68th of Frost, Year 121 Steel
Laurevere Val'Istra's Yard
Laurevere Val'Istra's Yard
"You might as well hold the sword as you meditate," Laurevere was saying, "and get the weight and balance of it in your muscles while you speak to these spirits."
The high elf looked dubious about the Dratori spiritwalking tradition, but being half-Siltori himself, he had internalized some of the Hytori views on the cousin races. They were in his yard next door to Sivan's own, though his was barren, the snow swept off the flagstones. Sivan was kneeling there and he looked equally as dubious, one hand under the hilt of Laurevere's katana, the other under its blade. He had thought his neighbor would suggest the shorter wakizashi first, but he had said that came later, to be wielded in the left hand once one understood the larger blade, or wielded when one didn't have enough space for the katana.
Sivan had shrugged and agreed as he was to be the student and not the expert.
"Aren't you cold?" the elf asked, perplexed.
Sivan just smiled. "Khal is squirming around under my clothes, keeping them warm. Geb is..." He glanced toward the wall that separated this yard from his garden, dormant for the season, but much more inviting than this, albeit smaller. There came a pink-pink-pink in the center of the wall as Geb began to happily chip away at the stone, which he would likely use to continue building Sivan's cottage into a tower. Laurevere just stared. "The spirits can be awfully obliging."
He settled into a trance, calling his breath into order as his mind followed suit. It wasn't as though their separate yards had separate spirits, but he was inviting the local spirit who was inhabiting his garden to spread out into this adjoining space. It wasn't hibernating exactly, but it did move more slowly in this season. So too did the spirit of the hive in the Living Grave tree. And while the squealmouse didn't hibernate, it definitely took more naps and only left his house on the warmest winter days to forage for things he didn't offer it from his own hand and stores.
The spirits listened to him and replied. There was a sort of communion, and then one of them pinged a change, letting them all know that the wheat-haired human was nearby. When he came back to himself, he saw Laurevere looking between him and the wall where Geb was going to form a moon gate between the yards.
"My friend is knocking at my door. May I invite him to join us?"
"Of course," Laurevere said with a hint of noblesse oblige. "As you wish, my friend."
"Thank you." He held up the katana, but Laurevere smiled and shook his head. Sivan made a curious face, then carefully rose with the blade and held it awkwardly by his waist with one hand as they went back inside. Sivan continued to the front door, opening it, and peering out to find Torin knocking at his door. He had meant to give him a key, but this worked out anyway. "Torin!" He waved him over. "Come in out of the cold!"
Laurevere's townhouse was much larger than Sivan's cottage, even with Geb's improvements. It was too big for one man, but perhaps not for a noble man.