Faeries were creatures of extremes; their positive emotions brought with them harmony and negative ones caused discordance. They were storms with skin on their best days, and natural disasters otherwiseâ Esmeray shouldnât be surprised, thus and yet, the bits that seep from the cracks in this changelings composure feel greater than they should be, like water rushing through a fractured dam.Â
Sheâd hoped that was all there was, hunters would roam these places just like the hunted. A faerieâs wings made a macabre mantle piece for some of the more sinister of the lot.Â
âI am doing the rememberings, courses,â and Esmeray thinks itâs both comical and distressing that the woman knows so little about her own kind; the fae rarely ever forgot these things. âThe forgettings are not in the simpleness for our kind, though and all you must not have the knowings of these.â If she sounds like her mother, itâs a concern for another day. Perhaps she doesnât sound like Evren though, itâs been so many years since sheâs heard the womanâs voice, she canât remember it all that well.Â
Still, the woman had imparted whatever views sheâd been given from her mother before her, and so on. Esmerayâs immediate reactions were those sheâd collected around the courts ( laugher ) and the second had been imparted on her through continued nurture and introspection ( compassion ). When Evren had time for Esmeray, she gave it, otherwise the maids in waiting did what they could. But the haughtiness and callous airs of the other noble children was a contagious one.Â
âFor all the honesties, these are the discoverings that are of the comical naturings in my court,â there was truly no need to hide it, and she didnât wish to go through the nauseating trouble of lying, âI did the thinkings in the passings, though and all I did not do the dwellings as you may have been having the doing of. My selves should have been doing the slower thinkings, thus,â considering how much it had affected the woman, which should have been obvious given the circumstances.Â
Regardless, she didnât anticipate this reactionâ the poor thing must have been smothering her emotions all this time and fae didnât lend themselves to such forms of control. It would end up hurting her in the end, when the storms behind her eyes could be contained no more.
âDid you do the wishings to do the livings in the lies, in the stead? I have not done the ruinations, those who did the exchanges of your person have done the suchness in them selves.â Harsh words once again, but no less true.Â
Noa barely registered the comment about memory, about her own knowledge. Â Her whirlwind thoughts had already moved on, whipping only further toward frenzy. Â She caught the next comment, though.
âOh are they?â She barked a bitter laugh,  âHow nice for you. This must just be so entertaining,â Venom did not so much drip as splatter from her shrill tone. She didnât quite process the following admission. She wasnât looking for reasons to forgive.
It would be an overstatement, really, to say she was looking for much of anything at this point. She wasnât thinking. She was barely reacting anymore, either. Rather, she was careening through the spiral of her own unleashed feelings, hurtling towards a cliffâs edge she couldnât see.
And then the other fairy mentioned who was to blame.
âOh?â Her breathing was ragged, frantic.  âThem? The kidnappers? The abandoners? The ones I donât even know? My- my- my...â
For a second, she stopped. Stillness for just a moment. Taught as the air before downpour.
She couldnât hear the music. If the other woman was speaking, she couldnât hear her either. Only her own heartbeat in her ears. The barest suggestion of a branched shadow, almost a trick of the light, flickered over her head and was gone. One tear slipped to her chin.
When Noa was a little girl, sheâd had what her parents had deemed âlegendaryâ tantrums. There used to be a joke, even, among the family friends, that it wasnât a party until Noa Byrne cried. But her parents had helped her learn to understand her emotions. To process them, to regulate them. Theyâd practiced with her, carefully, patiently, how to pull herself from the maelstrom of her feelings to see them clearly, to find the true issue underneath. Theyâd taught her how to find the words to express it, to communicate what she needed. By the time Noa reached highschool, her reputation had inverted and sheâd prided herself on being fairly analytical and levelheaded.
The tear fell. And all of that practice went right out the window.
The sound she made was not a word. It was not an attempt at a word. The glass in her hand hit the floor, and what little remained of her composure shattered with it. Rage bled from her like ink across wet paper, spreading and winding and catching and pooling in the people around them, the faces of those closest reflecting first faint unease, then slight but mounting frustration. Â