Well, three could play the hissing game. When it seemed that the snakes were having a right go of letting the whole room know that he was moving around and awake, he hissed at them, though he knew nothing of actual snake language. Hopefully he wasn't swearing at them mistakenly.
He watched the gorgon shift and the sheer length and girth of that tail would certainly be enough to kill a grown man. So far, not formally awake over there on the stone, so he pushed off the fur that was covering him and slipped from the bed. He walked with a limp, wincing a little in discomfort from his leg.
He made his way over to the quiet embers and built up another fire with the wood available, intent on finding his pack and making some coffee. He was going to need it today. All the while, he watched the gorgon's outline.
They hissed louder as if challenged, a few lifting themselves up and swaying a little.
Gabriel, in his half asleep state, swatted at them a bit as the rest of him stretched out, part of his coils spilling on to the floor. At least that part of it was warm due to how close it was to the warm stone. So while Jack was reminded of his injuries, the gorgon was at least pushing himself up in to a sit, rubbing over his face as a few snakes moved their heads to the sides of it and others watched the hunter still.
Still wearing a loose lace-up shirt and... that was about it, hands fallen to coils, swaying a little as he sat.
Apparently hissing didn't work. Whatever. He wasn't about to argue with the guard snakes, though he had hoped the gorgon would sleep longer. He supposed that it was a matter of some small measure of trust between them that they had slept at all.
Fire stoked to life and needing to be fed, but he was rising to find his kitpack and pulling it closer so he could rifle for some precious coffee and his kettle to heat some water. He added some to it and allowed it to warm with the fire that was coming alive, glancing over at the gorgon that seemed rather sleepy still.
"I didn't realize you had two forms," he murmured softly. "You can choose to have a tail or legs then?"
He yawned wide, jaw cracking just a little from it just due to how far it had stretched, some hair fallen over shoulders and a few snakes moving to wrap it and other snakes up as if it were some sort of hairtie. Let him deal with it all later-
An eye cracked open. "Comes with having one parent as a human, and either has it's own advantages." What those were between them exactly he wasn't going to say. He was moving off that stone, moving up as tail turned to legs and he had to grab a pair of pants to pull on. "Sometimes it's more comfortable to sleep in that form."
He was seated next to the fire so that he could more readily feed and build it back up, his magical sight more directed outwards so he was aware of the gorgon rousing himself from sleep completely. It was... a rather different experience since he could 'see' rather than having to feel for everything, and honestly, the mixture was good.
"Do I dare ask how many creatures you've choked the life out of with those coils of yours?" He was poking the flames, turning wood over. "And as you said before, every gorgon has a human parent out of the two." Now he knew more advantages. Soon enough he was going to be the most knowledgeable hunter when it came to gorgons.
The transition was interesting to be aware of as well, smooth and easy, like sliding into a different shirt or something. "You appeared comfortable. Slept well by the sounds of it too."
"Don't think you do," because more of that had happened when he was younger and had little else at his disposal. A desperate sort of act to keep himself alive until he could do more to defend himself against those he came upon. "A human parent that loves them as much as they love their gorgon mate," or so he had observed while he'd had his parents.
Pants were tied as he let the hunter feed the fire, going in to on of his food storage to pull out a few things. Some fruit, a few pieces of wrapped meat. He could smell the coffee warming but said nothing of it.
Jack went very quiet at the little details of Gabriel's parentage, face tipping to make it seem like he was looking into the fire. His fingers laced together and he slowly nodded his head, and he could assume based on the way that Gabriel spoke that those parents were long dead. "You must miss them," he said softly. "How long ago did they...?"
He was back to poking the flames, feeding them until the size and heat was satisfying enough and knowing that the coffee would boil up nicely. His thigh ached, but it was easy to ignore as he busied himself with pulling out two mugs.
"Slept well," he agreed. "You hiss when you sleep." More like the snakes hissed, but it could be one in the same. Also a play on snoring.
He was quiet for a while, as if Gabriel wasn't going to answer, just the sound of fruit being sliced. "A few decades ago," he couldn't remember the years exactly, but that was close enough. "A hunter found us, and my father fought him while my mother hid me before going to fight at his side." Neither came back, but by the tone....
Gabriel had seen what happened, what became of them. The sound of slicing never stopping even as he spoke, moving on to the meat.
There was the low hissing of a snake- "Do I?" He wouldn't know, truthfully, same as snoring.
