[Sanctuary] You Don't Always Get What You Bargain For (Cuga)

A reluctant Nakivak and an even more reluctant Patron meet for the first time.

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Built into the cliffs overlooking the Suvan Sea, Riverfall resides on the edge of grasslands of Cyphrus where the Bluevein River plunges off the plain and cascades down to the inland sea below. Home of the Akalak, Riverfall is a self-supporting city populated by devoted warriors. [Riverfall Codex]

[Sanctuary] You Don't Always Get What You Bargain For (Cuga)

Postby Kavala on September 11th, 2011, 4:24 pm

Image Timestamp: Fall 10, 511 AV
Location: Sanctuary
Purpose: Meeting Her Patron
Status: Cugacon

Anger burned in her with an intensity that startled even Kavala who was used to running on an even temperament and level head. Ten days ago a man had come to Sanctuary, the first day of her open contract, and had taken it up in the name of his son who was 'out hunting'. Ten days ago he'd changed her life and forewarned her that she was going to be visited twice daily by a stranger who was going to force her to couple with him until her body quickened with child. Something in that news had blown the apathy and depression she'd been suffering away like a storm wind blowing away a thick cloud of fog.

Tasival's conception had been different. Reclaimed women were often prone to mental states that the Akalak gave them time to recover from not forcing contracts on them the first time until enough time had passed that they had started to feel grateful enough for their lives being spared to be compliant. Kavala's situation wasn't by any means unique. She'd been an untried girl when she'd traveled to Mura for her medicinal training and then had rode back alone and stupidly, getting caught out on the grass. Her introduction to men and what they wanted from women had been swift and brutal, a lesson learned via fists and knives until she knew what to do for them without hesitation and complaint. So when she'd come to Riverfall at last, she'd felt herself a ruined thing, soiled and wasted on those who were no more than memories at the hands of Akalak blades.

The first man she'd started to feel comfortable with she'd eventually given in to. To her surprise it hadn't been awkward or unassuming. Instead, it had been liberating as if she'd proved to herself she could finally enjoy something that she thought was stolen from her along with her innocence. But that had been different. That had been her choice and designed to prove a point. And in the end she'd loved the man, or thought she had, even though he'd turned his back on her the moment her body had started to swell. It was another lesson learned about guarding her heart, even though it was a generous sort of organ and tended to open itself up to a lot of new experiences with and without her consent.

But this would be different... absolutely different. He wouldn't touch her, not without her consent, and if that meant locking her in the tower so be it. She'd make him fight for every inch he took, and she'd succeed because she'd been training. Even now, out in the courtyard with Fall being their easy time since all the hay and grain, medicine and bandages had already been put away, they could relax and wait for winter. Only Kavala didn't relax. She had donned her custom made night armor and was practicing in it. She'd done so daily since Elantok's visit with Tasival looking on, the art of her practice keeping her stable and giving her time to think. Stretching, warming up, isolating muscle groups to warm up and test... Kavala forgot nothing Hatot and Radris had taught her. She forgot nothing of her independent studies as well. And while she was just a novice at her unarmed and daggers, it was all in how you used what you knew rather than in how much you knew.

And she had luck in tenfold measures. Surviving slavery, surviving Riverfall, making Sanctuary thrive, producing an Akontak.... she wore marks from the Gods and wasn't about to settle into a role like a Nakivak for long. There was too much work to do - good work - that no one would look twice at a Nakivak spearheading. That was the only reason she hadn't fought really hard for her release. It was cover.. good cover... but while she was taking advantage of the anonymity it gave her, she wouldn't fall prey to it.

The Council could go take a long walk off the top of the falls if they disagreed. The Oathmaster could join them.

So, slightly enraged, Kavala stretched and began to run through her unarmed Kata's, putting her body to work together and warming up. Once she was warmed up, kicks and punches were practiced, heavily, until she worked up a good sweat. Kavala went through her store of knowledge on unarmed and fought fence posts and dummies they'd set up in a small practice area off of the round pen. When she was hardened enough and comfortable enough, she pulled her Tamo daggers free, returning one to her weapons belt, and began again. Thrust, parry, all blended together with techniques in disarming opponents. Kavala ran through all the angles of attack and refreshed her mind on which ones were most vulnerable. An iridescent hilt glinted in the sunlight, a sharp contrast to her black armor as she ran through her dagger exercises... not perfectly though. It had been a while, mostly due to her late stage pregnancy and her apathy for life, since she'd taken up weapons. But they were like old friends, even now, as she twisted and plunged, feigning down and striking up wards.

Rage was best burned off in exercise, and the Konti figured there was no better time than the now to work off her rage. She'd be ready when and if she started receiving a visitor, despite what she'd told Elantok.



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The Sanctuary The Sanctuary Forum Riverfall The Cytali
Reverie Isle Wolf Creek Training Course
Please Note:
  • This pc is maxed out in Animal Husbandry, Medicine, Observation, Rhetoric, and Socialization.
  • Kavala a Master Teacher. Students she is teaching in thread can earn more than the maxium 5 XP per thread.
  • This pc has a Konti Gift of Animal Empathy. She has a superpower from a Riverfall city event that allows animals of all sorts and Kelvics (in kelvic form) to speak clear understandable Common around her.
  • Kavala is a Konti but was raised in the Drykas culture so her accent is entirely Pavi though she can speak Common, Pavi, and Tukant well. She's only conversational in Kontinese.
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Kavala
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Joined roleplay: October 25th, 2009, 1:46 am
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[Sanctuary] You Don't Always Get What You Bargain For (Cuga)

Postby Cugacon on September 12th, 2011, 3:02 pm

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Cugacon entered the front room of the Sanctuary with a great deal of composure – more than he would have felt naturally if he had allowed his emotions to run away with him. His anger, simmering just below the boiling point, he had shoved back, in order to have this conversation with the healer. His sense of insult likewise was wrapped and bound tight. The mortification that he felt over what his father had done on his behalf, in his absence, and totally without his consultation or consent, he kept at arm’s length. None of these feelings had anything to do with this woman, with Kavala, he had to remind himself over and over. Elantok had been a bit circumspect in his account of how the Konti herself had taken the idea of this contract. Business-like was about as descriptive as Cuga’s father had been in relating Kavala’s demeanor. But Cugacon was a natural born skeptic, and he knew full well how many Nakivak felt about being ‘obliged’ to accept a contract, a random mate, and the subjugation of what they might wish for themselves to the greater good of propagating the Akalak race. Not all Nakivak felt disgruntled over their status, obviously. Some were in Riverfall expressly for the purpose of such contracts. His own mother had been such a one – viewing the exchange of services for compensation in a pragmatic way. But those females rescued by Akalak’s such as himself often saw things in quite a different light. He knew this. He had had ample opportunity to choose such a female after participating in such hunts – where the slavers became the prey and their hapless captives became prey of a different kind. He had thought long and hard about the whole spectrum of possibilities, when it came to trying to sire a son himself. And he had expressly rejected taking an unwilling Nakivak. That wasn’t the way to perpetuate their race, he firmly believed. Sons should not be born of slaves – and in the end, forced Nakivaks were exactly that.

