Oliver cleared his throat softly as she offered her condolences.
When Vivilene described her family, though, Oliver--whose family members were all wildly different from one another--had a wholly different moment of "trying to picture" Vivilene's than she did of his. Rather than clones, he at first pictured a number of centaur-creatures like herself but in shocking shades of red and green. Then he wondered if maybe they weren't deer, and maybe-...
His brain pictured mermaids. Her top half, for some reason shining white; but a fish's scaled lower torso and tail. He wasn't sure why, but in his mind, Vivilene was part deer and part mermaid.
And part... whatever had a tail like hers.
He wasn't sure.
She took the stone, and he watched as the fish dipped on and off the stone, seeming to swim into nonexistence and then flit back across the slate. He hoped she liked it; she seemed to, anyway.
At her offer, his eyes widened a little. For one stuttering heartbeat he forgot he was meant to be helping her, and he wanted: wanted the flower, cherishing the idea of a thing that lived forever. Then he blinked, and the moment passed, and he wondered if that's what she wanted--for him to take it.
Not that his own garden inhabitants died often; he circuited the caves at least once a cycle, tending his plants and trees in every little grove. But there were those that would wilt without care, that would flower and fall away; flowers themselves didn't seem to last all that long.
But Vivilene could make ones that lasted forever..?
@Vivilene