar hooked in his belt in the evening sun, the flutter of the ends of his red keffiyah in the breeze. He looks the same as he had yesterday, as all the days before, and yet Cleo can’t seem to reconcile any of it anymore.

“Of course, he won’t let me repay him.” Arim laughs, shaking his head. Then he points very suddenly at a bird streaking through the sky, and says, in Nerahati, “What’s that?”

Qarayyid,” Cleo says, but her eyes fall immediately back on Damiyr.

.

iii.
hold on to me as we go
as we roll down this unfamiliar road
and although this wave is stringing us along
just know you're not alone
cause i'm gonna make this place your home


.

They’re in another inn, on the outskirts of some village called Hefiyyah. This one has a communal sleeping area, with rows of beds on either wall, leaving Cleo to uncertainly observe the complete lack of separation between the sexes. In all of their previous inns, they’d split the rooms down the middle, with the men taking one room and the women, including her, taking another.

In her lessons with Arim, she’d learned that the Nerahati had very few gendered words. Even though they translate mallaha as king for her, because the current mallaha was male, they don’t have a concept of kings versus queens; the mallaha is the mallaha whether the position holder is male or female, just like the mallada, the ruler’s consort, could be either sex. They only impose gender on a word with a conditioner, avar for male and adhar for female, and very few of them ever bother to mark the difference unless it was somehow relevant.

And in the Nerahati’s eyes, gender is very rarely relevant.

Now, as she stands watching the men and women of their company fall with relief into their beds, mixed together with all the inn’s other patrons, Cleo has to wonder if they’d split the rooms as they did before solely for her benefit.

It’s a strange feeling. She’d already realized that they were moving at a much slower pace than the soldiers were capable of only because of her and her inferior stamina, that they always stopped for breaks whenever she was feeling particularly worn out, without any mention of it at all.

She’d almost told them, once or twice, not to hold back on her account—but the pace felt challenging enough for her already, and she isn’t too proud to accept her limits.

But now she realizes that someone had taken very careful consideration of her feelings. That they were still taking very careful consideration of her feelings, and that’s the strange part.

She also realizes that they’re missing Damiyr; he hasn’t come back from the common room yet, though it’s deep enough into the night to warrant it.

Pulling her boots back on, she slips from the sleeping area and finds him sitting in front of the waning fire, a mug dangling by the rim in his fingers. He looks up when she enters, though she doesn’t remember making a sound.

“Cleo,” he says, with that same, thick Nerahati accent that gives her name at least two extra syllables. He is without his keffiyah, in just his riding pants and qamis, rolled up to the elbow; his skin glows brown and gold in the light of the fire.

“Can’t sleep?” she asks, trying not to sound sheepish. In hindsight, she’s not sure why she decided to seek him out, now of all times.

He blithely tilts his head to the side, blinking. “I haven’t tried yet.”

Smartass. She shoots him a withering glare as she sits down on the low cushion next to his, tucking her knees against her chest.

“Do these arrangements bother you?” he asks, before she can open her mouth in retort. “This is the only hostel in this area—it has no private rooms.”

“Do you always get private rooms for me?” she asks. Her voice sounds very tiny to her ears.

He raises his eyebrows. “I… assumed it would bother you, to share a room with men.”

The confirmation does nothing to slake her uneasiness, knowing that Damiyr goes through such trouble for the sake of her comfort. Not many people would do that for her, especially people who generally consider her a burden; it’s her fault that they have to move so slowly, that, in all likelihood, they stop at hostels and inns in the first place, that he’s forced to teach a foreign merchant’s daughter how to do simple things like ride a horse and wield a knife and build a fire, things that must come as easily to him as breathing.

She’s not ashamed of her inability to do the things she was never taught, she tells herself. She’s not ashamed of the comfortable life her parents worked hard to give her, though she never quite realized how comfortable it was until she came to Nerahati.

And yet… and yet. She picks at a stray thread on her sleeve.

“I don’t mind,” she says, even though she does, just a little. But it’s a small thing that she can bear if it makes Damiyr’s life a little easier. She thinks it might even be a small thing she could grow accustomed to, given the chance; she’s grown accustomed to many things here.

She’s grown fond of them, even.

When she looks up, Damiyr is considering her very gravely, eyes amber in the firelight, and even though she’s so often subject to his stare, there’s something about it now, so close, that undoes her just a little. She pulls at the loose thread again, nearly unraveling all the stitching on her sleeve, and he puts his hand over hers, so gently, but the contact feels like she’s jumped into a frigid winter lake.