That had been part of the reason that he had finally settled upon the purchase of a kelvic. It was another form of slavery, he could see that. But the kelvics bred far more easily than a human female, so there was less risk that the mother would end up suffering and then ultimately die anyway. And the kelvics from Ravok were bound to be looked upon as slaves anyway – their fate had already been determined. It was a case of, if he had not purchased Itsa, someone else would have. By taking her himself, he could know she would be treated well – as well as any free kelvic would have been – and her natural temperament was to bond with a master anyway. In Cugacon’s mind, that seemed far preferable to forcing an unwilling woman to bear his son. The option of finding a willing, available Konti to form a contract with were about nil – they were few and far between and quickly snapped up. With Itsa’s unforeseen illness, and death at the hands of the Akontak, Cugacon wasn’t sure what his next step would be. He needed time to think, time to mourn. For, though she had been his for only a few short months, he had in fact become attached to Itsa, despite having tried to avoid it. He wanted to be focused, detached and reserved, but he had found, somewhat surprisingly, that he could not. Trying always to keep his emotions contained – because of his latent fear of Eowe – Cugacon had come to think that he had been successful. He believed that he was the master of his feelings. Well – he was wrong, apparently.

When Raiha had so neatly and quickly snapped the little otter’s neck, Cugacon had felt some part of his heart flying away with Itsa’s spirit. Though ever calm on the outside, always determined to be the cool, collected warrior, Cuga had wept on the inside. He had carried the cooling body to the river, far, far upstream, and sat for many hours, pondering fate – Itsa’s, his own, his race’s. He had held the stiffening body in his lap, and then finally released it back to the water, watching what remained of Itsa slip into the river – something he should have thought to do when she was alive and happy. Then he had gone on the hunt – for Zith. He had no desire to hunt for food, but he felt a need to kill. That should have been enough to clue him in to the fact that he was not as self-possessed as he would have liked to think. But he was oblivious to the implications, and after ten days, having tracked down a Zith hunting party and dispatched the four hunters one by one, he had returned to Riverfall – and to the news of what Elantok had done in his absence.

That had been five days ago. Five very long, very infuriating, very contentious days – and nights. For the two, father and son, had argued long into the wee, small hours. Cugacon could not believe – literally – he had a hard time believing – that his father had gone to the animal healer and then to the Oathmaster and made this contract. Cugacon had found it outrageous – humilitating, exasperating, and totally outside the bounds of what he could accept. The first words out of his mouth – when he could actually speak past his astonishment – were that he would repudiate the contract. Elantok had sprung it on him late that night when he had finally returned from the grasslands. So there was no immediate recourse – but Cugacon was adamant that he would go straightway to the Oathmaster first thing the next day and cancel the arrangement – set Kavala free and allow her to choose her own path. Foolishness – Elantok had insisted. She was bound to accept anyone who approached her. He knew personally of at least fifteen others who would pounce as soon as Cugacon had signed a release – and he had listed them by name. Cannily so, for amongst them were at least three Cerulean, Akalak who he kept a watchful eye on in the guard towers. Ceruleans who Cugacon knew personally as well – and would know that even the remote possibility of delivering the Konti into such hands was to seal her to a fate of extreme abuse. Why throw away this opportunity in a futile rejection of a time honored and fully acceptable tradition? In the end, it would not serve any useful purpose – not even for the Konti healer.

And so it began. Hours and hours . . . and more hours, of wrangling, back and forth. Days, and nights, and days again – when the two were not otherwise engaged in their duties. After three days of this, Cugacon had taken to avoiding his father as much as possible – spending even more time working out and training. Elantok had finally eased off, feeling enough words had been exchanged and that it was time to let them all sink in to his son’s thick head. Cuga had at least been persuaded to wait – forty-eight hours – before he stormed off to the tower. This would give Elantok time to finesse making sure the ‘appropriate’ substitutes were alerted to what was in the wind, should the Nakivak become available again. It was a subterfuge on the older Akalak’s part, of course – though he would have tried to do this if he was really convinced his son would give Kavala up. But he was a firm believer in the adage that time brings reason, and he felt sure, in his heart, he could finally make his son see that reason. Cugacon was still determined to let the healer have her freedom, brief though it might be. He wanted no part of this forced servitude, no matter what form it took. But he agreed with Elantok – if she was under contract to him, and he wanted to sever that legal union, he should do so in a way that did not in any way reflect badly upon her, as she was innocent of anything, other than being unlucky enough to have been caught by slavers out on the grass. Cugacon also had some sensibility to his family’s reputation, and did not want it to seem that he and his father were as divisive on this matter as they in fact were. So, he would wait. On the third day, he had kept himself busy, and spoken not at all to his father, until that night when they had gone over the same ground and gone to bed weary of each other, Elantok pleading that he had yet to finalize his covert conversations with a few choice friends. On the fourth day, the day before this one, a stony silence had prevailed and Cugacon had given his father a deadline. On the morrow, he would go to the Oathmaster, arrangements in place or no. He suspected that Elantok was simply stalling.

That evening, Cugacon had walked out of their home and wandered about the city. Though there were never enough of them, still, boys were to be seen everywhere. The evening was a pleasant one, and people were out and about in the last hour before dark. With the ever present roar of the waterfall as a backdrop, Cugacon had descended through the terraced city, watching his fellow residents. So predominatly male. Sp predominantly Akalak. The random females, mostly human or kelvic, or Konti, stood out – not like a sore thumb but like beautiful flowers, gracing the city with their presence. The children who laughed and ran and played about their homes were like sunshine in a shifting pattern of shade and cloud – rays that spelled hope for his race. Roaming with no particular destination, Cugacon felt a great sadness. His race was at risk of dying out completely. His own family even more so. If only there were more females willing to come to Riverfall – more willing to take an Akalak mate. If only there were more solutions. He wondered if there might be – he wondered how hard the council had tried, in the years since the Valterrian. How long had it been since they had really tried to reach for other options – or had enslaving those they ‘rescued’ become too easy?

