Victor’s smile fell for an instant. His protective mask, his emotional charade, every effort he put into the affect of his face faltered in the wake of a few familiar syllables, spoken from a sweet tongue that, for an instant, felt too much like the pale, frightened thing that inhabited Laszlo’s mouth. His straying eyes lingered on her lips for a second too long; when they rose again, so did his expression. By then, she had escaped him again.
Abalia. He skipped after her, happy to play the dog on the leash, the ignorant foreigner. He knew what it meant to live in Alvadas, what it meant to worship Ionu, illusion, mischief and deceit. But he forced his pride to take a hit for the mystery at hand. Abalia. He walked beside her again, but his steps were shorter so that he seemed to be rushing, always behind, inferior. His face flashed between her and the path before him, as if unable to decide which was more pertinent to his survival. Abalia.
She was not damaged, as the sputtering ethaefal had described her. She was not shattered.
But she had to be the same.
“I suppose you thought my truth would be a name,” he mentioned, and his voice shivered and bounced with each step. Dismissing the little trick, he went on, “If Alvadas isn’t a lie, then what is it? A trick? A game? A truth?” He laughed. “The truth?” He followed beside her for a few more paces, chasing, keeping up. The world was becoming normal again, or more so than he had been. Sound seemed dull and muted, but the thoughts in his mind were loud and burning. He took her by the wrist again, hoping that she was not keen or wary enough to resist the surprise in it, and pinned her suddenly against the adjacent wall.
“I know something you don’t know,” he sang. “And Laszlo knows it, too.”
"Don't you petching dare," Laszlo growled, and Victor swallowed.