A part of him wondered how far would be pushing too far, and he was fine with a non-answer as well. He certainly didn't take any pleasure discussing his family or the resulting scars that came from it. If gorgons were as loyal as they seemed, then it was a sore subject indeed. Maybe he wanted a sliver of a moment in sharing in pain that he could relate to, that others suffered as he had.
"A hunter..." He couldn't say he was surprised. "The snake purge." That's what the Guild called it when the hunt to eradicate gorgons had been at its peek.
He was stirring the brewing coffee, checking its readiness. The hiss might have been him being called traitor for selling the snakes out. No regrets yet. "You do. They seem as active at night as during the day. Your own personal little tea kettles."
"My father did ultimately kill the hunter," A man that had been a skilled fighter, "but the blindfold he wore had been ripped off and neither of them could act quickly enough to prevent him from catching a glance of my mother's face." So he turned to stone, naturally, that part didn't need to be spoken- "In her grief, my mother fell upon his sword-"
Gabriel hissed, knife dropped on the table as he took hold of his hand, a bit of blood dripping to the floor. What he had been cutting was spared any blood, but he still moved to try and take care of the wound himself. See if it was more minor than it felt or not.
He supposed he was supposed to root for the hunter but he didn't at all. It was a shame to rip a seemingly happy family apart like that. Yet another orphan created from a bounty that had no real base back then. Most gorgons did little if anything to harm humans. "She must have loved him very much to leave her child behind."
His head rose from the coffee at the hiss and it didn't take long to smell blood. He rose from his seat by the fire and moved to offer assistance. "Here, let me help. How deep is it? I shouldn't be distracting you with such painful talk."
A few of the snakes' heads had crowded around his face as if the look at the cut as well without getting in the way. Still, he let Jack take his hand, blood actively flowing from the cut. He hadn't cut off a finger, but it was deep enough to be a bit of a problem- "She blamed herself for his death, that grief deep enough she forgot everything but that," and it had been enough to leave him alone.
Had been enough for him to hate hunters, laying the blame on that rather than his mother. The hunter was why the blindfold was gone and neither of his parents could react fast enough. That he watched the hunter bleed to death near the statue made of his father and the cold body of his mother before coming out of hiding.
It wasn't strange that Gabriel felt about hunters as he had once felt about monsters and other creatures that required to be put in check. His own hatred had faded down to a wary kind of loneliness, like he was doing the jobs because there was nothing else. Sometimes he mustered his hot anger and rushed in headlong, but it was rare these days.
"He knew the risks having a lover that could turn him to stone," he pointed out logically, aware it wouldn't make any different. Her grief had clearly been horrible and deep, unreasonable.
He shook his head as he used a finger to smear the blood to look at the wound. It was deep enough to be concerning, nothing so simple as a bandage would fix. "Hush, I've got this," he murmured as he examined the wound before more blood welled up. It coated his fingers and his hands but all the same, he wrapped his palms around that wounded finger and called upon his magic to press warm healing into it, stopping the bleeding, knitting the injury so it was little more than a surface wound. Not perfect, but good enough for a bandage now.
He sighed and sagged a little. Healing magic was one of the hardest to learn and some of the hardest to cast. "Let's wash it up and bandage it now. Might itch for a day or two."
Yet here they were, a hunter of monsters and what most would call a monster.
"He did, reason he took every precaution he could, and all it took was one hunter." One determined to use a gorgon's mate against them in order to get his prize, and likely would have tried hunting Gabriel down if things had gone as wanted. He'd made sure some creature ate that body while his mother's was left alone.
A shoulder shifted to help keep Jack from sagging further, a few snakes brushing against the sides of the hunter's face. "You didn't have to-" Use up energy needed to heal himself just to take care of a bad cut, but. Well. This entire encounter had been filled with surprised from the start, hadn't it. "I've a wash basin, c'mon."
Would lead them both to it, and there was enough clean water to wash off all of the blood. He'd do something with the bloodied water later- "Do you need to sit?"
Honestly, this was the most genuine encounter with anything and anyone that he had had in what felt like a long time. It was difficult to think of why they were doing any acts of kindness towards each other, and yet here they were. He liked to think that Gabriel had started it with treating his wounds, so this was fair.
He blinked when the snakes came at him, facial expression freezing for a moment before they just bumped and brushed by. That was... not what he was expecting. This encounter was only getting stranger the longer they stayed together, and he found himself tired and confused all over again.
"And you didn't have to carry me up here and treat my wounds either," he pointed out as he allowed himself to be blindly lead to the wash bin. He dipped his hands in, washing off the blood as he leaned a bit more heavily than he would like on the gorgon. "I can stand, just need to lean a little."