Reaching no conclusions, he walked on, his feet taking their own course. But it must have been one chosen by his heart – or perhaps his head – or, perhaps for once the two were working in concert. For he found himself on a road he knew, though he had only been this way once before, two weeks ago. At a widening in the road down to the Sanctuary, he had paused, looking down on the compound. Lights had been lit by this point, warding off the darkness, beacons to those seeking whatever the shelter had to offer, keeping guard against those who might mean it harm. He thought of Kavala, and he thought of himself. Was he someone that she would see as coming to do her harm? Or would she welcome his need for her services, just as she had been wanting to help before, with Itsa? It dawned on him, that he didn’t know. He couldn’t trust his father’s rendition of the interview he’d had with the healer. Though Cugacon himself was opposed in all ways to the idea of forcing himself upon any female – he realized that it might not be that way. The Konti might be Nakivak more willingly than he might suppose. He didn’t know much about her, other than what Elantok had pressed upon him. But he did know she had built up a reputation in the city, and with his people. She seemed quite settled here. He had heard no negatives about her former contractual situation – nothing to lead him to believe that she had had to be forced to it, in the tower. Of course, that wouldn’t necessarily be a matter of public knowledge. If his father had any such information he certainly had not mentioned it to Cugacon. Perhaps Kavala was willing to do this. Cuga, for the first time, had to admit that, in reality, he had mad a lot of assumptions about the healer, based only on his own beliefs and preferences. If he really wanted to do that which would not negatively impact her, did he not owe it to her to find out what she wanted? Looking down upon the lights of the Santuary, he had decided that this much he would do – out of respect for her. In payment of her concern and sympathy for Itsa. And to set his own mind at ease. On the morrow, before he went to the Oathmaster, he would talk to Kavala.

So, as difficult as he knew this conversation was going to be, he pushed all emotions aside and concentrated on being succinct and frank. Entering the front room, he waited a moment before a worker he did not know came out from a room behind the counter. Inquiring after the healer, without stating why he wished to see her, Cuga composed himself to wait patiently for the worker to fetch Kavala.
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Cugacon
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[Sanctuary] You Don't Always Get What You Bargain For (Cuga)

Postby Kavala on September 14th, 2011, 4:40 pm

Image The first person Cugacon ran into within Sanctuary was Aweston, one of Kavala's stablehands. He was sitting in the reception area using it for a staging area to roll horse bandages. The fresh linen looked new, freshly cut into strips for ease of use on all sorts of animals. Cuga was slowly getting the idea when they didn't have customers, Sanctuary used its facility for multiple purposes tasking and retasking rooms for whatever was needed.

Then man looked Drykas, with sandy blonde hair and the bronzed skin of a rider who spent more time outside on a horse than inside hiding from the sun. The man eyed him carefully, up and down, then frowned suddenly. He started to say something, then changed his mind. Recognizing Cuga from his visit before with the otter ... he'd been around but had not wanted to interrupt... he guessed the reason for the visit. "If your looking for Kavala, she's out in the courtyard arena beating the Shyke out of a fence post for no good reason. She's been an a fowl mood for the last ten days. I can probably assume, safely so, that your the reason." He said softly, then finished rolling the bandage that he had in his hand. Setting it aside, he rose and moved over to shake Cugacon's hand. "I'm Aweston. I work here as a stablehand and groom." The handshake was friendly enough, so too was his smile. "I'm not going to cast judgement on the Akalaks, Sir, or their practices but go gently with her. She's a good person, mostly, and if you don't treat her with the respect she deserves half the staff here will cut out your heart without blinking. And since she already warned us you were coming, feel free to go where you please. She said you'd have that right. She's out back." Back in Sanctuary was actually the front, since the horse gate and huge courtyard faced the road that lead to town. To actually get into the clinic, one had to walk all the way around the facility or cut through the horsegate and across the veranda. Austin offered a pleasant smile again. Then he pointed through the exam room to a veranda that looked like a central gathering spot for the folks of Sanctuary. Steps tumbled off the veranda leading down to the courtyard that really gave a good vie of what sanctuary was about.

Aweston took his leave, gathering up his bandages and moving to put them away in the storeroom until such a time they were needed. He didn't give Cuga much of a chance to respond or do anything else before he was gone, the warning still echoing in the air.

There was nothing left for Cuga to do but walk out to meet her. Once he passed out the door that lead to the Courtyard and spilled out onto the Veranda he could see her. Armed. She fought like a dancer, careful of her body position, each move deliberate. Regardless of the blade in one hand, her feet and free limb were also used, swinging and planting, lunging forward and resting in a kata for a second before moving on.

Her hair was slick with sweat and she was breathing hard, but he could tell for all of that she was in good shape. Flushed, a pink tint crossed her cheeks and forehead, accenting the scales there. It took her no time to spot him and grind her workout to a halt. She sheathed the tamo dagger and relaxed to concentrate on breathing. She pushed the damp locks of her white hair out of her eyes and moved to greet him in a full set of night armor. The armor fit her like a second skin, accenting her shape and the delicateness of her form. A weapons harness hung across her chest, filled with an unusual assortment to arms. He could see bolas and a blow gun, as well as a brace of throwing daggers. She carried them all well, with a familiarity that would have given any warrior pause, despite her slight size and Konti features.

The picture she made was so out of place - a konti armored and fighting - that a less serious man might have burst out laughing. But it was obvious she was serious about her training. The way she carried herself, stood, and watched him spoke of training. Lots of it.

When she caught her breath, she nodded. "Cugacon. You are here." It sounded painfully awkward in her ears. Her eyes scanned him and then drifted lower, inspecting him completely. And even though she was breathing hard, there was something that turned completely calm about her. Her face grew expressionless and she glanced around. "I've been working out. Sweaty. I'll need to bathe unless you prefer...." She paused, swallowed, and glanced at the bathhouse. Would he want it there? Upstairs in her own bed? Where did he want to leave these memories? She wondered if she could talk him into someplace impersonal, where there would be no memories she'd have to face daily. How could she tell him..."Hey...can we just use a horse stall if you are going to force yourself on me? I don't want to leave those kinds of memories in the bed I sleep in every day?"

"I do not know what you require and prefer."
Even though her face was expressionless, a panic was growing in her. He was a stranger to her. He was not someone she wanted, loved, or knew anything about other than he'd been laying with a kelvic to get a son on her. Kavala glanced around, noting the exits. It was a foolish thing to do. She wouldn't run. But she couldn't promise not to want too. Slowly she unbuckled the weapons belt and slipped it off her torso and chest. The Konti hunt it on a fence post and stepped away from it. She removed the temptation.

Would he demand a bed? Would the hard dry ground be fine? Would he make her go down on her hands and knees and do the thing impersonally where she'd not have to look him in the eye? Kavala almost growled before she took a deep breath and another then gave him a chance to say something as she unbuckled her night armor to the fine linen she wore below. He'd want access and the armor gave him none.

