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PRP [BWP] I wanna honor your mother, I wanna learn from your pa - Printable Version +- Vivarium (https://vivariumrpg.com) +-- Forum: Vivarium (https://vivariumrpg.com/forumdisplay.php?fid=3) +--- Forum: Spirited Highlands (https://vivariumrpg.com/forumdisplay.php?fid=25) +--- Thread: PRP [BWP] I wanna honor your mother, I wanna learn from your pa (/showthread.php?tid=10544) |
[BWP] I wanna honor your mother, I wanna learn from your pa - Foxglove - 3/4/2026 skill: ranger 1/5 [BWP] It was strange, in all actuality, to be back in this world and to be back on four feet. He had been born like this, but it had been so easy for him to live as a human. Sure, he'd fumbled quite a bit but none of the Goldencourtes seemed to mind too much. Although he had very strong suspicions about why Shiloh had been so standoffish with him. Fox didn't need to be told to give him a wide berth and let the redhead have his space. How could he be expected not to be frustrated, at one for being parted from Tiberii and two for having to see Fox there in Talamh. Fox wasn't very good at keeping himself out of trouble, but he was no fool. He didn't plan on giving the Lion a chance to burn out some tension by taking it out on himself. No thank you. Foxglove had a life he wanted to live. This life seemed so vastly different with his other perspective on what was possible. It was strangely all new but still the same. He spared a glance at Fable , his shoulder brushing hers for a moment. You doing okay?He asked. There had been so much going on, and it felt bizarre trying to catch up as it was to what the rest of Mythris had been experiencing. We missed a lot.Fox added a beat later, as a way to make it more clear what he was really asking. Since they had returned, there was still the acute absence of the girls and the rest of the family that had stayed behind. Fable had once mourned them without a means to ever have them again - and yet fate had sought ways to bring those that mattered most to her. Fox of course, was oblivious, instead considering himself somewhere just in her orbit, just basking in her warmth when it shined upon him. The fact that Epona hadn't taken either of them by the ear and pointed out what was so obvious to the rest of the universe. Maybe that had also made it easier for him to adapt to life on the farm. Y'know, I miss talking to Cailean....We were just getting a rhythm.The colt had been very patient with Fox, but the Kali had been somewhat of a natural with the animals. it was probably from being so in tune with their behavior. It made it so much easier to read them, after all. It probably didn't help that the colt was also very food motivated. I know they're capable of handlin' themselves. Doesn't mean I don't still worry.He knew that the Farm was something special specifically - although he had no idea how long the story had been for Epona and Alistair. He had a feeling that Fable was still half here, and half there, longing to know how the girls were doing, how her father and siblings were, how their efforts to prepare for war went. But they were here, and all that they could do was try and piece it all back together. When they'd been told about the rainbow fires Fox had wanted to set off and find them for himself. He needed to see it. The man had been human only days before, what seemed so farfetched about a pretty fire? He heard the Howling River before he saw it, and it was aptly named. Ears perked, he couldn't see anything yet. RE: [BWP] I wanna honor your mother, I wanna learn from your pa - Fable - 3/4/2026 ![]() SKILL : Howlentines ( 1 / 5 )
The previous days had been a flurry of activity without much time to breathe. Getting settled back into the Kingdom's embrace was tiring, but it was the sort of work that fed Fable's soul. She felt like she was a part of something bigger than herself, connecting her to other souls in this oftentimes brutal plane.
It was just like being in the coven her family was in. The Hand was as much a community as it was anything else. Whether you were there for one moment or a hundred years, it was your family. Despite feeling like a puzzle piece placed where it belonged, she couldn't fend off a sense of concern for what had apparently assailed the land in her absence. The lingering darkness, no matter the time of day, would have been off-putting to the sun-loving dreamer in any capacity, but knowing it was one more symptom of whatever illness plagued Mythris had her wondering if they had jumped out of the pan and directly into the hearthfire. They had avoided the rigors of war, but at what cost? Fable was jostled from her thoughts by Fox's brush against her shoulder. As the gesture so often did, a series of tingles hummed down her shoulder and seemingly straight to her chest. Had he detected the direction of her thoughts? She cast him a sidelong smile she hoped was more convincing than she felt it likely was. As well as can be expected,she returned. The absence of Naussi and Illi troubled her amidst everything else, but she couldn't help but wonder if it was a small blessing that they hadn't yet arrived - perhaps this darkness would move on before they would, or they would know more about what was transpiring and could better protect them. Protect them all. Fable wished more than ever she had Shiloh's analytical mind, but she had never really needed it. She nodded when he indicated they had missed a great deal. A pinprick of guilt clutched at her - would so much time have passed if she hadn't tampered with Talamh's ebb and flow? It was impossible to know, but even knowing that, she shouldered the blame. She couldn't exactly voice that to Fox, however, as she would then have to explain why she did it, and in spite of her assurance to herself the day they returned that she would talk to him... it hadn't happened. Something held her back. There were a few times when they were alone over the past few days where there was a moment she thought would be right, but the words would never come. Instead, she'd fill the space with something meaningless like an observation about their surroundings or that it was snowing again. As if he didn't have eyes of his own to see it, obviously. From