Aiesha’s mother and Legend had not been that different.
One of them had been nurtured.
One of them had wilted.
For Legend, it was the anger. All those built up emotions coming to the surface, and spilling over in quips at the guard in
Sapair, and whoever else got close enough to handle an imp’s mouth after horrid frustration.
She had been so close.
And then it was all gone.
Four feet glided over tall fields whose waves flowed against moving ankles. Two spire ears were kissed by silver moonlight peaking white rays through dappled clouds. Lone fellahin would shrink and cry to see their work to soften a queen’s pads destroyed by thoughtless expeditions into outer territories. That a woman which held the purpose to kneel before the crown and obey the law of reverence and fragility, as well as feminine strength with a bladed tongue, could not be still. Could not stay in the safety of a roof which had been welcoming to nurse royalty into position to overtake should the new Pharaoh and majesty fall.
They were wasting their time, trying to raise someone like her. Up into something important.
For she knew it would not last, because nothing had.
Her nose smoothed over milkweed. For a moment, wanting to take in its scent.
But in it, nothingness other than subtle dryness as her body leaned towards it, legs stiffening to plant into position.
But one scent had stuck with her.
Perhaps Aiesha had caught on now. That she could smell where imp could hardly hold a scent.
There, in the distance, a red back slumped into entire exhaustion with the colors of her father burning brighter than every star. She was a child of a pharaoh. Of a god.
Stepmoms were supposed to be evil, she was pretty sure. But imp wasn’t very good at playing roles she had yet to see. Legend hoped it was not too jarring— that Aiesha could use her mind to imagine more malice in the woman’s tone so that a more known story would deliver itself. For that must’ve been easier to think of than the failed tale where a stepmother rose in the absence of the first mother, who was strong and leading and willing to accept or deny love.
Wasn’t sure what she was to Aiesha.
There didn’t need to be anything.
But— lone girl running away until those around stopped caring?
Legend knew all about it.
“
Geesh. Now I look like I’m stalking you.”
A shrug of shoulders, looking away towards glittering star lights before the strike of green eyes found her own blues. Didn’t last long, though, before Imp looked back.
“
Should’ve known that I would find you here. Didn’t think that you’d be without Khusobek, though.” He was likely already looking. He or her father.
Imp kept walking, albeit much slower, head dipped and wondering absently if there was an end to the ocean of golden fields.
Made it easier to distract from all the other buzzing thoughts.
“
Change really does suck, huh?”