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yuck - Vivilene - Nov 03 2020

The good news was that Vivilene remembered this place. The warm dark felt like a deep sleep, like being bundled up in the blankets her father would leave out for her. It was the feeling of security, of contentedness, of drifting lazily in and out of slumber. It was a feeling she wasn't very accustomed to-- which, in that of itself, as ever for Vivilene --was vaguely anxiety-inducing.

Which led to the bad news. She had no idea where she actually was.

The last thing Vivilene could remember was being at home, in Eridanus. She crept out of Attikias's camp carefully without waking up him or her siblings to check on her garden, neatly hidden away in an alcove on the wall closest to camp, shrouded in ferns and lichen. She talked to them (as much as she could, which was not much at all) and made sure to water them and sit with them, so that they wouldn't get lonely.

After that? Unclear. She could have quietly drifted off, but she knew this wasn't just sleep. Her limbs were curled up underneath her belly (the second one) and her arms were folded in front of her other belly (the first one). If she moved even just slightly she could feel the walls of moonstone encasing her, smooth and warm to the touch.

How long had it even been? How long had it been the first time? How did she get out?

Flashing back to her hatching-- a stressful situation involving crying, a lot of yelling, and some flailing --Vivilene soon came to the conclusion that she didn't actually want to know. It made her a little sick to the gut with fear, no matter the comfort that her family gave her nowadays. If it were still nowadays. Difficult to tell, when you're in a gemstone shell.

Still, it couldn't be that hard, and it wasn't like Vivilene was in a hurry or anything. In a gentle movement, she stretched her legs out and kicked as hard as she could. Sharp pain shot up her hind legs and she recoiled-- but the deafening CRACK told her, at least, that she'd been successful.

The moonstone chrysalis shuddered, rocking the ferns. The light streaking in through the foliage burned the hybrid's eyes when she pushed out of it, sending sloughs of pretty, blue-white rock onto the moss bed below. Her legs shook-- had standing been this difficult before? --as she stepped out, soaked in whatever had been inside.

She coughed, shook herself like a dog, and took a quiet glance over her garden. It seemed to be thriving still, at least-- lilacs and little white petals of chamomile seemed quite happy-- aside from the ones that had been partially smushed by the moonstone.

When Vivilene moved, she realised the shawl was wet. Yuck, she screwed up her face as she slung the wet fabric off her shoulders, shaking it, and then gently draping it over a fern to dry. Hopefully dry. It'd dry, right?

The hybrid bit her lip, hands folding nervously in front of her. She wanted to go back in there as soon as she was out. The chilled air felt strange on her pelt and her legs were sore from stretching out-- or maybe they were sore from hitting solid rock.

Vivilene passed her little garden a glance before she shifted towards it and began the process of quietly removing the slabs of white stone from the flowers and carefully setting them aside, next to the shattered half-chrysalis settled next to them.




RE: yuck - Annie - Nov 03 2020

The little clumsy puffball was bouncing her way through the foliage of Eridanus. She was almost 6 inches tall and full of spunk, with soft white wings and white feathers and fur all over. If she had a pattern aside from that, it wasn't obvious.

Huge green eyes were set in her head, massive and inquiring, reflecting almost every light, giving her a cat-in-a-dark-hallway look. But the big green orbs seemed to match her marshmallow appearance, with her teeny ear perking up through her feathers occasionally.

She rolled out into the garden with a soft 'tweet!', her teeny legs about as steady as a baby giraffe. She didn't mind one bit, though. It was fun to roll around! Rolling around was just great!

Annie slowly stood up and shook out the nubs that were her developing wings, slowly looking up at the massive creature standing in the garden, with purple fur, purple skin, and beautiful white hair. She stared in awe, eyes practically sparkling as she looked at this beautiful woman, so amazed that she was speechless.

"... Hi,", she said shyly, backing up a bit and poofing up her feathers so she could hide, "Um... I'm Annie. You're really pretty."

She spread her teeny wings and flapped them gently, peering up at Vivilene with her dollish gaze, "Your head feathers are white! Like me!"

She giggled and shuffled meekly, absolutely enamored by this Gembound, just in complete awe. She was pretty! Really pretty!

@Vivilene


RE: yuck - Vivilene - Nov 03 2020

The poor chamomile flowers were bent. Even after removing all the stones they didn't look very okay-- Vivilene spent a moment gently trying to push them upright again, only for them to droop back down. Poor things... Maybe if she offered them some water they'd perk back up again. She'd have to try and ask someone for advice either way-- she was fretting for their wellbeing.

Vivilene felt guilty. It was, after all, her fault for breaking out right next to her garden, very carelessly. She didn't want them to die, even if she could just make more. The chamomile was sp"AH!"

The deertaur leapt a few inches into the air with shock as, with a chirp, a second hybrid leapt into the alcove. There was-- as always --initial fear and uncertainty, the kind that made Vivilene's long legs shake and her hands fidget in front of her.