Epona's deadpan stares she caught every so often, she had a feeling her mother might stage an intervention if she didn't say or do something soon. In the end, it was fear that kept her at bay. Fear that she was wrong; fear that she had misunderstood; fear that she had somehow manipulated him; fear that the soulmate bond from the world before influenced him and none of it was genuine. She had tried to see things through the same lens her mother did as an outsider observing them, but Fable had been ever so wrong the last time she walked this path with someone. And look how that had turned out. She lost contact with two of her daughters and she had to forge out a little corner of the world for her fractured family to exist within. Although there were tough moments in "single parenting", she hadn't exactly been alone. Fox had always been there, alongside the other members of the Kingdom. She was grateful to have had them all, to still have some of them, as it would have been an even bleaker time in her life if she hadn't. She hadn't realized she coasted closer to Fox reflexively until her side pressed his as they moved through the Howling River's terrain and his warmth seeped into her. It was welcome, and though she thought she probably should have reestablished distance while her thoughts were in such disarray, she couldn't find enough reason in herself to do so. We did miss a lot - but at least th' water is clear now,Fable agreed. M'mathair is eager t'get settled into th' Sanctuary again. When all th' lasses have returned, we can hold their Rite of Fates. Aisling said she didn't want t'take her own until they all can together - I think she's really missin' her sisters. Whatever uneasiness might have been taking root in her was banished as he talked of Cailean. A smile took over her lips, more authentic this time, and she recalled watching him win the colt's favor over. Fox really had adjusted well to her natal world - it made her a little sad they couldn't have stayed longer, but there was too much at risk and with Conor forging out a way for them to go somewhere presumably safer, the choice was an obvious one. Fable would always choose time with Fox - with her family - over the venue. Be it in the form of humans, wolves, or sea amoebas, she would always reach for time. I think Cailean will be missin' ye, too - but especially all th' treats ye snuck him,Fable teased. Niamh couldn't believe ye won him over. Her younger sister had an excellent connection with animals; Fable suspected she had picked up their mother's druidic magic, but it hadn't yet shown itself beyond the latent, passive edges. I worry about them, too; not knowing what is happenin' t'them makes it harder,Fable admitted, but her brow creased when she realized the worry was beginning to fade. The air had grown sweeter and, with this development, her thoughts were getting foggier - as if something pressed itself into the space and forced them out. Like fae wine. Fable should have been concerned about that, but if the thought tried to manifest, it was wholly unsuccessful and the thought to worry about it never crossed her mind. She caught the edge of pale light flickering near the edges of some trees and she angled her body toward it. D'ye think that's th' fires they told us about?Fable asked, ears cupped forward. Curiosity had been the major driving factor of seeking the fire out, but as Matriarch of the Kingdom, it was also her duty to make sure she was vigilant of all develops in and around its lands. A strange-colored fire was a cause for inspection and it just so happened to line up well with the sense of whimsy she didn't often get to entertain these days. RE: [BWP] I wanna honor your mother, I wanna learn from your pa - Foxglove - 3/6/2026 skill: ranger 2/5 [BWP - howlentine's!] She had that far off look and it was clear that she wasn't here. She was probably with her girls who stayed behind for now. But what he knew, and she had to know, was that those girls could handle anything. Fox didn't think there was much that they wouldn't manage to accomplish if they put their minds to it. Mhm....He understood what she was saying - she would always consider her girls first in every decision. Fable had proven to him time and time again the type of mother that she could be. She would put the girls ahead of herself every time. Fox hadn't thought too much about time. There was before he had been taken from his family, and then there was when he found his home. They could be two different things at the same time or the same things at many times. What the Kingdom had done for him had been to provide him a shelter as he had grown and found his footing in service to others. It brought him a considerable amount of joy to be seen as helpful to them. Before he had met Fable, he'd felt like he had no purpose and had been just aimlessly wandering. And since that time he found purpose in their daily life together, the natural sort of dance they had fallen into. Sometimes he helped her parents. Sometimes he helped her daughters. Sometimes he made sure that they were also taking care of her. He took comfort in the proximity and the warmth of having her pressed against him. He realized, a bit sourly, that he wouldn't wrap an arm around her to keep her close when it was windy. He hadn't properly known the cold of Talamh, but fall had been in full force. It seemed perhaps Mythris was just a bit ahead of time, but he didn't know how much. It would probably have just made his head hurt like the way it had the first time Epona, Conor, and Fable had all tried explaining to him how this would work. He listened and nodded, that little flash of concern in his gaze when Fable pointed out how much Aisling missed her sisters. I'm sure they miss her too. It's strange not looking over and seeing Nauus or Illi.Fox agreed. Not to mention, since when is Aisling so tall?Foxglove couldn't help but chuckle at that. He'd have to get them to stand up shoulder to shoulder and see who was taller, Aisling or Fable. Bichette can still learn from you and Epona, and then she can help make sure the girls catch up quick too.He'd always thought it was easier to have many places to gain knowledge. It meant if one place confused you, there were