“Do you mind?” he asks softly, but he’s looking at his hand covering hers.

He’s not talking about the sleeping arrangements. Cleo traces with her eyes the curving lines of the hallah on his collarbone, before they disappear into the collar of his qamis, and tries to quell the shaking of her hands.

“I don’t. I—” Her tongue feels too big for her mouth. She swallows. “I don’t mind at all.”

He nods, very slowly, and shifts, setting his mug on the floor with a heavy clank so that he can take her hand in both of his. Cleo holds her breath without quite realizing.

“I’m glad,” he says, grasping her sleeve and smoothing out the hem where it bunched in her anxious attentions. He yanks the stray thread until it breaks, and it’s like her sleeve was newly mended. “My wish—my hope is that you enjoy our company.”

“I do.” That, she has no doubt of.

His eyes implore hers, as if searching for the lie. But after a moment, he releases her hand, almost reluctantly, and brings himself to his feet. It happens quickly, but Cleo is almost certain she sees the specter of a smile tug at the corners of his lips, before he holds out his hand for her to take, to help her up.

“That is all I can ask,” he says.

His grip is sure and strong. Cleo feels lighter than she has in days as he lifts her to her feet. “It’s good to know you can ask instead of demand.”

Now, she is absolutely certain that he smiles, lopsided and roguish and so very, distractingly handsome.

And she knows that fond isn’t quite enough, either.
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[personal profile] smithereens
.

.

.

She is completely unsuited for the desert; Damiyr can see it before they even leave the palace. He must coerce her into pants for riding, with the concession that she have a long enough qamis to serve for a knee-length skirt; must tie the keffiyah about her head for her so that it covers her mouth and nose, protection from the dust and wind as well as the sun; must make a stirrup of his laced fingers in order to lift her into the saddle of a very gentle, very placid mare they used to train the greenest of their children, while his company looked on in faint alarm.

Looking at her now, wilted in the saddle under the unrepentant mid-morning sun, he begins to think she’s even greener than their children. She would be sore to the high heavens if she continued to sit like that--she would be sore either way, he reminds himself, but enough time in the saddle would cure her of that if only she had a proper seat.

He wants to correct her, but hesitates only because he’s still chafing at the fact that he’ll be roped to this useless girl for the foreseeable future, at least until they find her father. Just the sight of the long, impractical river of hair down the length of her back is irritating him.

It’s not specifically her fault, he tells himself in a weak attempt at kindness; it’s her parents’ damned fault for not teaching her even the most basic of survival skills, though he supposed foreign merchants had that luxury. He wonders, briefly, what it is she does all day, whether she’s been put to any kind of work at all--or if she just starts gallivanting over the gap on well-intentioned whims.

“I think the two of you will get along very well,” his mother-samar had said, a twinkle in her eye that never failed to make Damiyr reel back in dismay.

“How can we get along at all?” he’d said, scowling. “I’m not a nursemaid.”

But his mother had only laughed and took his face between her hands to press a kiss to his forehead. “Be careful, my son.”

“Always.”

And now Damiyr eyes the khanjar jostling against her mare’s rump and wonders if she’s ever held a weapon in her life, since she apparently hadn’t thought to bring one of her own when she went chasing after her father. The knife was one the royal household had provided, along with nearly everything else in her pack.

A nursemaid indeed, he thinks sourly.

“Ride with your back straight,” he says curtly, ignoring Shahzadeh’s amused glance. “And use your knees for balance, not your bottom.”

He finds spiteful pleasure in Cleo’s indignant blush.

.

.

.

When they make camp for the night--when Damiyr and his company make camp, and Damiyr directs the girl in the menial tasks--he pulls the khanjar and sheath from its holster while Cleo watches him with apprehension in her eyes. She’s still sunburnt from her foray alone into the desert, before he’d scooped her up and been forced to make for the capital; any skin she’d had exposed is an unnaturally bright pink in the waning sunlight, and he wonders if she’s pained by it. Certainly it must annoy her.

That does not bring such spiteful pleasure.

“Come,” he says, while the others are otherwise occupied, “I’ll show you how to use this. Better you know how to defend yourself than be a complete burden.”

“Is something really going to attack us out here?” she asks, not without some sarcasm in her voice.

“You answered that for yourself at the oasis.”

Her mouth presses into a thin line, but she says nothing; Damiyr beckons her and says again, “Come.”

She rises to her feet and gingerly takes the knife from his proffered hand, still in its sheath. He’d picked a smaller khanjar for her, not the finest their armoury had to offer, but serviceable and well-balanced and manageable for a beginner.

