3rd Vhalar, 717
"I have absolutely no idea what you are saying to me right now," Faith said with a grin as he breathed in. He was, there was no doubt in her mind, adorable when he was passionate about things which he was learning about. "I mean, let me be clear, I don't need to understand." Thank all the Immortals for that, because he might as well have been speaking in Rakahi. He could, she knew, a little. Maybe he was just inserting words here and there. "I just need to know what we're doing here?"
This was her own fault, she realised. She'd made the mistake of walking into their bedroom. That was where she'd found him, surrounded by bits of parchment, some fruit and bits of wood and string. There were things going on here, she did not doubt, which his wonderful brain was desperately trying to communicate, but he refused to believe the simple truth. "The thing to keep in mind," Faith put the cup of tea she'd brought him down in a relatively safe spot, then sat on their bed and looked at him with earnest silver eyes, "is that I am a halfwit in comparison to you when it comes to this. However, I understand enough now to be able to help you." She motioned to the cup of tea, her expression softening as she did. "The first time in my life, my whole life, Padraig, that I ate or drank something made by a freeborn person was an arc ago totrial. You made me a cup of tea." She smiled at him, sure that he would remember. "And asked me what you should do, should a slave curtsy to you. We agreed that for you to curtsy back would be a bad plan."
She'd turned up at his door, carrying books and full of sass and desperate to learn. When he'd asked what she wanted to learn, she'd told him the truth. Everything. All of it and they'd discussed why she believed it was foolish to restrict the education of slaves. Turned out, he'd been right on that one, she considered. Although, "You were wrong you know," a strange thing to say, considering what she'd thought. But then, she'd changed her mind. "I didn't want to be free because I got an education. It was never about that. I stopped being content the moment I met you." Her grin turned wicked as she realised what she'd just said. "You know what I mean. A whole arc, Padraig. You have been making me happy for a whole arc." And somehow, they had gone from tutor and student, freeborn and slave topreparing for their wedding with their child growing inside her.
"So, you want to make things, props and teaching aids for your presentation to Professor Dashiell?" Faith asked, gesturing around at what seemed to her eyes to be the chaos he was working in. "You want to present what you found to the Professor? How do you want to do that?" Of course in asking that, she really meant the next five words, plain and simple. "How can I help you?" What ever he wanted, if she had the skills to help him, then she would.
This was her own fault, she realised. She'd made the mistake of walking into their bedroom. That was where she'd found him, surrounded by bits of parchment, some fruit and bits of wood and string. There were things going on here, she did not doubt, which his wonderful brain was desperately trying to communicate, but he refused to believe the simple truth. "The thing to keep in mind," Faith put the cup of tea she'd brought him down in a relatively safe spot, then sat on their bed and looked at him with earnest silver eyes, "is that I am a halfwit in comparison to you when it comes to this. However, I understand enough now to be able to help you." She motioned to the cup of tea, her expression softening as she did. "The first time in my life, my whole life, Padraig, that I ate or drank something made by a freeborn person was an arc ago totrial. You made me a cup of tea." She smiled at him, sure that he would remember. "And asked me what you should do, should a slave curtsy to you. We agreed that for you to curtsy back would be a bad plan."
She'd turned up at his door, carrying books and full of sass and desperate to learn. When he'd asked what she wanted to learn, she'd told him the truth. Everything. All of it and they'd discussed why she believed it was foolish to restrict the education of slaves. Turned out, he'd been right on that one, she considered. Although, "You were wrong you know," a strange thing to say, considering what she'd thought. But then, she'd changed her mind. "I didn't want to be free because I got an education. It was never about that. I stopped being content the moment I met you." Her grin turned wicked as she realised what she'd just said. "You know what I mean. A whole arc, Padraig. You have been making me happy for a whole arc." And somehow, they had gone from tutor and student, freeborn and slave topreparing for their wedding with their child growing inside her.
"So, you want to make things, props and teaching aids for your presentation to Professor Dashiell?" Faith asked, gesturing around at what seemed to her eyes to be the chaos he was working in. "You want to present what you found to the Professor? How do you want to do that?" Of course in asking that, she really meant the next five words, plain and simple. "How can I help you?" What ever he wanted, if she had the skills to help him, then she would.