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The Sanctuary The Sanctuary Forum Riverfall The Cytali
Reverie Isle Wolf Creek Training Course
Please Note:
  • This pc is maxed out in Animal Husbandry, Medicine, Observation, Rhetoric, and Socialization.
  • Kavala a Master Teacher. Students she is teaching in thread can earn more than the maxium 5 XP per thread.
  • This pc has a Konti Gift of Animal Empathy. She has a superpower from a Riverfall city event that allows animals of all sorts and Kelvics (in kelvic form) to speak clear understandable Common around her.
  • Kavala is a Konti but was raised in the Drykas culture so her accent is entirely Pavi though she can speak Common, Pavi, and Tukant well. She's only conversational in Kontinese.
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Kavala
I am more than the sum of my parts.
 
Posts: 3025
Words: 3295757
Joined roleplay: October 25th, 2009, 1:46 am
Location: Riverfall
Race: Konti
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Scrapbook
Plotnotes
Medals: 17
Featured Thread (1) Mizahar Grader (1)
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[Sanctuary] You Don't Always Get What You Bargain For (Cuga)

Postby Cugacon on September 15th, 2011, 4:47 pm

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The man’s words were not what Cuga had expected. But as they fell from the worker’s lips, he kept his expression neutral. The information was invaluable though. It certainly gave a whole new slant to the alleged ‘business-like’ attitude with which the Konti had received Elantok’s news that he was securing her contract for his son. At first blush, Cagacon was mildly surprised that Kavala had so obviously shared her feelings for being a Nakivak once more with her staff. Of course, it stood to reason that, if he was to truly require her to be available to him, here, where she lived and worked, then she would need to let her workers know to expect him, and alert her to his arrival. But the fact that she was so obviously upset, to the point that her workers had noted it and had actually ascribed the source of her ire to him (or, whatever Akalak arrived at the Sanctuary asking for her) did not bode well. Cuga could hardly take affront, however, at Aweston’s words, when he himself had such conflicted feelings about this forced situation. And ‘forced’ he could now assume was precisely how Kavala’s was viewing this contract. In his experience, people did not go around beating senselessly on fence posts when they were happy or content.

The Akalak took the other’s hand readily enough, but made no verbal reply to Aweston’s cautions, replying only, “Good to meet you, Aweston.” His words and thoughts were for Kavala. If she then chose to share them with others, that was her prerogative. Following Aweston’s pointing finger, Cuga made his way to the veranda, where he paused. She was as he had remembered her, though clad in form fitting armor and moving with the grace and fluidity of a skilled fighter, which greatly surprised him. Her actions were a pleasure to behold, though, even if somehow they were motivated by her unhappiness with him. He could understand, somewhat. It was the reason he was here, after all – for he felt the same discontent with this arrangement. When her eyes came to rest upon him, as he stood looking on, she came to an abrupt halt. Seemingly with no hesitation, she approached him, giving him a simple direct greeting which belied Aweston’s words. Cugacon could see that, in one way, his father had told the truth, for even now her tone was indeed very matter of fact. And her words clearly indicated that she assumed he’d come for his first ‘session’ with her. Cugacon was puzzled, but he kept his face as neutral as hers.

“Kavala,” he said, nodding in greeting. Her directness prompted him to be likewise, and get to the point right away, though perhaps standing in the middle of the courtyard was not the best place for this conversation.

“I only require a few minutes of your time.” He replied, his voice calm and low, watching as she removed the armor. “And my preference would be for some place more private than this, but here will do, if that is your preference. This shouldn’t take long, in any case.”
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[Sanctuary] You Don't Always Get What You Bargain For (Cuga)

Postby Kavala on September 16th, 2011, 8:12 pm

Image The Konti hesitated a moment at the Akalak's words. Her face showed no outward expression as her hands resumed unbuckling the armor. She stripped off the chest piece and grieves, and hung them on the fence where she could get back to it later. The vambraces and leg pieces came off until she was dressed in a sweaty silk bodysuit. The Konti nodded to Cuga and turned leading him towards the bathhouse which seemed to her to be the best option.

Fury boiled through her. He perfered privacy but would settle for a public display? Was he going to wander by twice a day and use her in front of anyone and everyone regardless of who was watching? He wasn't going to take long? Kavala's mind boiled. She marched quickly, even on her much shorter legs until she crossed the threshold into the bathhouse which entailed stepping up onto a marble surface that was lined with a black woven gum pad that lead to a well plumbed very large room. Twice the size of a normal birthing stall, the bath house was used for both humans and equines with a large corner area well-covered with pads, to prevent hooves from slipping, for horses to be bathed. An oversized stone bath sat at the other end of the room, pipes leading from a metal cistern on the roof that heated the water year round. It normally was filled with heated water, always ready for the staff and any emergencies they might have. Past the tub was a table and a large linen closet filled with towels, bandages, and robes. Cleaning supplies - soaps, shampoos, lotions and oils sat on the table. While utilitarian, the bath house served a function keeping everyone clean. Kavala hoped it would clean up Cuga's senses as well.

Kavala paused before the enormous stone bath, hooking a hip against it and waited for Cugacon to join her. Once he did, she'd not give him time to pause, time to think, or anything else. She just moved swiftly, once he was next to the tub. The Konti ducked around him, so she was blocking his exit away from the tub, then struck. Kavala pushed at Cuga's chest, thrusting him backwards in a martial arts-like move, trying to dunk him into the tub. Whether he fell into it or not wasn't the issue and was dependent upon his sense of balance. But she gave it her all certainly trying to dunk him. If he fell in or not, if he returned the gesture or not... Kavala didn't care. She launched into her lecture without hesitation.

"You will not humiliate me in public by requesting your services there. Any and all of that will be done in private, not where other customers and clients can see. And you will not be quick about it. You are going to take your time and do it right or you'd best forget coming around to do it at all. I'm not a broodmare, I'm living breathing caring Konti. And I'll not be treated like one, tied up and covered twice a day until my belly swells. I demand that much at least." She said, furious.

Kavala didn't strike him. She didn't kick his teeth in like she longed too do. Instead, whether or not she succeeded, she just wanted his attention long enough to make him understand she had needs and he as going to see to them... the main one of which was her sense of what was proper.

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Last edited by Kavala on September 21st, 2011, 8:47 pm, edited 1 time in total.
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The Sanctuary The Sanctuary Forum Riverfall The Cytali
Reverie Isle Wolf Creek Training Course
Please Note:
  • This pc is maxed out in Animal Husbandry, Medicine, Observation, Rhetoric, and Socialization.
  • Kavala a Master Teacher. Students she is teaching in thread can earn more than the maxium 5 XP per thread.
  • This pc has a Konti Gift of Animal Empathy. She has a superpower from a Riverfall city event that allows animals of all sorts and Kelvics (in kelvic form) to speak clear understandable Common around her.
  • Kavala is a Konti but was raised in the Drykas culture so her accent is entirely Pavi though she can speak Common, Pavi, and Tukant well. She's only conversational in Kontinese.
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Kavala
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[Sanctuary] You Don't Always Get What You Bargain For (Cuga)

Postby Cugacon on September 20th, 2011, 7:04 pm

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He had planned on keeping this conversation brief and to the point. He had thought, based on the first sixty seconds of their interactions that Kavala meant to do likewise. Apparently, he was wrong.