still other options. He bumped his shoulder to hers when she teased him about perhaps overfeeding the colt. But hey - he'd managed, hadn't he? Wasn't it your mother who mentioned the way to win a man over is by appealing to his stomach?He quipped, but it was playful. He knew here he'd be doing the hunting and providing. That was enough to warm his cheeks a hint at the possessive tone it had and how he wanted to be in that role. Niamh helped me out too.He would always give credit where it was due, after all. These trips, short as they were, he'd missed. Of course they'd managed plenty of time to themselves too, where Fable taught him how to function as a human. It was entirely different leaving the packlands to explore the strange details of the world they had come back to. Its going to be hard for us.He agreed, but suddenly the thought was a bit sluggish, and that confused him. It seemed the harder that he tried to chase the thought the further it got away from him but Fable managed to tether him again. Gotta be....Fox looked over at her, the pink glow bouncing off the cream and blush hues Fable already held. He was looking at her too long. He looked at the fire again as they drew closer, his nose scrunching up at the smell. He wasn't used to being able to smell the world properly again. Ever seen somethin' like it?Fox felt his thoughts lighter, the stress of the heavy weight of the many 'Unknowns' he knew about the world right then just.....faded away. His body felt lighter, and while he wasn't a depressed man and was often a tease, his smile had a more relaxed tone to it, like he'd just sank into a hotspring. RE: [BWP] I wanna honor your mother, I wanna learn from your pa - Fable - 3/7/2026 ![]() SKILL : - - - ( 1 / 5 )
She breathed a laugh that sounded more like a huff when he pointed out the thing she had noticed as well: Aisling had gotten so tall. It would - hopefully - not be long before her two sisters arrived, and how tall would THEY be beside her? Aisling wasn’t the tallest of the brood and the thought of her sisters being even taller made her heart wrench. While Fable would never regret her daughters, she wanted keenly for the slowed-down version of life humans lived - she would get years upon years to watch them blossom into themselves, using the near-decades worth of time to soften herself to the idea of them spreading their own wings and taking to skies that no longer belonged to her purview.
Not that she could ever hope to swallow the resignation - it got caught in her throat, threatening to choke her. In the end, she wanted what was best for her children, and she would never hold them back. She's so tall now,Fable admitted with a slight frown. Despite the pride that dwelled in her chest for each and every one of her daughters, it seemed like only yesterday that Aisling and her sisters had been curled into her side and entirely helpless. They had relied on her for everything from nourishment to protection and warmth - she gave it all willingly, she would bleed her soul dry to give it to them. But now, they were growing up so fast. Faster than she could ever want, but she was powerless to manipulate time here. I feel like I blinked an' she's nearly grown. Inevitably, the thoughts brought her to Eidola and Kyros, whose forms she hadn’t seen in many months. Were they well, wherever they had gone? Not knowing the answer to that drove cracks into her very soul, but short of picking the Kingdom up and moving it across the world in search of them, there was little she could do to find them. She had to hope that they knew the Kingdom was an open door for them always, and that maybe their paths would cross again. It didn’t stop her from keeping an eye out for them everywhere she went. Just in case. Her gaze turned to Fox as he reassured her that Aisling still had time to learn from her, still needed her - sometimes she wondered if he had a little window into her brain and could read her thoughts like she read lines in a poem back in Talamh. It certainly felt like it sometimes, and warmth gathered beneath the fur of her cheeks as she realized, should he have such a power, he would have been privy to a great many thoughts she dared not think about. Aye, Illi has always been so enthusiastic, I know she will catch up quickly - an' Nausicaa will probably be more focused on findin' Shiloh. Sometimes, I think she likes him more than me,she said, a grin slowly spreading across her lips. Her little wildheart, as she called her, was certainly more interested in all things combat. It made Shiloh an easy favorite for her, given his background. Though it pained her to think of her children ever finding themselves in harm’s way - especially after Nausicaa’s encounter with a bear - she was grateful her brother was willing to help her learn, both in this world and the last. I would say I have no idea where she got it, but then I just have t’remember who m’siblings are. If one thing was true, it was that fire flowed in the veins of the Goldencourtes. While Fable wasn’t one to fight, she would do anything to protect those she loved - her fire was slow to burn, but it still flickered beneath her breast bone, ready to catch kindling if the situation ever arose. His shoulder bumped hers and her grin dialed into a mischievous smirk, but her expression quickly shifted with a mild edge of surprise as his words summoned a memory - or several. Specifically, it dragged out the first day back with her family, Fox seated alongside her, as she taught him how to use silverware to eat - and her reflexive motion that overcame her like an innate, automatic instinct as she fed him from the fork she held. She had been powerless to stop the motion, but it was only one intimate gesture in a whole sea of others, and she restlessly turned each and every one of them over and over and over in endless scrutiny. Fable cleared her throat as if she hadn’t been stuck in a momentary reverie, split between warring emotions surrounding that memory and the fact none of them had faded even now. M’mathair says a lot of things,Fable muttered, mostly to herself, but raised her voice to normal volumes with her next words. She claims it’s part o’ how she won athair over an’ he agrees. It must work on