With his hands washed and that wound clean, he lifted Gabriel's hand to inspect his work. It was neat and clean, better than he normally did. "We should dry it and bandage." A deep tired sigh. "Sorry, but I might have to stay here the day with you. Just need a bit of rest." And coffee... which was still on the fire boiling away.
"It was either that or dump you well outside of the mines, and I doubt anyone would have found you." In time to get wounds treated well enough that he wouldn't get sick of something. So in Gabriel's mind it was better to carry and treat the hunter himself, especially after fighting with him rather than against.
He sighed softly, snakes curling back in to place amongst his hair. "You're fin staying to rest, really." It wasn't as if anyone would find the hunter here, the gorgon lived alone.
Did perk up a little and leave Jack standing there by the wash basin, and pulled that coffee from the fire so it wouldn't burn once he noticed it again. Had a cloth wrapped around is hand to prevent burning, too- "I can cook breakfast for the both of us- after drying and bandaging." So get something more in to Jack than just coffee.
"It was still kind of you to take me in, especially given your history with hunters." He was safe here which was interesting to consider. He couldn't claim to having that much unless at the Guild when everyone else as sleeping or on assignment. A kindness he hardly deserved given the blood on his hands.
Still, he returned to his pack as he dried his hands on his borrowed clothing and pulled out his medical bag in search of bandages while Gabriel dealt with the coffee. "Pour me a mug of that, would you? And yourself some if you're into coffee."
He was moving over to sit on the bed because it was big enough for them to sit together so he could bandage Gabriel's finger properly. "I can't say I eat breakfast often. More just rations on the road. Come, let me bandage that wound so you don't scratch at it."
"So I suppose we'll see if this doesn't bite me in the end, huh?" There was nothing biting to his tone, just that... well, he'd already accepted what could happen from his actions here be they good or bad and still had done it. "Still, rather have done it than not given what bit of kindness you'd already shown yourself," trap or not.
He did pour the two mugs of coffee before setting the container back down as he gave one a sniff while carrying them both over to the bed. One was set within Jack's reach and the other just beside it as Gabriel sat down just within reach himself.
His hand was held out so that Jack could take it to bandage the injured-and-healed finger. "Well, going to today since I'm not just going to fix it for myself with you here, seems rude."
"It shouldn't. I have no want or need to report you to the Guild. Your existence is safe with me, but I can't guarantee if other hunters in the area stumble on you," he said honestly. He couldn't control the routes of others, but most hunters avoided this place because they couldn't or didn't want to disarm traps to head through. Easier to take the long way around.
The coffee smelled really good, dark and flavourful. He ignored his mug to instead work on Gabriel's hand, wrapping a quick but efficient bandage around the digit. He had been bandaging himself for years, so he had plenty of practice.
"I will be more than happy to eat whatever you make, okay?" He patted Gabriel's wrist lightly to signal he was done. "Good as new. Careful with the coffee. It will be hot." And sitting next to each other? That was nicer than it should be. He hummed softly and just stared off across the room.
"Like I said, you're the only one who has and lives still to speak about it at all." Chances had been given four times, and only one of those chances had been taken even if with a threat left behind with it on both sides. Funny for them to end up like this.
Fingers flexed after Jack had finished, but nothing to purposefully try and loosen the work done to his finger. Seemed it had passed whatever it was Gabriel had been watching for. "A bit of fruit, some cooked pork, and a few eggs beaten together and cooked like that was the plan." Seemed a well assorted morning meal to him.
Did watch Jack a moment before he stood to go and finish preparing the food to be cooked, picking up where he'd left off with the meat. Of course the pork and eggs were cooked over the fire together and the smell they made filled the room, and it was enough to make up two plates that Gabriel carried back to the bed and sat down on the side of it again.
"Here, it'll help you feel a bit better after using up your energy for that healing magic."
"Lucky number four," he remarked, a touch on the bitter side. He shook his head, pushing the thought aside and just packing away his medical supplies again now that the job was done. He would need to sit for a bit longer, feeling like his legs were jelly.
Instead, he allowed himself to just be aware of Gabriel cooking food. It was strange how homely that felt, like some of those very early mornings at some of the inns he favoured where the matron of the house was bustling about cooking for the influx of people waking. Serve coffee and just let him exist in their sphere because they knew they were safe while he sat quiet by the fire. Earned himself a few free meals that way.