The healer’s shove had been entirely unexpected. Cuga had thought her choice of locations for their talk just a bit odd. But she wasn’t an idiot – he knew that much already. She would have her reasons for choosing the bath house, he assumed, following her without comment or question. As she moved to stand in front of him, his mind was, stupidly, on what his opening remark would be. Her hands flying up and making contact with his chest caught him completely off guard – not too good for a seasoned fighter, really. His balance was compromised enough that he began to fall backwards, and Cuga’s first instinct was to reach for the Konti and twist, pulling her down with him and trying to end up on top. After that, he’d probably hold her under and drown her. Luckily, his brain got the better of his instincts, and he refrained from grabbing Kavala. He had no desire to grapple with her. But, as his back hit the water, sending up a good wave, he felt the anger welling within him. As always, though, he did his best to shove his emotions aside, and focus instead on trying to process this sudden change in her behavior.

The tub was deep and full, however, so his head went completely under water, slightly derailing his train of thought. Not knowing if she meant to jump on him, or if she had thought to bring a weapon hidden about her person somewhere, he quickly shoved himself upwards. Even with his long legs, which had ended up sticking out of the tub at a ludicrous angle, he couldn’t hope to push himself all the way back to the floor. Sliding his legs under him fluidly, he rose, his body and mind now ready for combat, though his intellect was trying to put on the brakes. Crouching, ready to defend himself, though with enough lucidity to refrain from making a first move, water streaming from his hair and face and body, he heard her angry words, and his eyes narrowed in disbelief.

Rising to his full height, augmented by several inches due to the fact that he was standing in the raised tub, he glowered at her. When her diatribe came to a vitriolic halt, he waited, expecting more. But as Kavala seemed to be waiting to hear from him, Cuga easily stepped from the tub – making no move towards the seething Konti – and crossed his arms over his chest.

“Did you really think I was here to couple with you – in plain view of anyone and everyone?” His tone was low and fairly even but there might have been a dangerous rumble to it to one who listened closely. “It’s obvious you know nothing about me – and I understand why that is. But I can assure you – I’m not an animal. I felt badly last night for having made some assumptions about you, Kavala. Assumptions that I came here to clear up. But I can see that you too have leapt to some conclusions, about me. That doesn’t make me feel better about my own error – it only makes me . . . disappointed.” He had been going to say ‘sad,’ but at the last moment, he felt a great reluctance to share any of his emotions with this woman. So he had chosen a more neutral, if less accurate, word.
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[Sanctuary] You Don't Always Get What You Bargain For (Cuga)

Postby Kavala on September 23rd, 2011, 4:58 pm

ImageKavala had heard the svefra expression of something taking the wind out of someone's sails but she'd never experienced it first hand until now. Standing there staring at the soaking wet Akalak who was doing his best to control his own temper drained her own fury right out of her. His voice had a strained cadence to it that gave her spine something of a chill. It was low, dangerous, but controlled. Barely. She glanced down at her hands, half expecting to see a stick in them as if she were deliberately baiting a caged animal by poking at it.

And staring at Cugacon, Kavala realized that her shove had brought her no pleasure. It wasn't her, not really, and no matter how crude his comments were, it didn't merit her rising to his occasion... or the perception of what she thought he was all about because his next words made her blink.

Who did she think she was? Was her ego so huge that just because she'd birthed an Akontak she thought everyone would line up for a chance to get her with another? Cuga's father had made it clear it wasn't about anything like that. It was about survival. This was business. Just because in the back of her mind she was terrified she'd be treated under contract like she'd been treated when she'd been captured didn't give her the right to ill treat someone else.

Someone, evidently, who she'd misjudged.

Kavala dragged a webbed hand through her long hair and turned from him for a moment. It was a dangerous move to take your eyes off an enemy, but it was also equally dangerous to jump to conclusions. His words had been ill placed, but that was no excuse. Kavala shifted her weight again, balancing back up on the heels of her soft boots, and turned to look at him again. She shook her head and walked over to the cupboard to pull free a couple of large towels. She handed one to him immediately, then held the other one ready in case one wouldn't be enough to dry him off. She hoped the leather he wore - his belt, his boots - wasn't ruined.

"I... I apologize. I've been worried for days about what was going to happen and how. Your father negotiated a good contract for you that allows you to be here twice a day with no set restrictions on time. I don't know you and this seems so strange and almost surreal to me. I have a child, so I am not stranger to this setup, but Tasival's father was a friend and mentor first. You are a stranger who owns the rights to my body and when you said that I thought the worse. I know how things are here. There is no excuse for not knowing. It is a judgement I normally wouldn't have made, but things lately have been so strained. I'm sorry I shoved you. I don't know what I was thinking. There is no excuse for bad behavior, especially to a stranger, when we speak two different languages and know two different worlds." Kavala said, her voice accented heavily by Pavi which was her native tongue. The words she spoke though were Tukant, and though her skill at the language wasn't the greatest, she wasn't worried that she'd be misunderstood. "It looks so bad, doesn't it? Is my ego so huge that I'd think you take your rights in front of everyone... " She broke off awkwardly, not wanting to apologize any more but still sorry.

What a perfect way to introduce herself to her contract holder.


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The Sanctuary The Sanctuary Forum Riverfall The Cytali
Reverie Isle Wolf Creek Training Course
Please Note:
  • This pc is maxed out in Animal Husbandry, Medicine, Observation, Rhetoric, and Socialization.
  • Kavala a Master Teacher. Students she is teaching in thread can earn more than the maxium 5 XP per thread.
  • This pc has a Konti Gift of Animal Empathy. She has a superpower from a Riverfall city event that allows animals of all sorts and Kelvics (in kelvic form) to speak clear understandable Common around her.
  • Kavala is a Konti but was raised in the Drykas culture so her accent is entirely Pavi though she can speak Common, Pavi, and Tukant well. She's only conversational in Kontinese.
User avatar
Kavala
I am more than the sum of my parts.
 
