Too many times Favchean just simply assumes that all races shared his races features. Oh not the oddly colored skin, or the general height and weight but the things that weren't so apparent to the naked eye. Such as the Akalak's lack of worry about darkness and the inherent dangers there in. Wasn't the goddess of secrets and the dark Akalak's mother? Even the ..curse..that outweighed at times the blessings that Akijah and Wysar had given their children. Even that he sometimes forgot that other races did not have. So he sometimes had little patience for those who did not show the same discipline and control he and his non-cerulean brethren practiced and meditated on daily. He sometimes forgot that others did not have the same need to contain their emotions and thoughts, so when the sailor man spouted his words Favchean simply dismounts. For all the world to see it was simply staring down the smaller male, though if someone was to look closely they might see the tick in his jaw as he clenched his teeth before turning to the Drykas with a tight smile.
"Do you think the horses can cross here? I trust your judgement on what will be safe for the horses and their riders then my own." The Akalak responds in his gravely tones, trying to take care to keep it quieter then even his normal quiet timbre was. As the night falls voices will carry farther, Favchean couldn't tell anyone why it was that happened any more then he could explain how certain animals could change their colors to match their surroundings. He just knew it to be fact. "If we can stay to the tree line and they are not zith then we will be ok I think, and they won't see us when we turn to move back toward camp."
Blue eyes so pale that they seemed to gleam against the black-green flesh of the Akalak turn to watch the figures across the river. He couldn't make out very much detail, but he was certain that one had a weapon but that did not mean much when it comes to zith and their parties. He had seen zith slaves that were freed from raids such as these. His own right of passage he had freed a slave of the zith that earned him his right to a second name. That slave wept..not in gratitude but terror in what was to become of him. It was chilling to see the horrors that the slave's body had been through and how his mind had been twisted in such a way.
No he did not discount the man with a weapon being with the Zith at all. Weapons do not make a man a free man after all.
"Do you think the horses can cross here? I trust your judgement on what will be safe for the horses and their riders then my own." The Akalak responds in his gravely tones, trying to take care to keep it quieter then even his normal quiet timbre was. As the night falls voices will carry farther, Favchean couldn't tell anyone why it was that happened any more then he could explain how certain animals could change their colors to match their surroundings. He just knew it to be fact. "If we can stay to the tree line and they are not zith then we will be ok I think, and they won't see us when we turn to move back toward camp."
Blue eyes so pale that they seemed to gleam against the black-green flesh of the Akalak turn to watch the figures across the river. He couldn't make out very much detail, but he was certain that one had a weapon but that did not mean much when it comes to zith and their parties. He had seen zith slaves that were freed from raids such as these. His own right of passage he had freed a slave of the zith that earned him his right to a second name. That slave wept..not in gratitude but terror in what was to become of him. It was chilling to see the horrors that the slave's body had been through and how his mind had been twisted in such a way.
No he did not discount the man with a weapon being with the Zith at all. Weapons do not make a man a free man after all.