irishvelvet: (Default)
Deer Prince ([personal profile] irishvelvet) wrote in [community profile] six_word_stories2017-10-31 11:08 pm
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[ Sharp eyes watching from behind tree. ]
steadyheart: (Dismay)

[personal profile] steadyheart 2017-11-02 05:06 am (UTC)(link)
Next time she ought to take better care in selecting a destination before leaping out of her personal space. Is that the lesson, here? To be sure, her frustration has evaporated like the faint clouds of her breath, but now she's utterly lost. This could be any forest, anywhere.

...no, not just any forest. Setting aside the tickley fiddlefern feeling of strange magic on her skin, clues to help her pinpoint hemisphere, continent and country are literally sprouting up all around her. Dillie stands on her toes to squint at the underside of the leaves overhead - nearest her nose are broad, oval, toothy hazel leaves. Higher up are the splayed fingers and gnarled cathedral branches of an oak. Ground ivy springs up under her feet and pillowy primrose leaves shield tightly bound flower buds.

Northern Europe, then? Or North America. Or some plane that mirrors both to an unsettling degree? Everything is much bigger and disturbingly green for this time of year. Dillie presses her palm to the hazel's trunk and tugs at her earlobe. What else is she missing? Maybe the hedge of thorns itself?

She's just turning to look behind her when a voice, high as reedsong, slides through the quiet. Dillie's turn becomes a spin, one she barely manages to stick. The smell of bitter sage stains the air as the mugwort in her shoe is crushed into paste.

Dillie takes no notice; the person(age?) in front of her is too arresting. He...she...they? They're shorter than she is, measured nose-to-nose, but the antlers spiraling from their temples top her head by a good eight inches. There's an overwideness to their eyes and a strange cast to their nose that mars their human seeming, but otherwise they're as delicate and androgynous as a child. Which, unless Dillie mistakes her guess, makes them quite dangerous.

This is her first corporeal nonhuman entity, though, so that's mostly hearsay and conjecture.

"I'm--" her voice creaks on the first try. She swallows and takes another go. "I'm afraid I am. I took a wrong turn, or..." she pauses, and tugs at her ear again. Hmm. "Or something turned me wrong."

It's rude to ramble, but doubly so when trespassing, so Dillie hastily returns her attention to the...antlered being, and bobs a quick curtsy. "I don't mean to wander uninvited, but it might be I was sent here. I'm a--a hedgewitch and a healer. Sort of. Is there anything I can do for you?"
Edited (rogue tag!) 2017-11-02 05:07 (UTC)
steadyheart: (hey you)

[personal profile] steadyheart 2017-11-04 03:46 am (UTC)(link)
Professor Gray always said, an ounce of manners was worth a pound of power when it came to the fae.

("How is it you've hung in there so long, then, you terrible old man?" Dillie'd asked him once.

"Whatever do you mean, Miss Noakes?"

"Only that my mother'd've hauled you up by the ear if she ever saw how you behave in faculty meetings. Professor."

He'd leaned back in his chair and tapped a lump of spent ash from his pipe. "Perhaps I have the magic to spare. As you do not, I advise the former tactic.")

Fortunately Dillie's mother had drilled perfect manners into all her children along with certain other habits. Among those was a tendency to carry snacks, because you never knew when you might miss your bus or be stuck working late and it wouldn't do operate at less than your best due to low blood sugar. More than once a stashed candybar or baggie of trail mix has kept Dillie awake and focused while on-call...so it's not much of a stretch to say her snacks have saved lives.

Right now they could very well save her own. "Oh! Of course!" she follows the personage's pointed stare at her bag and quickly slips the top flap's toggle. Some clever needlework transformed the interior of the basic canvas knapsack into a many-pocketed grab bag. Her herbs and vials all have their own slots, but so to does a simplified version of her EMT field kit. Dillie reaches for a zip compartment and comes up with an apple, a packet of cheese sandwich crackers and a chocolate mint Clif bar. There's some jerky in there, too, but she's going to assume herbivore until proven otherwise.

She places the apple in that dark, outstretched palm, and offers the two wrapped packages with her other hand. As she does so, Dillie's eyebrows pinch and then smooth back out, marking the quick passage of a thought. "If you'd like me to stay, I only ask that it be, um, the way people like me measure time."

God forbid she disappear into some faerie realm for decades. She's got second shift tomorrow!
steadyheart: (Approval)

[personal profile] steadyheart 2017-11-29 05:14 am (UTC)(link)
Dillie almost waggles the cheese crackers and the protein bar back and forth, just to see if the fae creature's eyes track them. She chooses self preservation and stomps down hard on that urge. It helps that she, herself, is distracted when they use their antlers as a makeshift pantry. She's struck by the image of apples dangling from the branches, candlestubs lit on the prongs, strings of popcorn strung between the rack. In her defense, it's seasonally appropriate.

She blinks that picture away, and in so doing loses track of her host. As she's casting around, reflexively looking down for foot--hoof?--prints in the loamy soil, their voice pipes up behind her. She mostly manages to tamp her surprised jump down to a spin.

They've got the serrated edge of the cheese cracker packet between their teeth, which doesn't prevent them from asking a potentially loaded question. Dillie has to check both her immediate answer (By my watch, usually) and her offer to help them get at the snack. One could be too open ended, the other insulting.

"Well, I work night shift usually," she smiles back. "So how about moon phases?"