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Aliveth and Milan in Heritage
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"It is! It hadn't had any examples of teleportation before to copy, and it wasn't worth the time investment to try to figure it out from scratch. But now it's had a few examples so it'll probably stop and figure it out when it has time and isn't disentangling a hurricane."

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"Disentangling a hurricane?"

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"It's hurricane season, there's one that's approaching from the coast. So my family's magic is killing it so it doesn't hurt anyone. It takes a while, hurricanes are rather big and complicated. It put down disentangling it for a little while to help me, but I'm pretty sure it's picked it back up again by now."

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"...that's... impressive," he says. It's also slightly worrying on an instinctive level, but not ultimately that worrying, because he gets a definite sense that Aliveth's family's magic is astonishingly benign.

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Aliveth suddenly realizes that maybe mentioning the scope of power her family's magic can operate on to the guy whose universe squishes uppity mortals was a bad call. Maybe she'd handle this with grace if she were not hopelessly in love with the guy in question, but she is. So she just - starts talking. All in a rush.

"It, um -" she adds quickly, "it actually can't just - just blast people, even if it wanted to, which I would like to stress that it very much doesn't. It's spent pretty much all of its existence figuring out how to do a lot of extremely helpful things that tend to be slow acting. It's good at quickly understanding and twisting magical effects from other magics to its own - and its charges' - benefit, but it typically doesn't have the chance or the proclivity to sit down and figure out how to do something destructive. It'd have to put down all of the helpful things it does all of the time. So if it were to branch out into destruction, which it won't, you would get a warning because all of the healing stations in the country would stop working and the weather would stop being quietly more helpful than it would be on its own and realistically the economy would probably crash so it'll be very obvious?"

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"That's... good to know. Thank you."

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"You're welcome. It's um, also pretty good at protecting people? Teleportation fluke aside, anyway. And I've got you under my shields right now. That's - actually why the hand holding earlier, so I could keep you in range without having to worry about keeping you in range."

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"Thank you, I appreciate that."

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"Well I wasn't just going to leave you there, and I wasn't going to not protect you." She pauses. "Am not just going to not protect you," she corrects. "I mean there are circumstances where I would conceivably stop covering you with my shields but presumably in those circumstances you'd be somewhere actually safe."

She's babbling. She hasn't done this in years, someone help her.

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"Yes, I very much get the sense you're that sort of person, and it's something I appreciate."

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"Oh, um. I mean it's not entirely just inherent responsibility, there's the - you know what, I have been babbling for far too long, I'm still adjusting to the mind control, it's thrown off a lot of my typical ability to socialize competently, I am just. We should probably actually resume rowing again, actually, that seems like a helpful thing to do that is not me desperately flailing verbally."

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"Sure, that's reasonable."

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"Right, okay, yes, good." Pause. She notes, logically, that she's got to stop hugging him in order to row. Logically, she understands this fact. It just isn't really logistically feasible to hug someone and also row a boat, or at least, not very well, or not without potentially endangering someone to getting beamed in the head with an oar by accident. So she must cease hugging Milan.

....

It takes her a bit to actually do something with this logical fact, but she does disentangle and then go get to rowing. Looking slightly mortified.

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Milan refrains from commenting.

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She is just handling this with such unmatched grace and composure, really, she's making all of the other princesses look bad. So bad. Milan is going to have such a great opinion of Kivenne from its crown princess, yes indeed.

Aliveth refrains from voicing her consternation out loud.

Down the river they float, acting out the heart wrenching and inspiring ballad known as 'Row, row, row your boat,' except without any merriment, and with at least one occupant desperately hoping that this is a dream so that she can wake up from it.

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Milan is thoughtful and quiet and gives no sign whatsoever of judging her for her conduct.

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Well. Good. She guesses. She'll just keep rowing and they'll see if they can find a town before she's exhausted or not.

She ends up speaking before she gets there.

"I'm um. Sorry if I'm being a bit, uh, erratic?"

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"It's completely understandable, given the circumstances. Don't worry about it."

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"All right. Still, for my own benefit, if not yours, I'll try to keep the babbling to a minimum."

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"Also a reasonable approach."

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Snort.

"I do try for those." She falls silent as she rows some more.

"... Speaking of reasonable approaches, do you perhaps also want to row?"

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"Yeah, I'd be happy to."

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"Excellent, I and my arms thank you." She passes him the oar, because seriously, ow. She's many things, but 'physically suited for long term physical labor' is perhaps not one of them.

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So Milan rows.

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"Let me know when you need a break," she says.

Except within about fifteen minutes she's graduated from attentively looking at scenery for signs of a road or town, to inattentively propping her head up with her arm, breathing evenly and probably at least 30% asleep. It's been a long day filled with kidnapping and escape attempts and emotional meltdowns and a lot of rowing, and it's getting rather late.

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