obstinate colts, too. She gave him a true smile as he credited her younger sister for her part in the matter. Niamh would have been welcome to have here with them, but she had been of mind to stay with Kieran and Aine, for she couldn’t imagine leaving the horses to fend for themselves and she couldn’t trust anyone else with them - so the farm’s sheep, horses, and chickens would be taken somewhere safer, hopefully out of war’s reach. Of her other siblings, Vixen had told them she wished them well, but she had a life she’d worked hard to build - how much of that was true, Fable wasn’t certain, but she lamented never being able to mend their broken bond. Most of the others were undecided. Ffionn and Fleta hinted they might return, as Fleta had already gotten a taste of Mythris and was curious to learn more, and Ffionn would always follow her sister to the ends of the universe. Where one went, the other would always follow. I know Amalthea will watch out for them,Fable admitted, feeling in her heart it was true. The Hand’s Matriarch had a long history with her family, and she would see to it that the Goldencourtes got settled, wherever that might be. While she and the rest of the McClures would face war head-on, she would ensure their loyalty was repaid before the real threats arrived. After all, they had given her word that her daughter would die and she could take measures to prevent it from coming to pass. There was little she wouldn’t do to repay such a debt, and she was a powerful entity to have on one’s side. She had an entire fleet of dedicated knights, but she, herself, was a force to be reckoned with; if Epona’s retellings were to be believed, there was a side to their Matriarch that was steeped in a dark, dangerous magic forbidden to those who were part of the coven. She, at times, seemed to detach from conscious thought and operated on a sort of murderous auto-pilot, an existence borne of instinct and a lack of remorse. She had many lapses early in her life, but since she entered her relationship with Edward, instances had been fewer and fewer. Some in her circle attributed it to her growing control, but Fable wasn’t so convinced. She had seen their soulmate bond - it was unlike any she had ever seen. Where most were bound by a gossamer string, pulsing with varying shades of light, theirs was like a cosmos had been compressed into the angles and sharp edges of a cracked-open geode. Their links fit together rather than were shared; it was perplexing. It was as though they were not two entities meant together since their first breath, but two halves of a single whole. As if their souls had been one singular entity and they merely shared it, and when they found one another, the ragged edges slotted back together. She never brought it up with them, nor mentioned it to her mother. Fable had a somewhat loose understanding of the threads of fate she could see, learned mostly through a few others she met who had heard of such an ability, but even they didn’t have all the answers. She had seen links that ran the gamut - some, like the one between Amalthea and Edward, were far beyond what she could ever hope to know. Even more difficult was thinking at all. It was as if cotton had been placed in every nook and cranny of her mind and the feedback loop responsible for coherent thought was moving through it with severe delay. Each breath enhanced the fuzzy feeling cocooning her, sharpened by the deeper inhales she drew of the intoxicating scent. She stared at the flame settled before them, eyes round in wonder and ears ticked forward. No, never,Fable replied, drifting closer until one of the colorful embers kissed her nose and she arched her head away. Even though its touch seared, she found she didn’t mind it - she didn’t worry about much of anything right now, really. She felt like she was on her third glass of fae wine at this point. Fable could almost taste the nectar on her tongue, its ambrosial notes summoned by memory alone. D’ye remember th’ nectar?Fable asked him. It had been served at every festival and she had been prudent about how much she imbibed at the time, determined to remain fairly, manageably sober in his presence - there was no telling what she might have said or done had she not. I feel like I've had some, for some reason. Now, she had no such choice in whether or not she partook. It was stolen by whatever this fire was emitting. The warm and cozy sensation blanketed her, eating away at the inhibition she’d schooled for the better part of a year as her gaze lifted from the fire and tilted Fox’s way, watching the light dance across his features, bouncing off the snow just to gild him with its touch. RE: [BWP] I wanna honor your mother, I wanna learn from your pa - Foxglove - 3/8/2026 skill: flowerchild 1/5 [BWP - howlentine's!] The little frown didn't go unnoticed, and Fox had the impulse to brush his thumb along the edge of it. He could not, however, and instead their shoulders were flush again, and he leaned in to give her a friendly nuzzle. That certainly didn't linger a moment longer than necessary. He didn't need to imagine how Fable felt now - he'd seen the girls all the same as she had. They were not his, and yet they were - and he would eviscerate anyone who dared say otherwise. He had seen them in the soft hours still nervous about thunderstorms; he had seen them as they soaked up all that Talamh had to offer. Seeing Aisling here and now, movie like he saw the jumps like a stuck fast-forward button, and they were completely blind sided by the depth of the message from this actor that you usually thought of as just the funny guy. She looked every bit grown and that thought caused a pang in his heart. Good thing kids never outgrow needing their mama's, right?He was a Mama's boy himself after all. Worlds away he still longed to have his mothers back and with him the same as he wished for his siblings to be back too. She pointed out the attachment to Shiloh, and it wasn't wrong. All of the Goldencourtes seemed to be so interwoven. The roots were strong, and the branches flourished. It was a beautiful thing to see and from what he had heard of their old ancestral grounds of Awenasa, it might have been quite the same for the Kalis and