May 17 2022, 01:37 AM
It was an offbeat day. There were about a million thoughts passing through Khavur, an information highway circulating between two brains, and an insurmountable, swelling tune from the past was managing to dominate every single one of them. It couldn't work like this. Couldn't guard, couldn't hunt, couldn't think of all its wonderful, devious plots, plans, pots, pans, clanging clanging music. It needed that music, more than ever before, and it couldn't ask for it from anyone else. It needed those clumsy feet and those gentle claws that it just couldn't reach. It needed the birds. It needed the music.
So it left for Cepheus.
And they knew, maybe this wasn't the right time. Maybe every oily machine clattering down the infernal electric railways of its mindscape had no business derailing here. The traffic, the heat and the tension, they were a prelude to a tsunami, earthquake, an all-out war. And he had to focus. So many things were reliant on his success, on his patience as well as his action, his direct spearhead, but now even the honking was coming into tune. The fluttering of bird wings, like an orchestra of the way looking at a butterfly felt, they landed on his back, his tail, they found a home in his spines and spires.
It's too much love to hold in one body. Too much love to take on alone. He needed music.
Welcome to Cepheus, the Palace, the doorways even Khavur could fit through, and the piano — deification of all sound. Pristine and polished, not a trace of past (or present) users. Khavur would never know the present, but the past he could bring to mind, the memory emblazoned in his heart and head with molten iron. He pressed every key. His grasping and killing claws were ineloquent, he fumbled against the ivory notes, he clashed and battled with his own lack of knowledge. Maybe he should have visited Menkheperre. Maybe he should do that now — but no, he needed the music.
Once the right hammers hit the right strings, Khavur could feel the inflammation in that hammering memory cool down somewhat, and one head brought forth a smile. The next few presses of the keys were a testy sequence, a rocky white water river, and Khavur was navigating step by step, trying not to lose their path. With time, he had it; the part of the melody he remembered, the sound of their swaying steps in the Colosseum, where another day they would part from one another. And he played that tune over and over and over again, getting it down perfect, breaking in the muscles of his fingers, engraving the rhythm into his bones. The carollers eventually caught on too, and they embellished with all the grace Khavur could not manage. And after a while, every voice took flight, including the wavering baritone of Khavur's two humming heads; two separate throats, finding harmony. A forest of music springing up from one piano.
They staggered and swayed.
@Cyneweard