by Hopeflower » Sat Feb 11, 2017 5:15 am
In the wake of the events that his students had gotten caught up in, and subsequently brought to Johnathon and Viho's attention, the psychomancy instructor had made it his priority to begin to teach his class basic offensive magic. He'd barely given himself time to rest, and now poured what energy he didn't strictly need for teaching into honing his newfound psychokinesis.
And, with two more or less fully functioning arms, he'd gone and gotten himself a rather nice belated Solstice gift. The sabre wasn't Viho's old scimitar, and it didn't hold the same sentimental value, but its edge was just as finely honed. And most importantly, its balance and weight agreed with him; the familiar practice steps came fluidly, and there was a vicious satisfaction in picturing the curved blade splitting flesh.
There was yet more added practicality to favoring a lighter blade, Viho was quickly discovering. With a little extra concentration, he found that even if his grip loosened or slipped, he could keep the sabre in his hand. That, he noted, was something worth experimenting with. He'd called Charles' sword to him, after all - so maybe if he -
"Please don't throw your sword at me."
Firel's voice was a wake-up call. Viho blinked, registering that he'd unconsciously moved to test out his idea. He adjusted his grip on the weapon and lowered it. "I apologize. I didn't realize you were there."
"Obviously," the younger psychomancer replied dryly. Firel took a deliberate step sideways, as though concerned that Viho might still throw the sword. "I hoped you'd be here, but I wasn't sure, what with...all the recent excitement."
"The excitement hasn't done much to stop me from being here yet," Viho said, sliding his sword into its sheath. "Did you need me for something?"
Firel struggled with himself briefly before he blurted, "I hoped - well, I've wanted to ask you, but you've been busy..." He huffed a frustrated sigh, scuffing his toe against the classroom floor. "It's...my mom has trouble with her memory."
Viho blinked, caught a little off guard. "I'm sorry to hear it," he offered when the silence threatened to stretch on for too long.
The younger elf hunched his shoulders a little and nodded tightly. As though it hurt his pride, he hurried through continuing, "I wanted to ask you if psychomancy can reverse memory loss."
After a quiet moment of puzzling that sentence out, Viho leveled a serious stare at his student. He spoke slowly, suddenly reminded that even for all of his experience, all of his years of life, there were things that he just didn't know. "Truthfully, I couldn't tell you. Psychomancy relies in part on what already exists within a person's mind. True, we can plant suggestions and touch memories people had thought forgotten - but I can't say I've ever tried to recover something a person can't recall at all."
He could see the moment that Firel interpreted that as there's nothing anyone can do, and something twisted painfully upon watching his student's hopes start to crumble.
"Then there's nothing for it," Firel said softly, turning away.
"I didn't say that," Viho corrected gently. "I said I hadn't tried it, not that it was impossible." Firel still looked unconvinced, so he added, "I think it's worth looking into. Perhaps someone more experienced than myself has made an attempt."
"Maybe." Firel set his bag on his usual bench and sat down slowly, as though he'd aged several decades during the conversation. He scrubbed his hand over his face, trying to pull himself together. "It's been hard, watching her forget about everyone she loves."
Mild alarm went streaking down Viho's spine. It was one thing to roll with the surprises that came with being around Dahnae. It was another thing entirely to try and support his students emotionally when he wasn't exactly the greatest example when it came to solving personal problems.
To his relief, Firel didn't wait for him to find the right comforting words. He shook his head and said, "But you're not here to listen to me talk about my home life."
"Maybe not," Viho replied, taking the opening he was given, "but I can encourage you to continue researching this. You may find more than what I can tell you."
Firel eyed him, then offered a small, tired smile. "Well, I guess it won't do me any good to give up after I came all this way to do just that."
"Gotta have a little sadness once in a while so you know when the good times come."
"Talent is a pursued interest. In other words, anything that you're willing to practice, you can do." ~ Bob Ross
"The future is always uncertain and painful but it must be lived." ~ Unknown