
33rd of Frost, 120
It hurt. Pretty much everything in his body ached; His eyes, his ears, his muscles, his bones. He still felt feverish and weak, even more so given where he stood. Fayeth's curse amplified his hearing and smell beyond what he could handle, he could hear the heartbeats in nearby bodies, the skittering claws of rodent feet in the abandoned warehouse he slept in. Perhaps crueler was the boost to his sense of smell, which had already been his primary sense as a rathor. He could smell blood for what felt like miles, body odor, defecate, and vomit were all scents that had more-or-less burned a permanent mark in his nostrils by that day.
Naturally, most would choose to seclude themselves in the woods somewhere, far away from loud, disruptive noises, surrounded by natural scents that he could learn to filter through. Instead, he chose to stowaway on a rickety train with the remaining nameless that sympathized with his cause, then join the ranks of a bellowing, angry mob. Their yells rattled his brain and stung his eardrums with such incredible strain that he feared he might go deaf. He could smell them all, the meals they'd eaten that morning still lingering on their breath. Spit, phlegm, unwashed odor, grease, rotten food, piss. All the scents around them were known to him and brought tears to his misty yellow eyes.
It wasn't as though he was at all significant in the crowd either, dressed in a dark cloak to cover his lightened scales while standing barely any taller than the average human, let alone all the elves in the crowd. He couldn't even see the gates of the Florent's estate that people so eagerly crowded around and pelted with rotten foods. Even when he pushed to stand on the tips of his claws in a desperate effort to get a look at the scene, he couldn't even land the spikes of the wrought iron fence in his gaze.
His head thrummed in pain, and the ache in his bones didn't ease at all. So, again, he lifted his claws to cover his earholes but found her hold on his wrists instead. "Stop it, Arkash," she warned scornfully.
"I dun' wanna do 'iss anymaw," he whined.
"The sooner you do, the better," she reminded the rath as she lowered his hands to his sides from behind him.
"Fayeth, please..." his eyes shut tight in an effort to halt the blooming headache that raged in his skull. "We gotta get re'dy for th' raid, enyway... Can' we do 'iss anuva tiem?"
"...This was your idea, Ark."
"An' 'ew says i' was dumb!" he cried.
"Well, yes. But I've thought about it and I think your theory has some merits; I've been selectively drowning out the various sounds around me and trying to focus on specifics since we got here," she explained.
Arkash lifted his head to let his hood drop while he put his yellow eyes on the Sil'Norai's blood-red gaze. "..An'?" He spoke to prompt her to continue.
The Cardinal smiled faintly as she met his eyes with her own, then lifted her gaze to look about the crowd. "...And I've had varying degrees of success; I can hone in on your voice, for example, even though no one else can hear you over this racket."
His tired, defeated eyes blinked slowly at the news. "...So wot 'ew's sayin' is..."
"...That we should stay and see if you make any progress," declared his progenitor quite matter-of-factly, only to draw a pained groan from the rath. "Quit your belly-aching and focus," she warned with a scowl.
His gaze briefly glanced over the grey sky as he hung his head, and stared at the snowy, trampled street while her hands rested on his shoulders. A brief grunt left his lips as he shut his misty eyes, then parted his jaws to breathe while he focussed entirely on his sense of hearing.