Ansbjorns. Foxglove chuckled when Fable pointed out how there might actually be some merit to the saying. Fox had not expected the sudden sharp wrongness of seeing Epona and not Alistair together. Having one without the other truly felt like an anomaly. Fox nodded to the statement, although he did not know Amalthea he trusted her. It was enough that Fable and her family put their trust in her. Fox didn't want to think on the risks. They had enough here, after all. Mythris was in shambles; strange fire illuminated their world. Foxglove let out a sigh and the inhale that followed filled his lungs with warmth. His aching toes did not scream at him anymore, and all that he was aware of was Fable and the fire. He was shocked when the little ember hit her nose, and he caught up to make sure she was okay. The wine!He laughed warmly now, open and at ease. Probably like that sunny young man she'd stumbled upon. I feel it all the way to my toes.He answered after a moment of hesitation while he tried to find the right way to describe it. It wasn't that his brain was incapable. But basic conversations about how he felt was't important at all. Instead, they were seemingly insignificant. His gaze was lost in the fire for a moment, and he worried for a second at the corner of his lip. He felt relief, and hope, and full of warmth. I remember about half of that night....He admitted and tore his eyes away from the fire to meet hers - seeing that she had been looking at him already. We got to go back.The memories of the night brought the haziest sort of bliss. Seeing everyone celebrating together had made him so happy. He remembered exhaustedly sitting down, and then Fable had somehow ended up next to him, head on his shoulder. The rest..... Everything I get to share with you, I cherish.He didn't need to analyze anything; he just knew how grateful he was for her. She filled in all of the lonely parts in his soul, and she had managed to provide him what he had missed so much by means of a family. Parents, siblings (including a tense relationship with Shiloh for things outside anyone's control) and land to work and love. Bha thu radanta. How selfish he was, to still want more of her. Tha thu fhathast ... RE: [BWP] I wanna honor your mother, I wanna learn from your pa - Fable - 3/10/2026 ![]() SKILL : - - - ( 1 / 5 )
Without even thinking about it or questioning it, Fable leaned into his offered gesture - always, they traded those small notions. She had always been a tactile creature, even when human; it was nothing at all for her to reach out to another. But with Fox, it verged on necessity. It was a dynamic they settled into easily, second nature and automatic. Sometimes, she thought it would have been weirder if they were in proximity of one another and didn't touch, as though even the barest of contact somehow kept the world tilted just right upon its axis.
The frown lifted from her features as he reassured her. She had always needed her own mother, too; she suspected she always would, even when Epona would one day be sent back to the Veil so she and Alistair could reunite in their next life. While she hadn't always appreciated her mother's meddling of late, the world would be a little dimmer without her in it. Aye, they don't, do they?she returned. Some of her worries fled, but she couldn't tell if it was his words or the strange warmth flooding her with the sensation of withdrawing from the rigors of life's vexations. The fire drew nearer, its light scorching them all away so that once they reached the flame properly, she could barely retain her thoughts. Thankfully, her nose was no worse for wear from its encounter with the spark. The soreness was already fading, a glancing touch in the grand scheme of euphoria that diffused through her body. Part of her felt like she could put an entire paw directly in the flame and she wouldn't be able to summon enough self-preservation to pull it back or care. Whatever was in the air was dangerous, but before a thrum of warning could shiver through her, it was stopped by the very force it sought to shine awareness on. Fable's sights were locked on Fox as he recalled the night's celebration - or, well, what he could recall. He remembered half the night. That sounded accurate; he was mortal, after all, and fae blood swam in her and her siblings' veins. They could drink a fair bit more of the nectar before it knocked them on their asses, but that still didn't mean it was wise to get heavy-handed with the pitcher. It took a lot less for mortals to get shit-faced, but they always seemed to have an exceptionally great time. They just couldn't remember it. The bright and effervescent nature that overtook him, and rose within herself as well, was at odds with the world around them. Near-certain demise awaited them around every corner - it was, after all, part of why they came out here to investigate - but she felt detached from that concern all of a sudden. It was a footnote at the running log of her presence of thought, and almost every line above it was blissfully empty pending the effort to scrape together an iota of interest in anything beyond the firelight's reach. I don't know if ye can be trusted around that nectar if ye only remember half,she teased, a grin across her lips as she regarded him. Good thing we couldn't bring any back t'Mythris, we might never get anything done. It was getting more difficult to parse thoughts clearly, the sickly sweet miasma all around them serving to slow the relay between brain and tongue. Fox's words coaxed her ears to cup forward, drinking in the curl of familiar language that flowed from him as if each syllable was poetry. And perhaps they may as well have been. The meaning of his words were not lost on her and she felt her heart kick against her breastbone, her green eyes shifting immediately to his own - so much brighter than her soft sage - and studying him, as though looking for signs of deception. Her intensity was unnatural for her, as if her gaze alone could press an answer from him to her unasked question. A scrapbook's worth of moments flickered through her mind, some of the memories snagged from before they ever went to Talamh, and others from the recent visit. Some of them were the ordinary, plain