Posts: 3025
Words: 3295757
Joined roleplay: October 25th, 2009, 1:46 am
Location: Riverfall
Race: Konti
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Medals: 17
Featured Thread (1) Mizahar Grader (1)
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One Thousand Posts! (1) One Million Words! (1)
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[Sanctuary] You Don't Always Get What You Bargain For (Cuga)

Postby Cugacon on September 23rd, 2011, 6:37 pm

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Water dripped steadily and ran in tiny rivulets over the hard, dark musculature of Cugacon’s tall frame. His posture had relaxed – a small bit – as it didn’t appear that the Konti was going to immediately fly at him and try for a second dunking in the tub. But he watched her warily, nevertheless, as his eyes took in the subtle signs of the emotions washing over her pretty features. Twice now he had met her under circumstances that were not allowing for him to make much of an evaluation of Kavala as a physically desirable woman. And perhaps, in some ways, that was a good thing. Beauty tended to complicate things, apparently more so for males. Beauty was a distraction, a temptation, sometimes an illusion which – if pursued too passionately – could lead to mass confusion and all sorts of mistakes, misinterpretations and foolishness. As he observed her so very closely, in the moments after he spoke, he wasn’t thinking at all about how attractive she was. He only wondered what lay at the bottom of her unexpected assault – and of course, fear and anger were the obvious culprits. But fear of what, or who, and anger stemming from what past experience – that was what he was really thinking about. She seemed . . . pensive, as she ran her hand through her long whitish hair, and gave him an inscrutable look. He could only look back, waiting to see what the next step in this mysterious dance would be.

Kavala turned, rather abruptly, but Cuga did not move, only following her actions with careful, dark green eyes. Her intent, though baffling, was obvious enough, as she handed him one towel and held onto the other. He could only assume that his words had found their mark – somewhere inside of this dynamic female. Or – she had had some change of heart. Why else shove him in the bath one moment and then help him to dry off the next? He had no concern that the healer was unbalanced in the mind in any way – her actions on the day he had brought Itsa to her were not the actions of a madwoman. Even today’s events in the few minutes since he had arrived were not born of lunacy, of that he was convinced. Pain and sadness, terror perhaps – but not mental instability. So, he took the towel without comment and began to dry himself. Soon enough she spoke. And he listened, his eyes slipping away from hers as he went about drying himself as best he could.

Cuga tried to listen without filtering any of her words through the still present sense of insult that her dunking him in the tub had left in his breast. Even for an Akalak, Cugacon was reserved, so his face betrayed little as his mind carefully processed what she said. It made complete sense, and in retrospect, he could see that what he had said had been very poorly worded. She had jumped to conclusions about their meaning. But it was so obvious that such a leap was spurred by her apprehensions, and his delay in coming to her, that he had a hard time finding any fault with her reaction. In fact, when he reflected upon how his words had been interpreted, he was almost tempted to laugh at himself for his own stupidity. In a sense, he got what he deserved. But he carefully hid his thoughts as he methodically applied the towel to his dark cyan tinged skin. Stepping from the tub, He drew off his soaking wet vest, undid his belt, and stepped out of his boots, placing each item carefully and neatly aside. Then, without any false modesty, he slid off his wringing wet trousers, and extended his hand for the second towel she still held.

Having secured it about his waist, he leaned back a bit so that he was sitting on the edge of the big tub. Once again his arms went across his chest, though the anger that had threatened just a minute or two before was now gone. In his deep, level voice, he began.

“We have gotten off to a bad start, yes. But the fault does not lie with you, Kavala. The fault lies in the past, when the gods saw fit to destroy so much of the world - so many of the Akalak - and render our people a dying race.” He looked at her steadily, and felt a tug at his own heart to see her face – so lovely and so abashed – angry at herself, and contrite. He sighed, though almost imperceptibly. His hands went to grip the sides of the tub, and he looked a bit less . . . oppositional.

His voice softened as well. “Do not distress yourself. Let us agree to start over. I did not come here today to initiate the obligations of your contract. I only wish to speak to you about it.” Cugacon had passed many heated words with Elantok about the whole matter, but it was not his way to dishonor his father in front of another. So he summarized his take on the situation by saying only, “I did not know that my father was going to come to you, and negotiate this contract. It has never been my desire to force any female to couple with me – by any means.” He would not shy away from being specific, about the tower, but he felt she would understand what he meant. Whether she believed him or not, well . . . time alone would be his ally there. “I am prepared to nullify this contract between us, but, before I do that, I wished to know what your thoughts were – and your feelings. I know myself as you can not. The idea of a contract is not one that appeals to me. But I also know, as you must as well, that if I do release you, it will only be a short time before another comes along and binds you to him, by law, as would be his right. And you would have no control over that, and neither would I.”

His body was visibly relaxing as he spoke, his own complicated thoughts, and efforts to suppress his personal feelings, were a bit distracting.

“I came to you today, Kavala, in the hopes of doing what was best, for both of us. Tell me, what do you want?”
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[Sanctuary] You Don't Always Get What You Bargain For (Cuga)

Postby Kavala on September 23rd, 2011, 8:07 pm

ImageAs Cugacon spoke, Kavala let the rich words wash over her and she listened. The Konti was a good listener, even if it was more of a racial gift than anything cultivated within her nature. All the Konti tended to serve others - as advisers, confidants, healers, even lovers - though they tended not to see themselves as servants. The healer took his wet towel and then his wet things as he stripped out of them, her nature apologetic and serene as she avoided studying his form now exposed to her. He offered him the second dry towel, but didn't stand still to watch him use it. Hanging his wet things up and setting his boots and belt outside in the sunshine, she was back in a moment, still listening to him. There was nothing frighting in a males body to her and nudity bothered her not at all. His stance was relaxed, non-threatening, and she'd already decided she liked the cadence of his words especially when they weren't laced with restraint.

Besides, him being wet gave her something to focus on, a problem, that otherwise would make the conversation a lot more difficult.

Wet men she could fix. Angry men were harder to remedy. "Many people come here bloody with ruined clothing, especially kelvics, though I do get the occasional Akalak because Sanctuary is closer to where they hunt and are often attacked than the healing center." She said, and moved back to the big cupboard that housed things needed for the bath. She pulled a separate long door open and bypassed robes and bent until she came to spare clothing. Pulling a fine white linen shirt from the stack, opening it up to check the size, and a functional but plain pair of black leather pants, Kavala handed the articles of clothing to him. She waited for him to dress, speaking herself as he did so.

"You probably came here thinking you were going to deal with someone who's been an Nakivak before with the Nakivak situation, but you are wrong. I think your father negotiated as if he knew what he was doing himself as well. Since he negotiated for my contract, he probably knew my history, but I imagine you didn't dig too deeply once you found out what he'd done for you." Kavala said thoughtfully.

"I was a rescue from a slave caravan. I was young, very young...."
She said it like she was far older now, though most people in Riverfall knew she'd only been there two seasons easily counted by the time the Sanctuary had been open. "I thought I could ride from Zeltiva to Endrykas via Syliras and not be harassed. My mother had died unexpectedly..." She paused, offered him a smile of apology and started over.

