hey baby, did it hurt when you fell from heaven
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...Oof. Although it doesn't seem ridiculous that a war between the gods could have wreaked that kind of devastation on the world. He listens to the exchange of news, conveys what little he can of his actual observations, and then rides onward, stopping at the next spot with relatively un-destroyed grass to let his horse graze. 

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This farmhouse was on a bit of a hill, which saved it from the floods; around near the back of the house there is grass for his horse to munch. 

 


In the distance in the field of debris left by receding stormwaters there is a young kid slumped on a piece of driftwood.

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Huh. 

He starts preparing to ride onward - and remembers the dead toddler. This one doesn't look dead. Yet. 

It's kind of an absurdly small-scale priority, but - he's seen too many dead things, lately. 

He loosely tethers his horse to a tree so it can keep grazing but won't run off, and heads toward the child. 

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Not dead. Just curled up asleep, in clothes that haven't fully dried yet, shivering.

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He spends a while figuring out how to shift things around, to pockets and under his coat, so that he can undo his blanket and cover the child. He pats - his? her? - shoulder, gently. 

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People in Cheliax mostly don't cut kids' hair at this age either way. 

When patted the kid opens their eyes. Looks confusedly around. 

"Am I dead?" they ask hoarsely. "Want to - want to go to Axis."

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"No, you are not dead," he says, as gently as he can. (And his understanding is that children this little don't and can't go to Axis, generally, but he doesn't say so.) "I...am sorry - your parents...?" There isn't going to be a good way to have this conversation, is there. 

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"They're in Axis and I want to go there too and I can follow all the rules I'm not too little," the kid says. They are probably three.

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Oh no, bursting into tears in front of the three-year-old - one of the people he was supposed to save, to give a glorious future, except he couldn't even save himself - is not going to help at all.

"No, not yet," he manages. "It is not the right time for you. But you could come with me? I am going to the big city." 

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The kid bursts into tears.

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"I am sorry. I am so sorry." A word that has two meanings, condolences and regrets for a personal failure, and he means the latter but the child doesn't need to know that.

He sits down, tries to see if the kid will let him scoop them into his arms. 

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The kid would absolutely like a hug right now. 

 

 

"I want my mommy and my daddy."

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"I know. I know." There's nothing else he can say. 

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"'s not fair."

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"No, it is not. None of this is fair, at all. I am so sorry." 

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"Wanna go to Axis, want my mommy and my daddy, I can follow the rules I can," but less coherently this time. It was really remarkably coherent, the first time.

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Which is exactly what you would expect, from a traumatized toddler desperate to see their parents again. "I know." Hug. He's prepared to sit still and hold the crying toddler for - well, if it takes hours he's going to get impatient and see if hugs while riding are acceptable, but he'll wait it out for a good while. 

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After about ten minutes the kid falls asleep on his shoulder, clinging.

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He waits for a bit to make sure they're settled, and then carefully stands up, making sure not to drop any of his other possessions, and makes his way back to the horse. Getting back up into the saddle without jostling the sleeping child is a production, but if he buttons his coat over them that'll help hold them in place so he has free use of at least one hand, and he can manage it. 

He keeps riding in the direction of the city. Casting his magic-detection cantrip every time he passes a building or other signs of habitation. 

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The stuff out here is not magic but he does get more competent with the cantrip. 

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He's out of food. He could manage on an empty stomach until tonight just fine, but probably he shouldn't subject the toddler to that, if there's literally anyone around here who can spare food for them - or just for the child, even, surely little kids don't eat that much. He keeps an eye out for a relatively-less-destroyed farmhouse or small village. 

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Here's an intact farmhouse where a wary man comes to the door brandishing a crossbow, and relaxes when he sees a man with a child. 

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"I found this child by the river," he explains in a low voice. "Their parents are dead. I - I do not have any food - I can go hungry for a day but I think a toddler should not - if there is anything you can spare..." 

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He hesitates. "Where're you from?"

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He names the town that he first passed through. "Well, one of the farms nearish to it. My family is dead. I thought, why stay..." It is, again, not hard to look the appropriate level of bereaved. 

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