61st Ashan, 718
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following: this
It had probably become quickly obvious that Tessa Anders was used to covering up bruises and blood. She'd done so with practiced efficiency, but other than her working outfits, there was really very little that she owned which was suitable for being seen in public with. And her working outfits were a definite no. She had one knee length skirt and top, but those were covered in blood from the massacre which had just occurred in her house. However, Tessa was used to having to improvise and she had two skirts which were long but which had slits literally all the way up the skirt on two sides. So, she wore the red one with the slits front and back, over the black one with the slits either side. It made it look like it was one skirt and it was entirely decent. A top was more difficult, but she put on one of Benji's shirts which she belted. Those who noticed such things might spot that she belted it with Benji's thick leather belt. The one he had given to Rafael Warrick to beat her with. She wore that over a strappy top which was so tight it was obscene, but the loose shirt covered that. She quickly pulled her hair up and then, put on the sling for her babies.
On the way here, as they walked together, Tessa had been almost entirely silent. She'd made shushing noises to the babies if they made a sound and she had, of course, answered any questions asked of her. But the woman was in deep shock and so she followed the men who had come to her home and saved her, she thought. But Benji was dead. Fear gripped at her at that thought and her breath shortened in her chest. Benji was dead. She'd made sure to stop, before they left, and she'd retrieved the money from the place where she'd hidden it from him. It was for the babies, that money, for them when they grew up and she squirreled away a little bit here and a little bit there. It had added up, though not to much but it was something. That and Benji's purse full of his winnings, the pot by his side of the bed and the other places throughout the house where he hid things from her. Each one, she went to.
But she didn't speak. She simply made her way with them and into an Inn. It was a very nice Inn, by Tessa's standards, although Celeste would most certainly have turned her nose up at it and declared it barely functional. Tessa dropped her head to the children, letting the bits of hair which she had kept loose fall forward and hide the bruises and split lip. They'd walked her through, her and the children and then shown her into a room. Whose room was this, she wondered, but she went and sat where the Knight told her to sit.
Sitting there, not having seen the people they passed, nor anything really except for a vague idea of where they were, Tessa looked up at him and her deep brown eyes showed her shock and confusion. There were a hundred things she wanted to ask, but she didn't know what any of them were right now, only that she had all of these questions in her head.
And that her heart hurt.
She felt alone and afraid and the Knight who had been so kind seemed to still be that, yet also distant, aloof. Torqin, he seemed more friendly, but she was wary of him. He was one of Them. Benji's people, the fighters and gamblers who won whores like her. He was in those crowds and she didn't understand for a moment that he had been there looking for her - to her mind, it was all just one strange situation. And her heart hurt, and she was alone. She'd never been alone, she didn't know how to be and Tessa felt panic rise in her at the thought of it.
"Am I yours, now?" Her voice was afraid, but she wasn't sure which answer she was more afraid of. Yes or no. "I'll be good, sir, I will. I've never been alone an' I'm.. " She had no tears, she couldn't remember the last time she'd cried, yet her voice shook. "I'm no good at anythin' 'cept bein' a whore, an' I can't look after th'children on my own." She knew that was true, and the baseline for her? "I have to know they're cared for." She didn't even know his name and yet for just a moment, just the slightest, briefest trill there was a flash of defiance and fire in Tessa Anders' eyes, "And I am not doing that any more, I don't like it and I will not be doing it." Her chin jutted stubbornly as it had just before she threw an ornament at him and as she spoke her defiance?
As she spoke those words, her diction and pronunciation was perfect. Yet, no sooner had the words come out of her mouth than she gasped in surprise at herself and lifted a hand to her mouth, as though to catch the words and put them back in.
On the way here, as they walked together, Tessa had been almost entirely silent. She'd made shushing noises to the babies if they made a sound and she had, of course, answered any questions asked of her. But the woman was in deep shock and so she followed the men who had come to her home and saved her, she thought. But Benji was dead. Fear gripped at her at that thought and her breath shortened in her chest. Benji was dead. She'd made sure to stop, before they left, and she'd retrieved the money from the place where she'd hidden it from him. It was for the babies, that money, for them when they grew up and she squirreled away a little bit here and a little bit there. It had added up, though not to much but it was something. That and Benji's purse full of his winnings, the pot by his side of the bed and the other places throughout the house where he hid things from her. Each one, she went to.
But she didn't speak. She simply made her way with them and into an Inn. It was a very nice Inn, by Tessa's standards, although Celeste would most certainly have turned her nose up at it and declared it barely functional. Tessa dropped her head to the children, letting the bits of hair which she had kept loose fall forward and hide the bruises and split lip. They'd walked her through, her and the children and then shown her into a room. Whose room was this, she wondered, but she went and sat where the Knight told her to sit.
Sitting there, not having seen the people they passed, nor anything really except for a vague idea of where they were, Tessa looked up at him and her deep brown eyes showed her shock and confusion. There were a hundred things she wanted to ask, but she didn't know what any of them were right now, only that she had all of these questions in her head.
And that her heart hurt.
She felt alone and afraid and the Knight who had been so kind seemed to still be that, yet also distant, aloof. Torqin, he seemed more friendly, but she was wary of him. He was one of Them. Benji's people, the fighters and gamblers who won whores like her. He was in those crowds and she didn't understand for a moment that he had been there looking for her - to her mind, it was all just one strange situation. And her heart hurt, and she was alone. She'd never been alone, she didn't know how to be and Tessa felt panic rise in her at the thought of it.
"Am I yours, now?" Her voice was afraid, but she wasn't sure which answer she was more afraid of. Yes or no. "I'll be good, sir, I will. I've never been alone an' I'm.. " She had no tears, she couldn't remember the last time she'd cried, yet her voice shook. "I'm no good at anythin' 'cept bein' a whore, an' I can't look after th'children on my own." She knew that was true, and the baseline for her? "I have to know they're cared for." She didn't even know his name and yet for just a moment, just the slightest, briefest trill there was a flash of defiance and fire in Tessa Anders' eyes, "And I am not doing that any more, I don't like it and I will not be doing it." Her chin jutted stubbornly as it had just before she threw an ornament at him and as she spoke her defiance?
As she spoke those words, her diction and pronunciation was perfect. Yet, no sooner had the words come out of her mouth than she gasped in surprise at herself and lifted a hand to her mouth, as though to catch the words and put them back in.