But the way she holds it seems to suggest it would come alive and bite her. Damiyr sighs and arranges her fingers around the hilt in the proper way.

“This is a khanjar--dagger is your word, I think,” he explains, covering her hand with his on the hilt. The khanjar is too thick at the tang and too curved at the blade to be called a dagger of her people, but it’s the closest approximation he can make. “It’s like a lover--do not hold it too tightly, or it will pull you down where it goes, but also do not hold it too loosely, or it will leave you when you least expect it.”

Her cheeks turn as pink as her sunburn, but she nods determinedly. Her grip is too tight when he lets go, her knuckles white with strain, and he flicks the back of her hand with his finger.

“Looser,” he says.

“But--”

She is afraid of it, and probably rightly so. She is afraid to cut herself or most of all someone else, and so she holds the khanjar as if it will turn on her at any moment, as if it will leap out of her hand and cause harm.

“Trust me,” he says, more gently this time in spite of himself, because he knows the feeling. Even now, it gives him no pleasure to take up arms against anyone, even his enemies. “The khanjar should become like--how would you say...? Another part of your arm. Another limb of your body. You are its master, and you tell it where to go and how to move.”

She stares at him a moment, she of the wide, bottomless eyes, as if coming to a decision, and makes a conscious effort to loosen her grip, even if only minimally.

“I’ve never used… anything like this before, so start from the beginning,” she says cautiously.

“I supposed,” he says dryly, but doesn’t give her room to answer before he flicks the back of her hand again. “Looser.”

She groans.

.

.

.

He teaches her how to mount her horse more easily, and without risking tilting the saddle; teaches her how to ride without soreness; how to make camp and then break it without leaving any trace of themselves. He teaches her a great many things, with Shahzadeh’s help, and he’s not sure whether he’s pleasantly surprised or disappointed that she learns quickly and he only has to repeat things once or twice before she picks them up. She occasionally complains, but never in earnest, and never resists his instruction for more than a few breaths, even if it’s with reluctance.

She is the most reluctant when he teaches her how to wield the khanjar, how to grip it, how to maintain her stance, how to dodge and slash and stab and throw. Her grip is still too tight even after his constant correction, but that is a problem only time and familiarity with the weapon can really solve. He’s far more interested in giving her the means to defend herself, if necessary, long enough to give her the chance to run.

“Where did you learn all this?” she asks one night, tipping her head to indicate his own khanjar, at his feet, and his scimitar, slung naked over his lap as he polishes it. She is turning her sheathed khanjar over in her hands, brushing her fingers over the silver work.

The others lift their heads curiously, but Cleo speaks lowly and only Shahzadeh and Arim could possibly follow their conversation anyway.

“Weaponry?”

“You’re all soldiers, aren’t you? You’re their captain?”

So it hasn’t escaped her how he’s treated by the others. He doesn’t have the heart to correct her, to tell her that their reverence was only partly because he was their commanding officer.

Aswaran salar,” he says. “I do not know if you would call it captain, but yes.”

Shahzadeh snorts loudly, over by Tabazin. Damiyr warns her with a glare.

Cleo doesn’t miss a beat, squinting her eyes suspiciously. “Aren’t you a little young to be a captain?”

He bristles, mostly because it’s to her credit that she’s wary, even without knowing he’d underreported his rank immensely. “When I first joined the cavalry, the damned wizard-king had just split the earth as it is now, and in that--we lost many good soldiers in the war, and with the gap we were at the mercy of brigands and foreign soldiers who couldn’t escape our borders even if they wanted to. Many of us became captains in those fights.”

“Oh.” She pauses, still fingering her khanjar thoughtfully. “What made you join the cavalry?”

“It seemed better than joining the infantry.” That’s true, at least. He doesn’t care to tell her that he still didn’t have much choice either way, as the infantry was below the mallaha’s sons, even third sons. He doesn’t care to tell her a lot of things, and for reasons he can’t really explain even to himself.

Mercifully, Shahzadeh is more absorbed in Tabazin to interrupt again, and Cleo seems to realize that she’s touched upon a dicey subject, because she doesn’t open her mouth again long enough for Barzayn to laugh so hard at one of Arim’s stories that he falls over.

And it feels almost natural, the seven of them.

tantivy.

Sep. 1st, 2013 03:46 am
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[personal profile] smithereens
Cleo finds him sitting in front of their modest fire, struggling to unwind the bandage around his shoulder with one hand. He’d heard her returning, of course, the expression he shows her sullen as she walks into the firelight.