He turned his head when he smelled that meal come closer, surprised the gorgon took the spot next to him again. "Appreciate this," he murmured, taking the plate as if he could see it and picking up some fruit first. Still in season, which he was grateful for.
"Once we finish with the chimera later today, I'll be out of your hair."
Gabriel was leaving the fruit for last, but he started on the eggs he'd seasoned while the pork fat gave them just a bit of extra flavor. He'd learned to cook from his father at first and simply picked up there there on watching humans from a distance. Easier when he'd had the basics to help him with that. "Not a problem, so you're welcome."
Did finally have a sip of that coffee, it had cooled down enough for him while he'd been cooking. Tasted fine, not something he allowed for himself to get away with the few times he did go to a human village. Wine and some ales were easier to get away with after all.
He nodded slowly. "I'll be leaving from here in a few days time, so I'll be out of yours for the rest of this season as well." Not have to worry about someone stumbling across him at least, if a worry at all.
Jack was eating the fruit first, enjoying the taste of it and knowing that soon enough it would be out of season and he'd have to persist on dried fruit. It wasn't the same. Sometimes he missed fruit trees and the harvest, and other times, he was glad to be away from it all and doing this simplicity nomadic life. That didn't stop him from enjoying the meal and his rather strong coffee.
He nodded and ate. The eggs were cooked well too he noticed, but that made sense of the gorgon had to survive on his own. Room for experimentation he supposed. "So... what is it you do exactly? Aside from your rounds of this place? You do odd work or something?"
And he would be able to provide more funds for the gorgon when he traded some of the chimera parts. Better it come from a hunter, and it seemed a fair exchange of their services to each other. A good parting gift, he supposed, since he doubted he'd hear from the gorgon again until next year or maybe never. Who knew.
"Something like that- sometimes I get mistaken for a mercenary, and if the job sounds decent I take it." Sometimes it was just to protect a traveling group, things like that. Hell, he had gotten mistaken for a hunter before and only took up jobs for a creature that had actually lost its mind and putting it down was a kindness for both sides.
Whatever he could do to earn a little gold for himself to get by on what he couldn't hunt or make for himself. One way to get by honestly enough.
The pork was nice and crisp when it came to the skin, and the fat had rendered wonderfully to make the meat succulent. That was eaten once the eggs were done for.
"In these days, any coin is better than no coin," he murmured with a slight shake of his head. With the war still going on here and there, sometimes work was scarce for those that had no occupation that wasn't some kind of soldiering. Impossible for some creatures, but Gabriel could hide much of his appearance and still come across as human. "The chimera should supplement you for awhile then. I know a good buyer who will pay well."
He realized that might be the last time they saw each other too. After all, what reason did he have to follow around a gorgon? For that matter, what reason did a gorgon have to interact with him passing through the area when he was known to be relatively safe?
He ate well today, finishing off the entire meal without a single pause. His coffee was drank between sips and he was feeling a bit better with food on his belly. Still tired from the expenditure, but that was fine and expected. He sighed and rose to move to rinse his dishes. He knew about where that station was anyway. "Good breakfast."
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He watched the gorgon shift and the sheer length and girth of that tail would certainly be enough to kill a grown man. So far, not formally awake over there on the stone, so he pushed off the fur that was covering him and slipped from the bed. He walked with a limp, wincing a little in discomfort from his leg.
He made his way over to the quiet embers and built up another fire with the wood available, intent on finding his pack and making some coffee. He was going to need it today. All the while, he watched the gorgon's outline.
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Gabriel, in his half asleep state, swatted at them a bit as the rest of him stretched out, part of his coils spilling on to the floor. At least that part of it was warm due to how close it was to the warm stone. So while Jack was reminded of his injuries, the gorgon was at least pushing himself up in to a sit, rubbing over his face as a few snakes moved their heads to the sides of it and others watched the hunter still.
Still wearing a loose lace-up shirt and... that was about it, hands fallen to coils, swaying a little as he sat.
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Fire stoked to life and needing to be fed, but he was rising to find his kitpack and pulling it closer so he could rifle for some precious coffee and his kettle to heat some water. He added some to it and allowed it to warm with the fire that was coming alive, glancing over at the gorgon that seemed rather sleepy still.
"I didn't realize you had two forms," he murmured softly. "You can choose to have a tail or legs then?"
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An eye cracked open. "Comes with having one parent as a human, and either has it's own advantages." What those were between them exactly he wasn't going to say. He was moving off that stone, moving up as tail turned to legs and he had to grab a pair of pants to pull on. "Sometimes it's more comfortable to sleep in that form."