sort of moments that were easy to accidentally pass over for the novel and impactful; but the moments of them simply existing together in the mundane were a cacophonous force when linked together. None of them lingered for more than a single synapse, but their weight combined was impossible to ignore. Fable shifted forward a stride, narrowing the space between them but staying just far enough apart that she could hold his gaze. He had grown proficient in her natal tongue over time, but especially during their stay in Talamh, where the language surrounded him amongst her family. Fox,his name woven in her voice was quiet, but no less intentional than her eyes on him. What does abhaile mean? She had wanted to ask for days; it beleaguered her, pecking away at her resolve - but its efforts were in vain. But beneath the influence of the magic around them, her inhibition slipped and couldn't seem to find a reason at all that she shouldn't ask. Perhaps she would be disappointed by the answer, find it was something meaningless to him and in abject defiance of what it meant to her. For someone - specifically him - to be her home; to find herself drawn to him like a homing pigeon. Memory, reflex, and something written into her very soul brought her to him and she couldn't be convinced otherwise. But to imagine the sentiment reflected? Her heart stuttered, torn; she had been wrong before, she had been hurt before - the last thing she wanted to do was drag him down the same road she'd traveled with Archon. Maybe something was wrong with her. Was that why the gods had chosen her to see everyone else's fates laid out like a silken web of whispered promise - to bear witness to what she was ill-advised to accept for herself? She had thought herself and Archon to be meant for one another for a time, but she had been ever so wrong. They were made for certain doom, destined to be fire and the kindling it consumed, leaving nothing but ash and smoke as their farce of a bond. In her hands, their life was all cutting edges and not enough bandages to contain the bleeding as she tried to fit all the pieces together - an effort that was futile in the end. But the wounds were old scars now, the sort that flared to life with phantom pain when gravity was too heavy. It made her shyer of reaching out, for fear she'd find a keen razor rather than soft, rounded corners. RE: [BWP] I wanna honor your mother, I wanna learn from your pa - Foxglove - 3/14/2026 skill: flowerchild 2/5 [BWP - howlentine's!] He nodded to affirm it - no matter how old he would remember how safe and warm he had been when snuggled in with his mothers. Though she seemed quite a natural at Mother-Henning, Epona did so with a level of finesse that made it seem so easy. She knew to heat the water slowly over time, although even if he were a frog, he wouldn't have hopped out. Maybe it was because of how he felt right then - how at ease he was. He would have stayed in the pot until he had been boiled alive so long as he felt like this. Another heavy breath and it was full of Fable and the fire-hot spice. Every breath he took he felt warmer. Was that actually possible? He would have assumed it wasn't. But he wasn't exactly in his best mind. He laughed at that tease of hers, knowing that yes it was true she handled the nectar far better than he had, Fox was clearly up for the adventure. Imagine - some pretty pot we kept right at the Heart...It didn't take too much effort for him to be able to picture it in his mind. He remembered the rest of the coven and their joyous songs and spirited dances....and he'd done his best to pick up the tongue quickly. He was frozen under the weight of her stare. She saw him, all of him, the faults and insecurities, the joy and the dedication - and she had never measured him and found him too lacking for her. That was the part that Fox didn't quite understand, but, he'd never been the cocky type to showboat. In Fable's eyes he saw that glimmer, just beyond them, the one that promised the warmth of forever. His gaze only dropped for a moment to her lips as she stepped closer and said his name, and they popped back up to find her still looking at him. He was a bit surprised she asked what abhaile meant - it was her language after all. Fox merely did his best to master it, if for no other reason than to have another tie to bind them. His head tilted before Foxglove found his voice again. I had asked about a word that was like....deepest friend, y'know, like the one you know will always be there....did I misunderstand?His brow furrowed. I had practiced.....did I say it wrong?Maybe he just needed to pay more attention to his pronunciation. It was impossible to focus too long on though, and he was reminded of the struggle when he'd found Fable in heat. She'd been alone. Vulnerable. Driven by the force of nature itself, and yet they had withheld. It certainly wasn't from lack of want, but Fox was able to curb his baser needs for the sake of what she needed from him instead. That same sort of ember burned in his chest, and he longed to tell her. He'd always wanted to be a source of safety and support for her. And beyond that even, in the part of his heart that controlled that little baser part, that he wanted to be the one to take care of her, to cherish her, to provide for her and for their young. It was too easy for him to see it, he could still picture her swollen with life, resting against him, at peace. It did not include the end of days that they'd seemed to be dropped back into. No, they deserved a peaceful spring. The fire made it all so cozy, he hadn't even blinked when Fable had changed the subject, sidestepping entirely what he'd said. No matter the form she took, he'd find her beautiful. RE: [BWP] I wanna honor your mother, I wanna learn from your pa - Fable - 3/17/2026 ![]() SKILL : - - - ( 1 / 5 )
The thought of a permanent nectar fixture at the Heart was tempting - but Fable wasn't even sure how it was brewed. It was a tightly held secret recipe, per the fae's requirement. As the story went, it was given to ancient Avon for their express use and no one else's; when the kingdom of old fell and the Hand rose, some of the old treaties, promises, and recipes were imparted unto them.
