WHO: Gwen, Adalia + Guilfoyle & Mystery Guest WHAT: Gathering a rare herb. WHEN: Some time this month, handwavily. WHERE: The Nadashin Marshes. NOTES: n/a
The beat of wings overhead and Gwenaëlle, dazed, oblivious momentarily to Guilfoyle struggling (not for much longer) with the last breaths of the wyvern, “Did you see the bird?”
—she flinches at his hands, pain sharpening focus in this moment and not wherever she was before, knuckles white clutching the bow and cheekbone and temple turning deeper, muddier colours where she'd collided hard with unsympathetic foliage. It hurts, and she's pale with it but pulled taut with triumph, too. The impact of arrow in beast still reverberates behind her sternum, rage a fist she's learning to wield and not a mouth sewn shut.
"Yes," He saw the bird. It’s entirely possible that Alan notices birds before he notices people, or the time of day, or whether the room is on fire. "Did you know him?"
What mangled muscles? They’re talking about birds. A hand to her face, slick with her own blood (as holy as the creatures dying about them, as much one). The other takes a tear in her sleeve, rips cloth free. There's no hope of soaking all the blood, and this isn't water to pour over a wound; enough death in it already.
The last of the wyvern's life slides out upon Guilfoyle's knives. The red thread winding through their little circle rips at once tight as cord, unspools itself into flesh with fever-heat. It's imprecise. Bruises bloom brown-green-yellow-gone before the marks of teeth begin to mend themselves. Awareness clears and —
That may not be ideal. The bow's good, for all its absent string: It's something to grip. This isn't pleasant.
It's not enough, either. Skin crawls with stolen life, restitches meat to bone, and Alan turns to bite his own hand, chews a great rend in old scar with the unflinching expression of old practice. Hurt can be turned outwards, but there are limits, and he's already overspent. The eroded edges of the Fade have worn a little farther from his grasp. Can't do more without digging in his own guts, or another's. That Guilfoyle might volunteer doesn't mean he's about to ask.
Gwen won't be walking steadily for a bit, and sickness is certain without minding. Adalia might see to that upkeep, if she's the skill — else they may need to make new contacts. Alan shoots a glance over his shoulder for the wolf.
Takes a while sometimes, to come out of a place. Takes a while to remember your own.
The wolf stands over its kill, one massive paw planted on the wyvern's partially-removed foreleg and rent chest, maw bloody and dripping. Her head lifted and ears pricked to attention, they swivel this way and that as she listens for more enemies. None seem to be forthcoming, and the wolf gradually relaxes, licking its chops of blood as it turns to lope toward Alan and Gwenaëlle. The human she sniffs at, looking down at the wound in her leg —
and suddenly Adalia stands where the wolf had been, dropping to her knees next to Gwenaëlle, heedless of the muck. Some things fade with the sloughed-off shape; the wyvern blood around her mouth does not.
"Are you stable, can you walk?"
She might be able to give Gwenaëlle slightly more mobility, but this wound is larger than she can heal in one day.
Pain strains her voice—awareness is terrible, her knuckles turning white around the bow that she is unlikely to release her grip on any time soon—but she is sufficiently stable to bark a laugh, to say, “Apparently I know the wolf as well,” which means yes, of the bird, or at least she thinks so—
It couldn't be, but maybe it was. It's gone, now, when she looks; maybe it's stupid that she looked at all. She doesn't believe in those things, she's sure, except perhaps while she's bleeding.
“I can try,” she says, but Guilfoyle is already wrapping an arm around her waist and lifting her from the water, only a tightening of his jaw betraying how much more effort doing so requires of him now than it once might have.
The shift hurts, too, but she grits her teeth through it. It's Guilfoyle who says, “Your own wyvern bite will need attention,” to Alan, impassively rewriting history. What blood magic.
It says something, maybe, that Adalia didn't even notice Alan's own wound, too preoccupied with Gwenaëlle's. She pushes to her feet, looking between Gwen and Alan with a rather torn expression — she can only do so much, and if she spreads her limited healing abilities between both of them she can do even less.
Not to mention that that hardly looks like a wyvern bite, but that's not particularly important at the moment, is it.
"I could... help? With that? I can try to help Gwenaëlle walk better or I can try to close that up some, or I could do both with less efficacy, what would be most helpful?"
no subject
—she flinches at his hands, pain sharpening focus in this moment and not wherever she was before, knuckles white clutching the bow and cheekbone and temple turning deeper, muddier colours where she'd collided hard with unsympathetic foliage. It hurts, and she's pale with it but pulled taut with triumph, too. The impact of arrow in beast still reverberates behind her sternum, rage a fist she's learning to wield and not a mouth sewn shut.
(This is probably fine.)
no subject
What mangled muscles? They’re talking about birds. A hand to her face, slick with her own blood (as holy as the creatures dying about them, as much one). The other takes a tear in her sleeve, rips cloth free. There's no hope of soaking all the blood, and this isn't water to pour over a wound; enough death in it already.
The last of the wyvern's life slides out upon Guilfoyle's knives. The red thread winding through their little circle rips at once tight as cord, unspools itself into flesh with fever-heat. It's imprecise. Bruises bloom brown-green-yellow-gone before the marks of teeth begin to mend themselves. Awareness clears and —
That may not be ideal. The bow's good, for all its absent string: It's something to grip. This isn't pleasant.
It's not enough, either. Skin crawls with stolen life, restitches meat to bone, and Alan turns to bite his own hand, chews a great rend in old scar with the unflinching expression of old practice. Hurt can be turned outwards, but there are limits, and he's already overspent. The eroded edges of the Fade have worn a little farther from his grasp. Can't do more without digging in his own guts, or another's. That Guilfoyle might volunteer doesn't mean he's about to ask.
Gwen won't be walking steadily for a bit, and sickness is certain without minding. Adalia might see to that upkeep, if she's the skill — else they may need to make new contacts. Alan shoots a glance over his shoulder for the wolf.
Takes a while sometimes, to come out of a place. Takes a while to remember your own.
no subject
and suddenly Adalia stands where the wolf had been, dropping to her knees next to Gwenaëlle, heedless of the muck. Some things fade with the sloughed-off shape; the wyvern blood around her mouth does not.
"Are you stable, can you walk?"
She might be able to give Gwenaëlle slightly more mobility, but this wound is larger than she can heal in one day.
no subject
It couldn't be, but maybe it was. It's gone, now, when she looks; maybe it's stupid that she looked at all. She doesn't believe in those things, she's sure, except perhaps while she's bleeding.
“I can try,” she says, but Guilfoyle is already wrapping an arm around her waist and lifting her from the water, only a tightening of his jaw betraying how much more effort doing so requires of him now than it once might have.
The shift hurts, too, but she grits her teeth through it. It's Guilfoyle who says, “Your own wyvern bite will need attention,” to Alan, impassively rewriting history. What blood magic.
no subject
Not to mention that that hardly looks like a wyvern bite, but that's not particularly important at the moment, is it.
"I could... help? With that? I can try to help Gwenaëlle walk better or I can try to close that up some, or I could do both with less efficacy, what would be most helpful?"