Silence filled the halls of the Tiamat manse. It was an unnatural stillness that no one dared disturb. Gentle whispers of encouragement had beckoned to her from beyond her chamber door. They wanted her to eat and to take a walk outside while the sun was still out, but they didn't understand. There were no sunny days for Xandria Tiamat. Her sun had died and her light didn't shine anymore. The love of her husband and children were all she had to illuminate her eternal nights. Like flickering embers they gave her glimpses of hope. The twitching corner of a lip that hesitated to become a smile. Her cough that should have been a laugh. The grief chased away all these tiny moments before she could feel anything other than despair. |
Ahkoris opened the door immediately, not because he had been waiting for Xandria, but because he had been about to leave. He nearly stumbled into her, drawing up short as the door swung open to reveal her face. He realized in an instant how long it had been since he'd seen it -- truly seen it. At the funeral, of course, they had all been together. But before, and after... He could not blame his little sister for taking to her rooms. She had been there to witness the full carnage, she and Cairo. Though he knew little of that day from their perspective, he knew that much. And so no one had bothered her. Her husband and her children (was it possible she truly, truly was a mother of her own? how had the time gone by so fast?) came and went, but she...she had not seemed to leave the estate. She looked skinny and wane. His eyes raked over her immediately, and then fell back to her face. "Xan," he said, using the pet name he reserved for her. She wasn't knocking on his door for nothing. He silently abandoned his plans to take a solitary walk around the gardens, and he stepped back and gestured her into his room. "Come in." Signs of he and Sybil's life were littered about the room, and it was true, they had lived in it more recently than they had in their entire lives. Sometimes it was a struggle to get out of bed. He could relate to the pain and hollowness in Xandria's face for that reason, but he'd tried to keep it close to the chest. No tears. Mourning, yes, but no tears. He couldn't give himself permission to break. "I'd offer you something, but..." They were all out of alcohol. He and Sybil had been working steadily through it, a small sign of his grief that he could not stamp out. He wanted to ask her why she'd come, but he did not want to press. His eyes lingered on her face. "How are Miread and Mios?" he asked after a small pause. Miread in particular had made an outcry at the funeral. He could not imagine it had been easy to parent them through this. |