As alluring at the idea of having magicked wine was, Fable could also easily see any one of the girls sneaking into it. Especially Nausicaa. Aye, but then ye would get t'be on clean up duty when th' girls get into it,Fable hummed, quirking a brow at him as her lips hitched to one side. Since it is your idea an' all. She wasn't necessarily adverse to her daughters experimenting in those types of things, especially when they aged faster in this realm, but she didn't want to make it so easy for them to imbibe freely. They needed to learn in a careful and structured setting, where they could respect both their limits and the nature of whatever it was. As the world narrowed back to just the two of them, she clung to each and every one of his words - even as they punched holes in the walls of her air castle built from every hope she dared not hold. All the words to precede his misconception of the word were arrows fired beyond the gate - but it was why she had to ask. She had to know. It stung. Even as she braced for it, his answer still smarted - more than she expected. It coiled in a gnarled, thorned ball within her chest alongside the irritation aimed at her mother - for she was certain that was who supplied the oh-so helpful guidance to him. It lurked in a place where not even the magic smoke could reach. Ye spoke it perfectly,Fable soothed, but the faint curve across her lips didn't meet her eyes. But it doesn't mean that. Epona's meddling path was paved with good intentions, Fable knew, but it wasn't precisely helpful sometimes. Had she thought she would hear him call her his home and profess everything that lived within her own heart? Epona had to know better - how firmly Fable's paws settled at the edge of the precipice, too nervous to step forward. The frustration with her mother passed quickly, crumbling in the face of resignation. Of course she was a friend to him, and she would always be there; she had known him to be nothing less than affectionate, she couldn't presume that he was even more so with her - certainly, he was with her every step of the way with her daughters, but wouldn't any friend? He would have to truly be an arse to simply sit by and let her struggle, and that wasn't who he was. At some point, dreamlit thoughts had to end - she had to wake up, even if the cloying smoke wanted her to stay wrapped up in those fanciful ideas for a while longer. I'm not sure who told ye that word,she offered her mother a modicum of defense by not invoking her name, despite knowing with near-certainty she was the source of this whole entire misunderstanding. It means 'home' - it... has deeper meaning than friendship, when applied t'another. She averted his gaze, looking anywhere but in his direction - Fable was certain if her eyes met his, he'd somehow untangle her every thought; just like how... I hoped ye meant it,she spoke the words quietly, so much so that she didn't realize immediately that she'd lent them verbal space. When it sank in, she felt her heart sink as her body tensed. She really hadn't meant to say that part out loud. RE: [BWP] I wanna honor your mother, I wanna learn from your pa - Foxglove - 3/18/2026 skill: flowerchild 3/3 BWP - howlentine's!] It seemed that the invisible thread binding them to each other pulled Foxglove right along after Fable, his mind also thinking down to what the kids would do if they managed to find some of the fae wine. He couldn’t help the little giggle, and if he’d had a hand to do so he might have run it through his hair. Our girls can hold their own, Mamahe reminded her. Foxglove hadn’t really put any thought to saying ‘our’ and maybe that was how it should have been. Natural. Like their progression from acquaintance to a daily fixture in each others lives. They've got better blood for it than I do anyways!He pointed out quickly - because hadn’t Fable warned him about the advantage she had over him, a lowly commoner who didn’t have magic blood and ties lifetimes over? He hadn’t had any adverse effects after all - aside from an impressive headache the following day. His green eyes were twinkling with their own brand of mischief, and maybe he liked to tease her from time to time about the girls. He didn't want to take it too far, though, because Fable did love her kids enough that she sometimes landed herself right in the middle of a little tizzy when her thoughts got away from her. Fox felt like he managed not to completely destroy himself by remembering that time would go on regardless of what they might do to change that. His eyes fluttered when she spoke so soothingly, almost as if she’d reached up to brush her fingers through his hair. There had been more than one occasion where he had actually drifted off to the touch while she read and absentmindedly pet him like a cat. Who could blame him, honestly? A pretty girl and a soft touch were about all that it took. He could almost feel it now, the sun warmed grass beneath him, Fable reading out loud with occasional bird songs in the distance. He was shook back awake by the words she said after, explaining he had gotten the meaning wrong. Foxglove had probably annoyed each of the Goldencourtes with constantly asking for definitions and translations. His brow furrowed, and his jaw snapped shut when she continued on to explain the actual meaning. Oh - a deeper meaning? The heavier connotation might have been exactly where Epona had been aiming. He had probably been rambling on when trying to ask for her help. Still, the matriarch was completely innocent and incapable of any wrongdoings as far as Foxglove was concerned. The moon-kissed grandmother had always been available to help him, and he saw Epona put the same love and purpose in every aspect of her life. From the food she cooked, the stories she told, the legacy she built for her children of love and acceptance that had encompassed even the lands she kept and that included every soul on the farm - except maybe not that one ram who really hit hard. That bastard certainly didn’t deserve it, if she did. Regardless, Foxglove trusted Epona and if there had been a miscommunication, he was certain it was on his end. Im sorry I meant —And then he fell silent again. His jaw snapped shut again this time almost taking the tip of his tongue, certain that he hadn’t heard her right. Perhaps it was the strange feeling the fire had brought on. Was it confusing him? Had to be. Because if he had heard her - if she had wanted that from him. He couldn’t see her intention, though, and the way she couldn’t even look at him confused him more. She hoped? First thing he did was swallow, trying to free himself of the cotton that weirdly had filled his mouth suddenly. She hoped. Hope, the most beautiful thing, this most treasured occupant of Pandora’s Box Fables herself hung onto. And Fox had kept her hoping. Ohiumididntmeanareyousure—Foxglove.exe has crashed. System restart required. During his boot up loop Fox no doubt looked so befuddled. Briefly he licked his lips, anxious in a way that made him feel almost shaky. His touch was deliberate as his muzzle brushed hers and then guided her chin up a bit. He wanted to see her eye to eye. She probably could hear the way his heart pounded. Did she feel that too? Did it ripple down their bond? Fable, do you think I called you Abhaile and was wrong?Maybe the fire had him thinking so slowly that he needed the second confirmation. Maybe he was waiting on her to correct herself. I am so sorry if somehow I gave you the wrong impression - and I don’t want you uncomfortable with me at all.If she was no longer at ease when he was around Fox honestly didn’t know what he would do with himself. The worry shown clearly in his eyes despite the thick feeling in his head. Maybe the cotton he’d swallowed when his mouth was so dry and managed to replace his actual brain. Maybe that was the reason that he wasn’t able to keep up. Maybe it was just the realization that the girl he had been chasing since they’d met might have actually wanted to be caught that was responsible for his current dysfunction. Poor boy. Hopefully his head wouldn’t explode. RE: [BWP] I wanna honor your mother, I wanna learn from your pa - Fable - 3/26/2026 ![]() SKILL : - - - ( 1 / 5 )
His laughter was the first sign of spring after a long winter and the sound drew her ear, as it did every time she heard it. With the fire's effects weaving into her very being, it was more intoxicating than it typically was. She couldn't have fought the smile off her muzzle or the affectionate glint from her eyes, especially as he called her daughters "our girls". Fable's heart skipped a beat at the warm possession there, as if they were nestled into his heart as much as her own.