“Here, let me do that,” she says, in a tone she hopes will broker no argument. She knows enough of Damiyr to know he resists help from others at almost all costs.

It seems to work, since he hands her the roll of bandage without protest, and doesn’t so much as wince when she kneels down and begins to undress his wound. “As you wish.”

When she finally pulls away the old dressing, she inspects the wound as the doctor told her to do, looking for irritation or infection—bruising was healthy, the old woman had said, but not raw red or a greenish tinge—and finding none. The large gash is healing nicely, even if it still pains her secondhand to look at it.

“Does it hurt?” she asks, pressing the tip of her finger very carefully against the stitches, to make sure they were still holding fast; he only shoots her an unamused look, one eyebrow arched crisply.

She laughs. “Nevermind.”

“I’ve had worse,” he concedes finally, after she’d started wrapping the clean bandages around his shoulder.

“I hope it doesn’t ruin your hallah,” she says soberly, eyes on the intricate, curving dark lines that disappear little by little under the white linen. “The scar.”

“It can be remade,” he says. After a pause, he adds wryly, “My brother will likely be pleased, to have such a mark through his hallah.”

She smiles at that, touching gentle fingers to the ink on his skin without thinking. “Your brother’s—which one?”

“My second-brother, Samur. Madiq will be jealous.” His hand, at her side, opens and closes absently, and Cleo remembers him telling her that the tattoo that covers his arm almost completely from elbow to the back of his hand belonged to his eldest brother—his brothers had fought over which piece of Damiyr’s sword arm they would take.

She moves around to his back, then, and ties the knot behind his shoulder so that it does not chafe at the wound; she tries not to stare too conspicuously long at the great lion inked across the expanse of his back, under the guise of smoothing down the bandage.

When she circles back around to sit beside him, he catches her wrist in his other hand, stopping her in her tracks, forcing her to kneel in front of him again.

“Damiyr?”

“I thank you,” he says, not reluctantly so much as gravely, a deep crease between his eyebrows. “For taking me to the medicine woman—for caring for me. I owe you my life.”

Something about the intensity of his gaze makes her mouth go dry, and Cleo swallows thickly, attempting a smile. “I was only paying you back for saving my life. With the bandits.”

His frown deepens, a dispute on his tongue. “I would have—”

“You jumped in front of me. I don’t know what else you would call it.”

“I am still in your debt, for what you did. My father, my mother—my family would agree.”

“Then I’m in your debt too, aren’t I?”

His frown becomes a scowl, and she tries not to let her grin grow out of control.

“Stubborn,” he says finally, sighing.

“I could say the same of you.”

He doesn’t reply, so that the silence lingers and she realizes with a start that his hand is still gripping her wrist, and that his thumb is tracing small circles on the inside of it. His gaze is intense again, piercing, his brow furrowed in thought, and she feels suddenly a little light-headed, almost dizzy.

Then he leans very slightly in, close enough that she can feel the warmth of his proximity, warmer even than the fire at her back, and her breath catches in her throat. The ghost of a smile plays on his lips, as if he’s keeping some great secret; she’s annoyed by how suddenly transparent and shy she’s become, but unable to find very much of her voice all the same.

“Damiyr…”

His eyes flicker to her lips as they move, briefly, and that simple motion seems to set her heart into an even more furious rhythm. He releases her wrist only to lift his hand and tuck her hair behind her ear, with far more tenderness than she ever would’ve expected from those hands.

“This isn’t how I expected to repay you,” she says dryly, finally discovering her voice again. It feels as though she is standing, breathless, on the edge of a precipice, and everything about the closeness of his body and the brush of his fingers and the softness in his eyes is urging her to jump into the glaring unknown.

“I told you, I don’t expect to be repaid,” he says mildly, the smile still tugging at the corner of his mouth.

Something about that characteristic pigheadedness sets the decision in her mind; without hesitation, she leans forward to close the distance between them.
smithereens: (Default)
[personal profile] smithereens
“What kind of idiot runs from a mountain lion?”

Damiyr unceremoniously dumps the girl from his saddlebow as soon as the mountain lion stalks off; Khamis prances underneath him, still riled from the encounter, but Damiyr dismounts as soon as the foreigner’s feet hit the ground, a fluid movement that brings them face to face. It gratifies him to know that he is nearly a head taller than her.

“I didn’t know!” she insists, still slightly unbalanced and blinking in the harsh sun.

“That is the first thing you do not do! You’re from Elyium, obviously,” he says with disdain, glancing pointedly down at her skirts. He came just in time to watch her fall over them, as if she was a child just learning to walk.