"I was born among the Drykas people. My mother had traveled there on Call. There was a horse epidemic only a healer of her skill could deal with. She ended up staying longer than the disease and marrying my father who was a Sapphire Clan Endal... a leader. My mother had me and my sister, but we were no ... it was awkward for a Drykas to have two Konti daughters that he could neither marry off or give an inheritance too. So my older sister took up the katana and I rode for Mura to train to be a healer. I was there for several years studying in the Opal Order Temple. Before I was to take my final vows as a healer there I was Called back home." She said softly, noting if he was dressed or not.

"Come with me.. I'll get us some wine and fruit as we talk."
She gestured and if he'd follow, she'd lead him from the bathhouse chamber the short way to a small raised deck behind the main healing clinic that overlooked the courtyard. The veranda was the social gathering spot of the Sanctuary folks and often where they ate together in the evenings or had meetings or just relaxed. She ascended the stairs and gestured for him to pick his own seat somewhere in the scattering of furniture. Kavala poured him a goblet of wine that hung from a skin near a stone hearth and set a bowl of fruit on whichever side table was nearest the place he chose to sit.

"I'm still not sure what I was Called for because before I made it home, I was captured. There was a tripwire stretched across a pathway that ran from a bluff down to a deep grass valley on the Sea of Grass. I took the easiest way down and my horse and I hit the tripwire. We were caught instantly because the fall knocked me unconscious. He survived though for a long time I thought he was dead." She said, settling near him, her own goblet of wine in her hand.

Kavala liked whites, though there were red wines available. The subtle nuisances from green grapes were always more appreciated by her than the knockout flavor of most of the deep reds grown most commonly in Riverfall.

"One moment I was riding then falling - something a Drykas should never do and something that killed my mother - and the next minute I was waking up with a pounding head and a stranger pounding himself into me. I'd never been with a man and the rape was a shock. It was really too soon for a Konti. We age slower, like your people."
She said, her voice almost expressionless as she made the comment. "The slavers had me for a month before an Akalak raiding party rescued me and ten other women. Only three of us survived the brutality." She said softly, not going into details but then again thinking she didn't have too.

"I found myself a Nakivak. I found myself in a mountain of debt with Sanctuary here and the horses I needed to buy to start the facility. I've paid off the facility and the horses... my books at the Oathmaster's Tower are clean. But they still won't release me from service." She said softly, shifting in her chair.

Taking a break, she drank lightly of her goblet, enjoying the wine but not overly much. "An Akalak took an interest in me. He taught me the Akalak's unarmed style. He was a nice man, both of them were, and he listened to me. He also cared about me, or so I thought. One day we just... lost control fighting and it turned into something else. I think I did it because I wanted to see if I could... if I could choose to be with a man without being afraid. I could. Things were very good. In the horse industry we say 'The mare took on the first cover.' That's what happened with me. He hung a gold bracelet on my wrist when he found out, and as soon as my body started to change he stopped visiting all together. He's never seen his son though I did get papers that state I can raise him as long as I don't remove him from Riverfall for overly long periods of time. I promised everything to him... and he promised nothing to me but that he'd always be there. Cheva marked us with Chevas Marks to show our relationship. But hes gone... " She said, pulling back her hair and showing him the mark of faith on her neck. Kavala was married with no formal ceremony and no permissions from the Council, only in the eyes of the Goddess of Love. But it wasn't a recognized Akalak marriage. It was just a faithful Nakivak who promised something to an Akalak she couldn't fulfill because she couldn't keep him with her or keep him renewing her contract. "And the first time I lay down with you, so too will my Cheva Mark be gone because my vow will be broken." Kavala said, though she knew this happened sometimes with great frequency among Nakivak that fell for their contracts.

"Your father probably told you nothing of this. All he was likely to see was a mother of an Akontak open for use."
Kavala said, not bitter, just being factual. She'd long hardened her heart against what had happened.

"I had to tell you all this about me in order to answer your question.. about what I want. I don't know what I want other than that I really wanted my freedom to choose to live my life the way I want to live it when I want to live it. But the Council won't grant me that. But they are right in that the Akalak that saved me granted me life and there's nothing bigger than that, right? So you own my contract and you'll give it up, but you are right. Someone else will just take it up. If not you, someone else, and I could tell very much that you cared for the Kelvic you brought to us. To me, at least, that is something. The next holder of my contract might have a tattooed face or a mean streak a mile wide. You seem like a lot better option since I have to be under one." She said thoughtfully then looked intently at him before taking a piece of fruit.

Kavala bit into it, chewed thoughtfully at the apple, then asked him her own question once she'd swallowed. "And you? What do you want really? This doesn't seem to be your idea."

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The Sanctuary The Sanctuary Forum Riverfall The Cytali
Reverie Isle Wolf Creek Training Course
Please Note:
  • This pc is maxed out in Animal Husbandry, Medicine, Observation, Rhetoric, and Socialization.
  • Kavala a Master Teacher. Students she is teaching in thread can earn more than the maxium 5 XP per thread.
  • This pc has a Konti Gift of Animal Empathy. She has a superpower from a Riverfall city event that allows animals of all sorts and Kelvics (in kelvic form) to speak clear understandable Common around her.
  • Kavala is a Konti but was raised in the Drykas culture so her accent is entirely Pavi though she can speak Common, Pavi, and Tukant well. She's only conversational in Kontinese.
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Kavala
I am more than the sum of my parts.
 
Posts: 3025
Words: 3295757
Joined roleplay: October 25th, 2009, 1:46 am
Location: Riverfall
Race: Konti
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Medals: 17
Featured Thread (1) Mizahar Grader (1)
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[Sanctuary] You Don't Always Get What You Bargain For (Cuga)

Postby Cugacon on September 24th, 2011, 2:01 am

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At least she was willing to listen to him – that was a better start than being shoved into a tub. Cuga quickly dressed in the clothes she offered him, having watched her as she went about spreading out his own garments to dry, and putting boots and belt out in the warm sunshine. There was certainly something quite intriguing about the way she handled such mundane tasks. The fact that she even bothered to perform them was, to Cuga, an indication that she had reached a place where she, too, could look beyond words and anger, and strive to find some common ground between them. The story that she then told, in a soft, somewhat contemplative voice, was not a novel one – not in Riverfall.