But they were, weren't they? He had been there since very early in their lives; like herself, he had been by their sides when the world was tender and new and they were learning how to exist in it. She had still been a stranger to Mythris when they met beneath the fateful tree in the Highlands, fresh and new before the ground fell out beneath her. But when it all crumbled, when the good days ended and grief threatened to overtake her, he was there to pick up the pieces and she hadn't even had to ask him. Fox was steady in that way, catching her elbow when her steps were stumbling. The thoughts were spider's silk, ephemeral and drifting from her grasp as the fire made complex thought difficult. She was trapped in its haze and the euphoria came easily, lying right along the surface. Aye, they can,she acquiesced with a huff that turned into a laugh. Fae-blooded an' all, but I still see them as small enough t' fit between m'paws. They had grown so fast, but she would have to get used to the idea of them growing up. Aisling had already expressed interest in being a courier, and she shouldn't be surprised, but she wondered if her fawn-spotted daughter would settle into a life far away from her. Like two of her daughters already had. The morose thoughts couldn't touch her, though, for the warming glow she felt across her skin. It was like basking in the sun's springtide rays, even as the snow descended around them, outside the fire's perimeter. But bliss could not hold her forever - not when Fox's words and her own stolen ones tossed her into freefall. Panic was alive and well in her veins. It pumped adrenaline into every fiber of her being, demanding she make a choice in fight or flight; danger was near, and it was cloaked in fox-red fur and looked at her with familiar eyes of emerald green that reminded her of the rolling hills of her homeland. Her mind buzzed, the chaotic whirl that was her thoughts blurring at the edges as each strand fell into the next and the fire's effects ardently attempted to distance her from what troubled her so. It was only half successful, but the part that rose valiantly kept her tufted paws rooted to the spot. He was sorry and the anguish that washed over her was bitter, cutting into soft flesh she shouldn't have left exposed. She had shown her throat and each syllable ripped it out; she should have known and yet the part of her that hoped had done so, so recklessly. It was a four-letter word with all the weight of the world upon its fragile, tenuous shoulders, but promised destruction when it fell. She couldn't hold his gaze anymore and she ripped it away, looking around them but seeing nothing. If anyone asked her what surrounded them, she couldn't have answered; she processed not a single thing as she choked around the stone of rejection lodged in her throat, despite how gently it was delivered. Her tongue worked to find something to say, some balm to offer him, because he was not the marshal of her emotions - he didn't deserve to pay penance for how she felt and it wasn't his fault in the slightest. Somehow, everything had been misread. Perhaps even her sight was wrong - she hadn't been able to see her string of fate before, so who was to say it wasn't a mistake? A trick, a punishment for the mockery she had made of it before. When no words came to her, she went to take a half-step back but stilled when his muzzle touched hers and found herself falling once more into ivy-green eyes. Confusion tinged his expression, but there was something else there, too - an intention, a resonating purposefulness that evoked a desperation in her that was so raw she could attribute it to nothing else: hope, a small ember but kindled in the cage of her chest. The emotion felt like it belonged to someone else, as if her body was not her own, as she stood stock-still and held his gaze with bated breath. Despite her halting lungs, her heart hammered beneath her breastbone; she was certain he could hear it, but she was powerless to slow it - especially when he began to speak. "Do you think I called you Abhaile and was wrong? Yes, wasn't that why he apologized... ? But as the words sank in, she wasn't certain she heard him correctly. Fable's heart sped up for a different reason this time. Her brows furrowed as she finally reunited with her voice, shifting forward a step so her nose skimmed into the fur of his cheek. She felt the world might fall to pieces if she grew nearer. She was sticking her hand into the fire and bracing to be burnt. Fox,she said, her voice barely above a whisper. What are ye sayin'? She needed him to be clear, to leave nothing to guesswork. Fable's eyes searched his furtively, as if she could unravel the answer with a look alone. If ye don't feel th' same way, we can-her voice broke, betraying her before she wrested a tentative control over it once more. We can figure somethin' out. She wasn't even sure he would know what she meant - maybe they were both speaking too ambiguously, but the pathway between her brain and mouth was rife with obstacles. The idea of losing his companionship entirely left her feeling hollowed out, the mere suggestion akin to entering a vacuum, all the air disappearing with the glimpse of a reality she would lament until her dying day if it came to pass. She would find a way to patch herself up again, even as her heart bled out, if it meant staying in his orbit; it wasn't her first lost love, but she was sure a part of her would die with it this time. |