It washed away fairly quickly. This hybrid was tiny, fluffy-- she mistook it for a little Lesser before it started talking --and, quite clearly, not much of a threat. Not like that had ever stopped her from trying to help or make friends before, of course. Annie wasn't very much like Alpha, who might have taken the cake as Most Terrifying Thing She'd Ever Seen.

A few beats passed before Vivilene was slowly lowering herself down, quiet but curious. "Um," she offered, and this was about the best she could muster. Communication was always a mild issue for Vivilene-- the magic she used, also, was unpredictable. There was a gentle worry that after just waking up, it wouldn't even work.

With a deep breath, she tried anyway. With her gemstone glittering white-blue, Vivilene's tail flicked and her eyes lowered to concentrate.

She could feel it-- like trying to find a word edging on the tip of your tongue --but it soon left before she could grasp it. Uh oh, her brow creased a little. As much as she could try to think of this little-- Annie, as a flower, the words to reply with just wouldn't form out of her mouth.

So, instead, with a gentle half-smile, Annie was offered a little shard of moonstone from the shattered chrysalis behind her, held out with a padded hand.


@Annie


RE: yuck - Annie - Nov 03 2020

Annie felt like she was watching a goddess tend to her garden, and snapped her beak shut too, pointedly not talking. Vivilene wasn't, and if she wasn't she could be acting rude by talking back- could she not talk?

The little griffin's thoughts were quieted as the cervitaur presented the small shard of moonstone, her eyes widening in awe. She pushed herself onto her haunches and reached out with her tiny little claws, those of a shrike's, so small with teeny little talons. She picked up the shard and marveled at it, holding it up and watching the light catch it.

The little griffin looked up and smiled big and wide, her little stubby tail wiggling in excitement, "Thank you..."

She still didn't know if the other could or would speak, but it felt right to show gratitude for such a gift. She peered around and tucked the moonstone under a wing before bounding away and towards a tree, plucking a vine off the trunk, one that was shriveled and dead, serving as a ladder for the healthier vines. She returned, awkwardly waddling on her hind legs, and sat down, focused on her task.

She gently round the vine around the shard, struggling with it and having to try a few times to successfully secure it, and took a few more minutes to learn to tie a knot like she'd seen some other Gembounds do. She looped it around her head and cooed, lifting it so it sat above the heart-shaped morganite embedded in her collarbone.

Annie's ears pricked forward and she grinned, proud of herself for making such a thing, "Can I... can I give you a gift too?"

But what would she give? A flower maybe? But she had plenty of those... oh! She knew!

@Vivilene


RE: yuck - Vivilene - Nov 03 2020

Vivilene watched carefully. At least Annie didn't seem very offended that she hadn't spoken back to her yet, though she was-- well, definitely up to something.

The hybrid leaned over, quizzically, to watch Annie take some vines and wrap it around the moonstone. She knew this sort of crafting from her father, Attikias, who did it quite regularly. Maybe it's just best to leave her to it, she decided quietly, leaning back to return to trying to gently lift the broken flowers back to their previous state.

It wasn't until Annie spoke again that Vivilene's head swiveled back over to look at her. A gift-- she wasn't very good at recieving gifts. She was never entirely sure what to say (as usual) or how to act or what to do when you recieve one. Maybe if she could just--

And there it was. A gentle spark deep in her gut, grasped and harnessed and soon--

"You don't have to," rang in Annie's head, the voice gentle and breezy, a whisper but not quite. "It's okay. I'm Vivilene?" At least this much was clarification-- a response. Even if it might have been largely unsettling, what with her speaking without using her mouth, Vivilene's magic was gently noninvasive, for a spell that implanted words into one's head.

Still, she seemed content upon her efforts. "Do you know how to fix broken flowers?" The hybrid asked shortly after, gesturing gently to the sad chamomile.


@Annie


RE: yuck - Annie - Nov 03 2020

Annie blinked and stared at Vivilene, not seeing her lips move. She turned and looked around, then peered behind her, but saw no one.

"... How are you doing that?", she said in awe, "That's so... amazing!"

Distracted from the gift, she trotted forward and peered at the flower, and then over at the vines.

"... Maybe it needs support?", she wondered aloud, and picked up a twig, sticking it in the dirt next to the flower and carefully resting it on top of it, "Yeah. Now it doesn't have to worry about standing up, so it can heal. It's only got one leg so it can't limp or anything, that's what the stick is for."

The griffin perked up again, memory jostled by the flower pointed towards the sky again, "Oh right! Gift!"

She bounded off, wings fluttering happily, distracted for a moment by her necklace bouncing up and down. She ran into a tree and tumbled to the ground in a fluffy heap, but quickly stood up, embarrassed, and darted off again.

It wasn't even a few minutes before she was back, holding something in her beak. She approached Vivilene and put it in her claws, holding it up high so she could see.

"It's a rock!", she said happily, "But it's pretty, like you!"

It was round and white, with little speckles of black, layered in stripes across its surface. It was shiny and smooth from years of erosion, most likely from one of the rivers running into Eridanus.

"It's my favorite,", she said, "Because it looks like me, but I think you need it more."