Personal taste there.
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"Do I dare ask how many creatures you've choked the life out of with those coils of yours?" He was poking the flames, turning wood over. "And as you said before, every gorgon has a human parent out of the two." Now he knew more advantages. Soon enough he was going to be the most knowledgeable hunter when it came to gorgons.
The transition was interesting to be aware of as well, smooth and easy, like sliding into a different shirt or something. "You appeared comfortable. Slept well by the sounds of it too."
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Pants were tied as he let the hunter feed the fire, going in to on of his food storage to pull out a few things. Some fruit, a few pieces of wrapped meat. He could smell the coffee warming but said nothing of it.
"Well enough. How was your rest?"
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He was back to poking the flames, feeding them until the size and heat was satisfying enough and knowing that the coffee would boil up nicely. His thigh ached, but it was easy to ignore as he busied himself with pulling out two mugs.
"Slept well," he agreed. "You hiss when you sleep." More like the snakes hissed, but it could be one in the same. Also a play on snoring.
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Gabriel had seen what happened, what became of them. The sound of slicing never stopping even as he spoke, moving on to the meat.
There was the low hissing of a snake- "Do I?" He wouldn't know, truthfully, same as snoring.
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"A hunter..." He couldn't say he was surprised. "The snake purge." That's what the Guild called it when the hunt to eradicate gorgons had been at its peek.
He was stirring the brewing coffee, checking its readiness. The hiss might have been him being called traitor for selling the snakes out. No regrets yet. "You do. They seem as active at night as during the day. Your own personal little tea kettles."
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Gabriel hissed, knife dropped on the table as he took hold of his hand, a bit of blood dripping to the floor. What he had been cutting was spared any blood, but he still moved to try and take care of the wound himself. See if it was more minor than it felt or not.
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His head rose from the coffee at the hiss and it didn't take long to smell blood. He rose from his seat by the fire and moved to offer assistance. "Here, let me help. How deep is it? I shouldn't be distracting you with such painful talk."
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Had been enough for him to hate hunters, laying the blame on that rather than his mother. The hunter was why the blindfold was gone and neither of his parents could react fast enough. That he watched the hunter bleed to death near the statue made of his father and the cold body of his mother before coming out of hiding.
"I- there's some bandaging I can get."
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"He knew the risks having a lover that could turn him to stone," he pointed out logically, aware it wouldn't make any different. Her grief had clearly been horrible and deep, unreasonable.
He shook his head as he used a finger to smear the blood to look at the wound. It was deep enough to be concerning, nothing so simple as a bandage would fix. "Hush, I've got this," he murmured as he examined the wound before more blood welled up. It coated his fingers and his hands but all the same, he wrapped his palms around that wounded finger and called upon his magic to press warm healing into it, stopping the bleeding, knitting the injury so it was little more than a surface wound. Not perfect, but good enough for a bandage now.
He sighed and sagged a little. Healing magic was one of the hardest to learn and some of the hardest to cast. "Let's wash it up and bandage it now. Might itch for a day or two."
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"He did, reason he took every precaution he could, and all it took was one hunter." One determined to use a gorgon's mate against them in order to get his prize, and likely would have tried hunting Gabriel down if things had gone as wanted. He'd made sure some creature ate that body while his mother's was left alone.
A shoulder shifted to help keep Jack from sagging further, a few snakes brushing against the sides of the hunter's face. "You didn't have to-" Use up energy needed to heal himself just to take care of a bad cut, but. Well. This entire encounter had been filled with surprised from the start, hadn't it. "I've a wash basin, c'mon."
Would lead them both to it, and there was enough clean water to wash off all of the blood. He'd do something with the bloodied water later- "Do you need to sit?"
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He blinked when the snakes came at him, facial expression freezing for a moment before they just bumped and brushed by. That was... not what he was expecting. This encounter was only getting stranger the longer they stayed together, and he found himself tired and confused all over again.
"And you didn't have to carry me up here and treat my wounds either," he pointed out as he allowed himself to be blindly lead to the wash bin. He dipped his hands in, washing off the blood as he leaned a bit more heavily than he would like on the gorgon. "I can stand, just need to lean a little."
With his hands washed and that wound clean, he lifted Gabriel's hand to inspect his work. It was neat and clean, better than he normally did. "We should dry it and bandage." A deep tired sigh. "Sorry, but I might have to stay here the day with you. Just need a bit of rest." And coffee... which was still on the fire boiling away.