Typical. Most of the foreigners he encountered at least had the sense to dress appropriately for the desert and travel in caravans, but there were still many that crossed the split and expected uneventful, if hot, journeys. The desert was unforgiving, and it was dangerous. And she was alone.

“How was I supposed to know?” she asks, almost imperiously, and pushes locks of her ridiculously long hair over her shoulder. Damiyr feels a headache blossom behind his brow; this is not the situation he expected to find himself in today.

“You shouldn’t have come here, bakah,” he says. “Whatever your reasons, it is not worth your dying.”

“I’m not going to die. I have to—”

“I will take you to Hamitha and you will find a caravan back to the border,” he interrupts, in a tone he hopes brokers no arguments. It is a false hope. Her cheeks puff stubbornly and she wraps a hand next to his on Khamis’ reins, so that Damiyr cannot turn away. Khamis eyes her with interest.

Traitor.

“You don’t understand,” she says. “I need to do this. I could even use your help—”

She falters when he hooks two fingers in the band that hides his nose and mouth and pulls it down, revealing his scowl. Damiyr doesn’t know why he bothers to argue with her anymore, when it would likely be easier to throw her back over his saddle and tie her there until they reached the outpost. He supposes it would be even easier to simply leave her here, but his damned conscience knows she likely wouldn’t survive the night.

“No,” he says. “I am taking you to Hamitha.” It is less than half a day’s ride from here; he would be rid of this Elyium girl by nightfall, and then go about his life as if she’d never existed in it at all.

“Fine.” Her lips are pressed together thinly, but she doesn’t say anything else. He eyes her warily.

“Fine.”

Khamis chooses that moment to huff and lip at her hair, fine behavior from a pedigree stallion, and the girl smiles for the first time. Damiyr feels his scowl deepen.

“Get on,” he says, ignoring the enthusiastic way she strokes Khamis’ nose, while his treacherous horse shakes his head in ecstasy at the attention and presses closer to her. “We’re going.”

“At least you like me,” she says in sotto voce, “unlike your rider.”

“It’s Damiyr.” The words are out of his mouth before he can stop himself, and she looks over at him with mild curiosity while he curses sudden lapses of judgment. There’s no use for names if he’s only going to foist her off on the outpost in a few hours.

“I’m Cleo,” she says.

“That cannot be your name,” he says. For one, it’s ridiculous, though he guesses he shouldn’t expect much more from Elyium parents who couldn’t even raise their child with a hint of sense. “Kaliooh,” he tries, surprised when all she does is laugh.

“Close enough, I suppose,” she says, shrugging her shoulders. Khamis stares at him with a beady brown eye. “Damiyr.”

There’s a curious drawn-out lilt to the way she says his name, but it’s not so far off the mark that Damiyr isn’t irrationally annoyed by it anyway, by everything about her. He puts one foot in the stirrup and hoists himself easily into the saddle, before reaching out a hand towards her.

“That’s enough, bakah. Get up behind me.”

She mounts a little less easily, to his spiteful pleasure, but soon enough she is seated behind him with her arms around his waist, and he ignores the pale clasp of her hands at his chest and tells himself that he doesn’t care that her skin will turn pink with sunburn as he spurs Khamis into a purposeful trot towards Hamitha.

damiyr.

Feb. 22nd, 2013 10:15 pm
smithereens: (Default)
[personal profile] smithereens
Damiyr Shaharin
(Damiyr Qi'shaharin???)
early 20's
third son of the king
secret sorcerer (fire)

very tall - 6'1
broad shoulders, powerfully built
sandy blonde hair, tan skin
hazel eyes

father: sulaiman
mother: taamayr
brothers: madiq & samur

restless, prone to fits of wanderlust
kind of a jerk, but mostly in a standoffish way
keeps most people at a distance
crouching grouch, hidden woobie
reserved, slow to warm to people, actual sarcastic sassypants
was always expected to (and eventually did) become a soldier, in order to best serve his eldest brother
too bad military life didn't really agree with him
struggles with his purpose in life / what he actually wants to do, because being useful is too abstract to be a personal goal
is actually unexpectedly competent with soldiering: swordfighting, archery, horseback riding, battle strategies and tactics, etc.
his mother urged him to keep his sorcery a secret, to the point where even his father and brothers don't know the truth
as a result, he hasn't used his powers in years except in little secret practiced bursts, and his technique is unpolished at best, wildly destructive at worst
loves nothing more than to climb on the back of a horse and run tantivy into the desert as if it was swallowing him whole

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