They've left him alone in his cell.
He can't really be said to be lucid but he has very acute instincts for when there's someone and when he's alone - it's the last of his senses to depart him - and he's alone.
And then suddenly he isn't.
Mmhmm. Not sure I told you - I would probably have ended up chief of my tribe if I hadn't been a Speaker. I think they were even considering me for it after we knew I'd be one - wouldn't've been the best idea, to try to have one person doing both of those, but the only other chief's-kin kobold wasn't very well suited for the job either. Anyway, I got a bit of the early training, the basic logistics and stuff. Came in handy, when I was exiled - I think I did really well, going from having literally my hands and my magic to being prepared enough to have a comfortable winter within six months.
No, but it made it possible to do a lot of things I wouldn't've been able to do without it. Being able to teleport right out to where I left off the previous day with gathering, so I didn't have to waste time walking through areas I'd already looked at, and just teleport things back with a touch instead of having to carry them - it really isn't comparable at all to what most people would've had to do.
And the Eldar need less food and can carry more of it, but still I'd be proud of someone who was cast out alone and figured it all out.
That, yeah.
It does feel weird to be doing chief's work when there are other people around like this, but I think given the situation I'm right to ignore that.
We wouldn't feel comfortable making the sort of decisions you've been making on your behalf, no.
I mean, deciding where I go and who I help and how isn't chief's work, not by kobold cultural standards. This particular situation is pretty far outside what you'd ever see among kobolds, but that definitely is the kind of thing that'd be personal decisions outside of an actual emergency situation - and even then I'm not exactly a member of either of these groups. Chief's work is more the logistics, big-picture stuff that affects everybody, that kind of thing.
...that's not really what I meant? Kobolds don't like one person having too much power, I'm already a Speaker and a mage, I kind of keep expecting someone to get upset at me for overstepping what's appropriate. Even though I know Eldar don't think about it like that.
Good. Grin.
I'm going to start heading out toward the elves, today, and I really ought to have a plan for who gets to learn the magic before I get out there. Anything I should be taking into consideration with that?
...I don't actually want to encourage that. I mean, some, yeah, I'm coming from a culture that's used to dealing with this and how we do it might be useful information, but I don't know what'll work best for you, you shouldn't just listen to me because I happen to be the one with the magic.
The one with the magic and lots of common sense in considerations in deploying it, so far. It's better to be conservative with this kind of thing.
That I definitely agree with. I'm not sure how, though, and still have things work out okay.
I might need to just wait until the political situation is more worked out, that's part of what has me worried.
It might be that this war is going to be over in two weeks, I am somewhat hesitant to commit my people against their will for the war's sake if it's not going to be won that way anyway.
I don't think it's going to be quite that fast, but you're right.
And then how bad of a problem do we have if only one side has mages? Or a mage, but anyone with magic can share it.
Other than politics there's no reason to have more than one person learn magic right now - I do need someone with osanwë to help me get at least the magic detection form. If it's just one person I can probably work something out just with them; if it's going to be more than that, and not for a specific reason, things get more complicated.
And because I expect other people to worry about that. Reasonably so, if they know what it can do and don't trust who has it.