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He sighed softly, snakes curling back in to place amongst his hair. "You're fin staying to rest, really." It wasn't as if anyone would find the hunter here, the gorgon lived alone.
Did perk up a little and leave Jack standing there by the wash basin, and pulled that coffee from the fire so it wouldn't burn once he noticed it again. Had a cloth wrapped around is hand to prevent burning, too- "I can cook breakfast for the both of us- after drying and bandaging." So get something more in to Jack than just coffee.
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Still, he returned to his pack as he dried his hands on his borrowed clothing and pulled out his medical bag in search of bandages while Gabriel dealt with the coffee. "Pour me a mug of that, would you? And yourself some if you're into coffee."
He was moving over to sit on the bed because it was big enough for them to sit together so he could bandage Gabriel's finger properly. "I can't say I eat breakfast often. More just rations on the road. Come, let me bandage that wound so you don't scratch at it."
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He did pour the two mugs of coffee before setting the container back down as he gave one a sniff while carrying them both over to the bed. One was set within Jack's reach and the other just beside it as Gabriel sat down just within reach himself.
His hand was held out so that Jack could take it to bandage the injured-and-healed finger. "Well, going to today since I'm not just going to fix it for myself with you here, seems rude."
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The coffee smelled really good, dark and flavourful. He ignored his mug to instead work on Gabriel's hand, wrapping a quick but efficient bandage around the digit. He had been bandaging himself for years, so he had plenty of practice.
"I will be more than happy to eat whatever you make, okay?" He patted Gabriel's wrist lightly to signal he was done. "Good as new. Careful with the coffee. It will be hot." And sitting next to each other? That was nicer than it should be. He hummed softly and just stared off across the room.
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Fingers flexed after Jack had finished, but nothing to purposefully try and loosen the work done to his finger. Seemed it had passed whatever it was Gabriel had been watching for. "A bit of fruit, some cooked pork, and a few eggs beaten together and cooked like that was the plan." Seemed a well assorted morning meal to him.
Did watch Jack a moment before he stood to go and finish preparing the food to be cooked, picking up where he'd left off with the meat. Of course the pork and eggs were cooked over the fire together and the smell they made filled the room, and it was enough to make up two plates that Gabriel carried back to the bed and sat down on the side of it again.
"Here, it'll help you feel a bit better after using up your energy for that healing magic."
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Instead, he allowed himself to just be aware of Gabriel cooking food. It was strange how homely that felt, like some of those very early mornings at some of the inns he favoured where the matron of the house was bustling about cooking for the influx of people waking. Serve coffee and just let him exist in their sphere because they knew they were safe while he sat quiet by the fire. Earned himself a few free meals that way.
He turned his head when he smelled that meal come closer, surprised the gorgon took the spot next to him again. "Appreciate this," he murmured, taking the plate as if he could see it and picking up some fruit first. Still in season, which he was grateful for.
"Once we finish with the chimera later today, I'll be out of your hair."
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Did finally have a sip of that coffee, it had cooled down enough for him while he'd been cooking. Tasted fine, not something he allowed for himself to get away with the few times he did go to a human village. Wine and some ales were easier to get away with after all.
He nodded slowly. "I'll be leaving from here in a few days time, so I'll be out of yours for the rest of this season as well." Not have to worry about someone stumbling across him at least, if a worry at all.
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He nodded and ate. The eggs were cooked well too he noticed, but that made sense of the gorgon had to survive on his own. Room for experimentation he supposed. "So... what is it you do exactly? Aside from your rounds of this place? You do odd work or something?"
And he would be able to provide more funds for the gorgon when he traded some of the chimera parts. Better it come from a hunter, and it seemed a fair exchange of their services to each other. A good parting gift, he supposed, since he doubted he'd hear from the gorgon again until next year or maybe never. Who knew.
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Whatever he could do to earn a little gold for himself to get by on what he couldn't hunt or make for himself. One way to get by honestly enough.
The pork was nice and crisp when it came to the skin, and the fat had rendered wonderfully to make the meat succulent. That was eaten once the eggs were done for.
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He realized that might be the last time they saw each other too. After all, what reason did he have to follow around a gorgon? For that matter, what reason did a gorgon have to interact with him passing through the area when he was known to be relatively safe?
He ate well today, finishing off the entire meal without a single pause. His coffee was drank between sips and he was feeling a bit better with food on his belly. Still tired from the expenditure, but that was fine and expected. He sighed and rose to move to rinse his dishes. He knew about where that station was anyway. "Good breakfast."
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