Entry tags:
( closed ) all you have is your fire
WHO: Magni & Lakshmi
WHAT: banter banter banter
WHEN: week or so after the return to Kirkwall
WHERE: Gallows
NOTES: none for now
WHAT: banter banter banter
WHEN: week or so after the return to Kirkwall
WHERE: Gallows
NOTES: none for now
Inevitably, she imagined, Lakshmi would wish that she'd asked to meet her elsewhere. Somewhere inside, more private. Hidden, in a way, though her Rani insisted that it was a matter for Magni's own— not safety, necessarily. Credibility? To not be seen speaking to the radical rifter who was so strange and scandalous after seeming so comparatively normal. Magni, however, has decided she doesn't give much of a shit.
She wants to be outside. These months and months in Kirkwall have ground at her, she realises. Taking away parts of her, and she does not want to be reforged by a place like this. It is time to go home, at least for a while, to breathe in the air of the Frostbacks so she can better heal in the cradle of the Mountain-Father.
The gardens of the Gallows are a poor substitute, but that is where she sits, the crutches she is reliant on resting on the rough wood of the bench she's claimed, torso wrapped around and supported as best it can be to help the injury at her lower back. Even when sitting she seems almost to loom amongst the roses.

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It makes it easier to touch her when the world might see - for surely that woman who was Manikarnika never cared about such things. She loved as herself, and that was enough. Carefully, her hand reaches to touch Magni's cheek, turns her face up with a smile that is not -- full, but it creases the corners of her eyes earnestly.
"Truly?"
Lakshmi lets go to take her seat, beside her. Her hand smoothing the material under herself with a sweep down the back of her legs. Tucking them in neatly underneath her. Her ankles crossing, perching her weight on her toes. That half readiness, that press knifelike on its edge. Ready, ready, ready. The what for didn't matter so much as the suddenness that it might come.
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All of her might advocate it, if she was not so weary, not so sore. It is not the strong thing to do, she knows, but sometimes there is wisdom in allowing oneself to draw some strength from others. She only hoped that they did not harm each other more, with the comfort.
Magni opens her eyes, then, and her brows raise in a silent question. And you?
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Her own response is - brief, a tightness in her mouth, an exhaustion that flickers like a candle flame, there and gone. The still wrapped bandages around her hand that - the fingers throb from. They're not there. They're not there. She must tell herself as her mind lies to her over and over again. They were not there, and she should be lucky for the blackwater that no infection spread further.
So the response is simple - "I have survived worse things." And that will be the only sort of pity she ever takes on the matter.
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"You will do more than survive." Certain, steady. "You'll thrive." (Even if Magni has to see to it through her own stubborn, bloody-mindedness. She swears it, an oath.)
"You're far more than any injury could take from you."
She's here to wield love and support, but no pity.
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But that someone... took a moment. How easy it could be, just, quiet, calm. How easily Magni was such a thing when so often Lakshmi felt like a storm beating against the walls of a house. Too loud, too much.
"How could I do otherwise with such kind words?"
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Even so, after some moments, she exhales weightily. "I... asked you here to tell you something. Good news, I think."
Though she falls silent again, frowning very slightly, as she tries to wrangle her words. "I decided to heed your advise." From before. It feels very long ago, now. "And return to Talonhold, for a time."
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"It is good." Cradling them close, half turned up gaze under her brows, then drops them down, lashes against the curve of her cheek. "When do you leave?"
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"When Varmas arrives." Today, or maybe tomorrow, but soon is in her tone, as she watches Lakshmi's eyelashes, how they rest against her skin. "He knows my faith. These mages are too scared to heal properly, they scatter like dandelion fuzz if they even think of a spirit. I must see the shamans." If I am to smith again, if I am to heal, if my body is to obey me as I wish it to.
Silence, though not so much as she might usually offer. "And I... when you are so close all I wish is to go to you. If I am to think of all you told me and decide what our path might hold, I need to— be the dandelion."
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How she bathes in this comfort of it, selfishly. Their hands held together, settled between them, turning her head up to stretch into the soft brush, and give it in return. Taking long deep breathes to suck in the air.
"They do that," but isn't sure she trusts Magni's shamans anymore than she does the physicians here. Not for the first, and not for the last, she wished Tesla was here. "But promise me, before you put anything on your body, boil it in water first." That was what he had said was best, wasn't it? Something about some little things in the skin.
"As you must, walk as many paths as you need, for as long as you must. Of all things I have, time is the only one I can be sure of."
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She sets aside seriousness for a moment, head canting very slightly at Lakshmi's advice. Slowly, with a seriousness that is entirely inappropriate:
"What good will my clothes be to wear if they're wet?"
(Remember that time, Lakshmi, that time you spoke about wise words?)
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I hope you are bloody right about this Tesla. She didn't want to look half mad for no reason, unlike usual, looking mad for only sort of a reason.
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"You are a strange woman, Manikarnika, but for you?" For you, it will be done.
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"How long do you think you will be?"
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Magni gently tips Lakshmi's chin up, to look at her. "I will return."
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"Do not promise such a thing. It is your choice. I meant it. You owe me nothing, not even your return."
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Because the world was so much bigger than both of them, and because she would see Lakshmi safe, no matter what happened between them.
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But to not draw away, not even a little. To feel that soft puff of breath on her cheek. Warming her skin against the winter chill, even where the new scar is dulled from feeling much. To take that steadiness that Magni so simply was, and lean back into it like a crutch she could never admit to openly needing, but so gladly leans into. "Saawariya."
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Take great care of yourself, Manikarnika. Talonhold does not forgive those who allow harm to befall those precious to it. That is what she wishes she might say, the sentiment she might convey, but her words feel stolen from her, and her throat hoarse.