Iliril of the Chant
"Y-yeah, m-maybe t-that's r-right," Iliril said vaguely, staring into his tea. "I d-don't have t-to l-like it, t-though. B-but, I j-just f-feel l-like I've d-done s-somet-thing w-wrong. At s-some p-point, m-mayb-be I j-just m-mess-sed up and t-this is w-what I g-get for it." He frowned at his reflection. "I k-know it's n-not r-right b-but I c-can't help f-feel-ling it."
He took a sip. The taste wasn't bad but it wasn't that great either. It felt flowery on his tongue instead of milky like he was used to. "I k-know, I'm j-just one p-pers-son and I'm not t-that g-great of a m-mage, eit-ther. B-but."
Wait, what was that? Iliril stopped and licked his lips for a moment, a strange look passing over his face. He took a second sip and then another, letting that one linger in his mouth for a while and sighed. There it was, then, just a trace of something familiar. He hadn't realized it at first because of the differences in recipe. It was the only tea that nobody ever added milk to.
"Oh," he said, after putting the cup down. "T-this is c-chrys-sant-them-mum." It wasn't a question. "P-peop-ple us-suall-ly d-drink it w-when t-they're ill." That was him a lot when he was younger. Not so much now that he was passed the age. But it was hard not to remember it.
The next thing that happened left Iliril horrified beyond words. As he started to say something else, he abruptly choked on a sob. Shocked at just how quickly he was losing it, he rubbed at his eyes. He was actually starting to cry.
"Oh, d-damn it." This was the absolute last thing he needed. He had thought, he had really thought he had gone beyond this stage. The pull to some sort of a real breakdown was becoming increasingly strong.
Iliril didn't want it. He just shut up and gulped down the tea instead so he could say that the tears were from being burned instead. Because it really did hurt, it really did.
It was only a dumb, flowery tea.
"Y-yeah, m-maybe t-that's r-right," Iliril said vaguely, staring into his tea. "I d-don't have t-to l-like it, t-though. B-but, I j-just f-feel l-like I've d-done s-somet-thing w-wrong. At s-some p-point, m-mayb-be I j-just m-mess-sed up and t-this is w-what I g-get for it." He frowned at his reflection. "I k-know it's n-not r-right b-but I c-can't help f-feel-ling it."
He took a sip. The taste wasn't bad but it wasn't that great either. It felt flowery on his tongue instead of milky like he was used to. "I k-know, I'm j-just one p-pers-son and I'm not t-that g-great of a m-mage, eit-ther. B-but."
Wait, what was that? Iliril stopped and licked his lips for a moment, a strange look passing over his face. He took a second sip and then another, letting that one linger in his mouth for a while and sighed. There it was, then, just a trace of something familiar. He hadn't realized it at first because of the differences in recipe. It was the only tea that nobody ever added milk to.
"Oh," he said, after putting the cup down. "T-this is c-chrys-sant-them-mum." It wasn't a question. "P-peop-ple us-suall-ly d-drink it w-when t-they're ill." That was him a lot when he was younger. Not so much now that he was passed the age. But it was hard not to remember it.
The next thing that happened left Iliril horrified beyond words. As he started to say something else, he abruptly choked on a sob. Shocked at just how quickly he was losing it, he rubbed at his eyes. He was actually starting to cry.
"Oh, d-damn it." This was the absolute last thing he needed. He had thought, he had really thought he had gone beyond this stage. The pull to some sort of a real breakdown was becoming increasingly strong.
Iliril didn't want it. He just shut up and gulped down the tea instead so he could say that the tears were from being burned instead. Because it really did hurt, it really did.
It was only a dumb, flowery tea.