@Vivilene


RE: yuck - Vivilene - Nov 03 2020


"Um," Vivilene murmured aloud as she shifted, keeping the spell going. "Magic," she was soon responding with. "I can't talk like the others can. I have to cast spells. It's-- well, it... it doesn't always work, so sometimes it's a little hard."
She tried not to sound very down about it. To her, it was the way things were, even if she did envy the way people could just open their mouths and say any old thing. She'd even heard of people regretting the things they'd say out loud. She wanted to feel that regret, the ability to say anything to your heart's content and doing it enough that you can want to take it all back.

The hybrid watched Annie put a little twig nest to one of the flowers, leaning over. "That makes sense," she went on quietly, nudging the chamomile a bit. It didn't seem-- exactly stable, but maybe she could fix that. "Do you-- huh?"

And then Annie was off.

Okay, she thought to herself, spell fading for now. She had some things to do, regardless, and in the short barely-few minutes she had gathered some thin rope twine and more twigs and was in the middle of some form of Impromptu Plant Surgery, carefully lining up twigs to stems and carefully tying them together.

Never tight enough to crush the stem further, but enough to make sure the chamomile flowers would stay upright and, hopefully, recover. She didn't want to think about them dying and she certainly didn't want to ask her father about what to do when they did die.

Her tail flicked as Annie came back into the clearing and presented her with a speckled rock. Vivilene blinked carefully as she took it into her leathery palm, studying it carefully for a moment. Vivilene was unsure if she had any actual use for the rock-- but she did know someone who could certainly use a friend. Or someones.

The rock was placed into the flowerbed, carefully, avoiding crushing any more plants. She pat it a little, carefully, and nodded to Annie. "They need company while they heal," she offered gently. "I think they'll be good friends."

As much as rocks and flowers could be, at least.


@Annie


RE: yuck - Annie - Nov 03 2020

Annie leaned forward to watch Vivilene place the rock down, her eyes wide. She looked up at the woman and then back down, and nodded.

"They do need friends,", she said softly, and looked up at Vivilene, "You're their friend."

She sat down and looked at the flowers, "... My brother's almost as small as these flowers. Do you have a brother? Or a sister?"

She shuffled and lay down, folding her limbs under herself so she just looked like a ball of fluff with a face.

"His name is Hop,", she said happily, "Because he likes to hop around. He'd love this garden because it's like a whole forest for him. He's so funny."

Annie looked up at Vivilene, "He's my best friend. But he's my brother so I'm not sure if it counts."

She hopped up eagerly and fluttered her wings, careful not to disturb the flowers, "Will you be my friend, Viv-"

Hang on.

"Viv- Vivlee?", she said, grinning even wider despite the accidental butchering of Vivilene's name.

She only got told it five minutes ago, and of course she couldn't remember it.

@Vivilene


RE: yuck - Vivilene - Nov 03 2020


Vivilene nodded just a little bit, tucking away the idea that everyone-- even plants --generally needed more than one friend as not to become too reliant on one person. That sort of thing was, after all, a lot of information to process for someone, especially a tiny stranger you've just met.

Annie was also talking a lot.

The hybrid watched, only really half-processing the words she was saying with a few well-placed nods and blinks. The statement that friends not counting as friends when they're your siblings struck her, however. She was friends with her siblings-- Hunter, she felt closest to, but she still loved Astéri and Volta and Angela. Even Attikias and Pride were family, and they were her friends.

She shifted. She took a breath. "I have four," she went on after a moment, her eyes half-lidded to quietly focus on casting. "They're all my friends. It counts. I don't think it shouldn't? I don't know why it wouldn't count." People were people, no matter who concieved them, right?

"What about your-- your parents?" Vivilene asked gently. "Your grandparents? Are you friends with them?"
There was a long pause.

"Vivilene," she repeated. Was-- was it a difficult name? Viv-ee-leen didn't seem very complex to her, but she definitely had a biased view of it, considering she had been hearing it all her life. "Um-- Viv is fine...? It's what Hunter calls me."

@Annie


RE: yuck - Annie - Nov 03 2020

Annie shrugged in that way only a child could, "I dunno! I think it counts but other people don't. I don't got any friends but my brother."

She shrugged again and touched the petal of a flower, marveling at how soft it was. She looked up as Vivilene spoke of her own siblings, brows nearly reaching the top of her head.

"Wow!!", she gasped, "That's so many! I wish I had that many. So many people to talk to and play with. I wanna explore all the caves, but it's lonely if you don't have a friend. So I just need to find one!"

The griffin fluffed up her feathers and smiled, "I have a dad and a mama. My mama's off somewhere, though, I haven't met her. I know she's busy, my dad says she's working through some things and she'll be back to say hello some day. But I got an aunt and an uncle. My aunt's name is Sora- my name's Sora too! Annie-Sora. I'm friends with my aunt and my dad but I don't think I am with my uncle because I haven't met him. but we will be!"

She tried the other's name again, this time getting it right, "Vi-vuh-leen! I got it!"

Viv, huh? She liked Viv.

"Okay Viv!", she said cheerily.

@Vivilene