As Astrid spoke, Norani listened. And as the words spoke, a shiver traveled up her spine and her skin prickled, enough to elicit her Orkhan scales coming forth. There was a power in these words. Norani knew they were now etched upon her heart, was it a poem that Astrid had made on the spot, to describe the situation they found themselves in, or was it more?
Relief washed over the Orkhan at being told that she was not, in fact, dead. Agst'rasera, Tree of the World. At the mention of the Aedrin, Norani's eyes grew really wide. Even in Ecith, where the gods are held in very high esteem, Aedrin's name is not one that comes up so often, if only because of how ancient the god is. A name all knows, but no one knows. To think that a god, that any being could forge the elements of the world was astounding to her. Every wind, every drop of rain, ever glint of fire, and soft earth between the toes, forged a god of gods, a legend before legends.
And to hear it being spoken as fact and not myth...
The elements fed this great tree, and in turn, the tree planted the elements into the world. Norani knew in her heart of hearts that every word that Astrid spoke was true. This truly was how the world worked, and Norani suspected that very few knew it. She was awed and humbled, to be allowed to know this, to see this, to live this. Her eyes filled with tears once more. She wasn't worthy. Surely not her, the woman who fled her family in pain, surely not her, the woman who could not keep any of her friends safe. Surely not the broken Orkhan from a tiny village.
"And I am all that's left."
She was alone. Just as Norani was alone. Or felt alone. She had Ruvaf, and he was her dearest of friends, but he was more... a part of her than he was merely a friend. She missed Yeva, she missed her family, even with the wounds of their betrayal in place. She missed her friends in Ecith, and the familiar faces of her own kind. She missed Kaiko and even Inogen, Kayleigh, and the rest of the Expedition. Well, not the captain.
But she knew loneliness.
Norani smiled softly as her water friend appeared, and was speaking in a language that Norani knew not. And her eyes widened as Astrid spoke it in return. Unlike Norani's own tongue, and certainly unlike the uglier and more barbaric Common tongue, this language felt truly old, and yet, invoked life in Norani. Her Rune of Elementalism warmed a bit, a glow running through her body. That was... strange, but pleasing.
Glorbp Glorbp. A water spirit. Norani smiled, so pleased to have met a real elemental spirit. It wasn't uncommon to happen to Elementalists, but had not yet happened to her. "And I'm rather fond of them too." Stepping outside, Norani paused, casting her gaze to the sun above, her brow scales appearing to shade her eyes a bit, and the Orkhan let it wash over her skin. It had been too long. A world without warmth. Norani was living it doubly without the sun, and without Yeva.
But there was no time, and the moment passed. Ruvaf needed her. Opening her eyes, she saw a newly formed hut, seemingly grown from the roots and vegetation while she was inside the other. Strange. She wondered what that would be for. Norani cast her gaze to her companion to see that he was surrounded by so many more of the little elementals, and of many more types than just basic four elements. They were all so beautiful, so natural, so absolutely stunningly perfect. Their existence felt absolutely right in Norani's world.
At Astrid's instructions, Norani moved slowly over to Ruvaf's head. She sat down in the grass, and scooted forward, as he tiredly lifted his head and she cradled it in her lap. She spoke in their native tongue, cooing and using her soft tones, "Hey there, best friend mine. We're going to help you get better." Norani gently turned his head so one large eye could see Astrid. "This is Astrid. She is going to help you. She is friend. Please, do you best to be brave and strong and still so she can do her best to heal you. You did so good to get us here, let us help you now."
She rubbed along his beak and his neck, touching all of the areas that a Ci'uvan only allowed their rider to touch, that only a Ci'uvan raised from a hatchling would be comfortable with. His body relaxed and his head grew heavy in her lap as he calmed. She looked at Astrid over top him, "He's ready. Could you speak aloud what you're doing? I am shamefully ignorant of treating his injuries. I... left my home before I could receive such training."
Norani knew only the tiniest of basics of necromancy but was by no means proficient. But if it could heal Ruvaf, if it could heal Yeva, or anyone else she cared about, it would be a necessary skill to learn. There was so much information to have taken in now that she'd met Astrid. She was a bit overwhelmed, but also excited at the prospect. And she had so many questions.
"Would it be okay if I ask you some questions while you work? If it's not a bother." Norani wouldn't let her focus waiver, keeping Ruvaf calm. But there was so much more to learn now, she realized. And Astrid gave the affirmative, so while Astrid worked, Norani asked her questions, giving pause for them to be answered.
She wanted to ask who knew she was coming, but it was not important. She knew the forces that Seers mingled with and that was their domain, not hers. "You said that you are all that's left. Left of what? Of whom? The Achaeri, the Titans?" Norani, like most Ecithians, only knew of Titans in the most vague of vague tales and stories, many of which seemed more myth than legend.
"That language you and Glorbp Glorbp spoke, what is it called? Why did it feel... different? Old and big? Is that something I could learn?"
"What roles do the phycaal play in the world? I know of spirits, but know woefully little."
"Who is the Last Achaeri?"
Then a longer pause before the last of the questions, "Why was I, of all people, to be expected at all? I'm... a lost, broken, fool of an Orkhan. I hold no power of any renown, no talent or skill that measures up to even my own kind. I have lost my family in my anger and pain, I have lost a best friend I don't remember, and cannot find the other. I left on a mission to heal my pain but it only hurts more and I'm no closer to solving any of it than I was when I started. What could I have done to attract any attention, any expectation? I've failed at all the things that are important to me and mine.." She was choking back tears by the time she finished, trying to maintain at least enough breath so as to not sob and agitate Ruvaf. But she couldn't understand why anyone would pick her, want her, expect her for anything.
She never made anything better. And those she came to love would be taken from her or she'd leave in anger. Why could an Orkhan such as her ever matter?