For every female in the city who could tell such a tale, there were probably ten either dead or enslaved elsewhere, taken by Zith or by the wandering barbarians out on the plains of tall swaying grass. The Akalak often fought with such slavers and freed such women when they could – indeed they went out of their way to track them down and engage them. Of course, the Akalaks’ motivations were far from purely honorable, though the result was one that, for the most part, would preserve the female’s life, for the time being. The Akalak needed females to breed with – desperately. In return for their lives and “liberty,” the females brought back to Riverfall were obliged to enter into another form of slavery – slightly more benign but with risks, including abuse and death, all the same. It wasn’t anything Cuga was proud of. But at the same time, to do nothing was to resign his race to extinction. Or so the council always claimed. Many and many and many a time had Cuga himself been involved in such “rescue” parties, and “escorted” the terrified and usually abused women back to the city. He knew what would happen to them then. He hadn’t let himself think about it too much. Now, it was staring him in the face. She was standing there, before him, immovable and solid and a very real testament to what Akalak life demanded, for both males and females. It was something – Kavala was someone - who could no longer be ignored.

When she paused in her story, long enough to invite him to follow her – which he did – he said to her as they walked the short distance to the veranda, “I was aware that you chose to be Nakivak when you were rescued. That much my father had learned about you, and more. He chose you with more care than perhaps you might think, Kavala.”

He glanced down at her as they walked, with purpose but not hurriedly so. “I also know what this means – to “choose” to repay your debt this way. I understand, it is no choice. And that is why I do not wish to force you to go forward with this. To substitute one form of slavery for another . . . “ That was going a bit far, perhaps, he thought, with some ping of caution going off inside him. The Council did not look upon the Nakivaks as slaves. Such possession of other humans would have been frowned upon by their sense of ‘community.’ In their eyes, the Nakivak were willingly choosing to pay off a debt owed. To openly question the practice – to label it for what it was – that was perhaps not the wisest thing to do.

So, Cuga ended up merely shaking his head silently. They had reached the veranda at this point and he took a seat, accepting the wine that the Konti offered him. He was not overly familiar with all the worlds of Mizahar, but he could see, from her story, that even her growing up years had not been easy ones. A fish out of water – truly. Once more, she took up her tale, this time providing the more explicit details of her capture – and captivity. Again, Cugacon was not shocked. Such things were played out over and over every day out on the grass. But, sitting so close to this woman, as she so calmly told her horrific story, for the first time in his life, he was unable to fully block the reality of what she spoke of from his ears, from his mind. It was a natural self-defense method, of course. To pretend what is seen with the eyes, what is heard with the ears, or felt with the fingers, is not real, allows the mind to not have to deal with it. It was very much a warrior’s way – a way to get around the pain and suffering and death he must cope with in one way or another.

But this time . . . this time, Cugacon felt that he did not wish to block it all out. He did not want to throw Kavala into the same heap that all the others went to – there in a subconscious that did not have to deal with them. She was a living, breathing, feeling creature – just as Itsa had been. As cool as she was as she spoke of what must have been a living nightmare, her suffering echoed and reverberated about them, and Cuga felt it. On a level he had not experienced, except for a short while ago when Itsa had died, he felt it.

And so, too, her description of her experience as a Nakivak did not surprise him, though he had not, in fact, known the exact circumstances of her prior contract. Her other patron’s behavior seemed most odd to Cuga. To have a precious son – and an Akontak at that – and yet take no interest in him, that seemed beyond belief. Though Cuga himself was so obviously unwilling to go to any lengths to have a son, if he did sire one he would never consider not raising him himself. How could a father not wish that?

Her summation was certainly a left-handed compliment as it stood – “If I have to have someone, you’ll do,” was one way to sum it up. But he didn’t take offense. It was after all the crux of why he had decided the night before to come speak to her – something he certainly did not have to do to nullify the contract. But what was best for her – what did she want? And what were her limited options? It was clear that she did not want this – that she did not want him. Yes, as a second best, she was now declaring herself willing to accept him for fear of getting stuck with someone worse. Not a very attractive way to look at it, he thought, mulling over all that she had said, pondering her question which she threw right back at him.

With great deliberation, choosing his words with care that they might truly express his thoughts with clarity, he finally spoke. “More than anything, I want a son. Many sons. I do not want to be the last of my family.” He paused, leaning forward to rest his elbows on his knees, his forearms crossed, as he looked pointedly at her. “But I am not willing to produce my son by force. I want there to be a different way – a better way – for all Akalak.” Cuga sensed the intensity of the feelings underlying what he said welling up inside him, and deliberately, coldy, he shoved those feelings back down, willing his voice, his face, to remain calm, indifferent, logical.

“That isn’t likely to happen, though, Kavala. For hundreds of years we have had to turn to this unhappy path. I know for most Akalak, they don’t care. They don’t think about the ones they must use in order for all of us to survive.” His emerald eyes dropped to the floor for a moment. “You are correct – I did care for Itsa. But yet, she too really had no choice. I wasn’t able to give her a choice, though I did not force her to anything that she objected to. Perhaps, though . . . perhaps she never thought she could protest . . . “ It was a dark thought – one that had planted itself in his mind since the kelvic’s death – and one that left a bitter taste in his mouth.

His eyes lifted to the healer’s – Kavala’s eyes were an intense shade of azure blue, the color of the oceans. He saw the storms blowing through them, though he was sure she was trying as hard as he was to keep her thoughts private. He sensed that Kavala would share only what she chose to – much as he did.

“Children should be born of a common purpose. That is what I believe. Mother and father both should desire the union that brings new life to being. And that is what I want, Kavala. I want to have many sons, with a female that wants the same. I want to raise my sons to be the best Akalak walking – proud, strong, fierce against our enemies, skilled hunters and warriors. I do not want them born of slaves. I do not want their mothers’ tears to be those of sorrow and fear as they are placed to the breast for the first time. I want my sons’ mothers to be proud, strong, free females who will stand as an example to their children.”

For a long, long moment he looked at her. For really the first time, he looked at her – as an individual. His eyes searched hers, and he saw so much there – pain, sadness, fear – yes – those were there. But also, courage – strength – hope – resolve. Cuga had seen her in the courtyard, working through her training maneuvers. He had seen her skilled hands as they sought to do what they could for Itsa, he had seen the wheels of her mind turning, her Konti gift and her intellect working in tandem. He had seen her blazing passion – felt the desperation of that shove – heard the pride in her voice. Kavala was the type of woman that would birth wonderful sons, he felt sure of this as he looked at her, his thoughts spinning faster than the fall of the Bluevein as it tumbled from the cliff.

And in the end, it wasn’t him personally that mattered. It was the future generation – of Ramas, of Akalaks. It wasn’t a matter of her liking him, for himself. For Cugacon, it came down to her willingness to accept this role of mother. And it was this perception of detachment – of being one degree removed from the equation – that prompted him to say, “I want a female like you – but only if she is willing, to do this, for herself, as much as for me.”
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Cugacon
my brother, myself
 
Posts: 62
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Joined roleplay: August 28th, 2011, 4:46 pm
Race: Akalak
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