@worldsandfeathers
To Sakon, Kafei is an intruder and a thief, yet also a time bomb. Kafei’s parents are the Mayor and Lady Aroma; and the Curiosity Shop man’s ability to sell stolen goods rather crucially depends on the Mayor’s good favor. Lady Aroma is fiercely protective of Kafei. If she ever learned he’d been killed or even hurt by someone affiliated with the Curiosity Shop, the whole criminal ecosystem would collapse. He clearly has to be dealt with somehow, but there is a lot at stake in the matter.
At first Sakon thinks the unwelcome child is Kafei and Anju’s; a well-kept secret, an important factor in their decision to marry. But the child speaks with the eloquence (and foul mouth) of an adult, and the truth soon becomes obvious, though incredible. Sakon’s first impulse is to take the would-be thief back to Clock Town, to the Curiosity Shop, so he and the storeowner can have a nice chat with Kafei about staying out of their affairs. The Curiosity Shop man knows the Mayor’s family much better than Sakon does, and is by far the most qualified to come up with a good angle to approach forcing Kafei to drop the matter, hold them blameless, and keep silent about things he saw. Or, if the Curiosity Shop man knows things Sakon doesn’t, maybe they really will decide to kill him. Or, hell! Maybe Sakon will have to give the wedding mask back as a bargaining chip. He’d rather do that than lose the Curiosity Shop! He didn’t realize he’d be hunted down personally; everyone in Clock Town knows Kafei’s a scrawny, bookish coward who barely leaves the house. The trap he set was for anyone the Mayor’s family might have hired, not a high profile politician’s brat. Slumbering giants, this all should have been much more simple than it’s turned out to be. As such, it’s more than Sakon knows how to handle by himself. Sooner or later he’ll have to talk to the Curiosity Shop man.
But he can’t travel to Clock Town just yet. The moon has been hanging large and horrific in the sky for the past few days now. It’s coming down; and this mountain bunker may be one of the only feasible places such a landing could be survived. They will have to stay in the cave and wait for it to fall. Maybe the mountains will crumble too; maybe there’s no escape. But if there is one, it can be found in waiting.
Sakon finds a couple of large cages meant for transporting dangerous animals in the depths of the hideout, and, seeing no better solution for keeping Kafei from escaping or wrecking the place (and he looks quietly inclined to do either or both), deposits him into one of them and locks the door.
Morning comes, and the world still lives. The morning came yesterday, too; but this time, the moon is gone.
There is a new problem. That curse Kafei alluded to, the one making him small, seems to have lifted. That’s a grown adult in the animal cage, and his rage looks about as feral as the cage’s intended occupant. Suddenly Sakon doesn’t want to try and escort him back to Clock Town. Maybe... maybe Kafei could just stay here. And Sakon could go to Clock Town and talk to the Curiosity Shop man alone.
He’s preparing to leave when, to his horror, he discovers another intruder; more wandering and curious than sneaky and thieving, to be sure, but an intruder nonetheless. He was positive the hideout was locked up. How do these people keep getting in?? The young man is subdued, stripped of valuables, and unceremoniously stored in a cage neighboring Kafei’s. It’s painfully clear that Lady Aroma sent him after Kafei. He’s well-dressed, which probably makes him some kind of politician or merchant too, so no sense doing him any permanent damage either. Does the Mayor’s family already know where his hideout is? Do they suspect him? Kafei was missing for a long time prior to his sudden, unexpected visit; will Sakon be blamed for the entire disappearance? What is going on out there? What even happened last night? Full of fear, Sakon hurries to Clock Town. The Curiosity Shop man will know what’s going on, and how to react.
Kafei’s heart is heavy. In not returning with his wedding mask on the night of the carnival, he broke a promise to one of the only people in the world he’s certain he loves. While Sakon is around, while he has a target to lash out against, his turmoil becomes fury, quietly-contained or otherwise. Without Sakon, there’s no use pretending; he brought a lot of this on himself, and he has quite resoundingly failed. He watches Sakon with murder in his eyes as Owl is secured. When Sakon leaves, he curls up in a ball and says nothing. Now even his privacy is gone.












