"Food keeps us from stopping."
The words lingered in the air between them, soft and warm as the steam rising from the bowl. This ti, Amara had not spoken them with emphasis, yet they seed to settle heavily all the sa, as though they carried more weight than their simplicity suggested.
Vothanael did not move at once. His eyes rested upon the bowl, watching the pale strands of heat twist and thin as they climbed toward the dim glow above them.
Sothing in that slow vanishing seed to hold his attention, as though he were studying disappearance itself.
Then he spoke, quietly.
"Stop?"
The word ca with care, shaped slowly, as if he were uncertain whether it would remain once spoken.
His gaze lifted to her, and though his face remained still, there was sothing searching in the way he looked at her, like a mind reaching forward without knowing how.
Amara’s expression softened.
"Yes," she answered gently, and the warmth in her voice matched the warmth in the bowl he held.
"Stop ans... we end. We cannot move, we cannot continue. Food keeps that from happening."
She did not rush the explanation, allowing each piece to settle. He followed her words with patient attention, though his understanding seed to move slowly, like a tide drawn by a distant moon.
She tapped the rim of the bowl lightly.
"Food," she repeated, grounding the thought.
He looked down again, and after a mont his lips parted slightly.
"Food," he echoed, and the word ca steadier now, as though it had found its place.
She nodded, then reached beside her and picked up the spoon. Carefully, she placed it in his hand, guiding his fingers with gentle pressure.
"This is spoon," she said, shaping the word clearly.
He looked at it with the sa quiet curiosity he gave everything. His fingers tightened unconsciously, and the tal bent slightly beneath his grip. He loosened at once, glancing at her.
"Gently," she said softly, demonstrating again with her own hand, her voice patient rather than corrective. "Hold gently."
He followed her example, adjusting his grip with careful attention.
"Spoon," she repeated.
"...Spoon," he echoed, slower this ti, as though placing the word carefully beside the others he had learned.
She smiled faintly, then lifted her own spoon and scooped a small portion from her bowl. She paused long enough for him to watch, then brought it toward her mouth in an unhurried motion after blowing on it.
"Eat," she said softly, letting the word accompany the action.
He followed her movents, mirroring her slowly. The rice rose from the bowl, uncertainly balanced. Steam drifted upward in pale curls, dissolving into the dim glow.
He leaned slightly forward. His breath passed over the spoon, copying her in the motion of blowing on it, and the steam vanished.
Not gradually, but in a quiet collapse, as though the warmth itself had been drawn away.
Amara blinked once, and then her smile returned, gentle and amused.
She leaned forward and blew softly across her spoon, allowing the steam to thin naturally.
"Blow," she said quietly, demonstrating again.
"Blow cools food."
He watched carefully, absorbing both the word and the action. Then he leaned forward again, his movent cautious this ti, and blew softly. The steam wavered and lifted away without vanishing all at once.
She nodded.
"Good," she murmured.
He brought the spoon toward his mouth.
He paused again, just before eating, as though uncertain of the next step.
"Eat," she said gently.
He placed the rice into his mouth.
The stillness that followed was longer this ti. His brow furrowed faintly, as though he were encountering sothing unfamiliar not just in sensation but in purpose.
She watched him quietly.
"Chew," she said softly, moving her jaw slightly to demonstrate.
He followed her example. The motion was slow at first, hesitant, like soone learning a movent that had never before existed.
"Chew breaks food," she explained gently.
He continued, and the rhythm gradually steadied.
"Swallow," she said after a mont, and pointed at her throat showing him the motion.
He obeyed.
The rice vanished, and his hand rose slowly to his chest, as though tracking the path of sothing unseen.
She noticed.
"Inside," she said softly, placing her hand lightly against her stomach.
He mirrored her motion.
"...Inside," he repeated.
She nodded.
"Food goes inside. Then body uses food."
He seed to consider that, his gaze lowering again to the bowl.
He lifted the spoon once more, this ti with slightly more certainty. The rice slipped, and a few grains fell into the grass between them.
He stilled imdiately, watching them. To him it seed like the spoon committed a grave sin. He just learnt what it was like to eat and knew food is the thing that you ate. And now a little bit of food is on the ground. Absolutely unforgivable...
Amara followed his gaze.
"Fall," she said gently, introducing the word.
"...Fall," he echoed.
"Food fell," she continued, her voice calm.
He leaned forward slightly, reaching. She shook her head softly, her hand lifting in a gentle stopping motion.
"No eat," she said, pointing to the ground.
Then she pointed to the bowl. "Food here."
He withdrew his hand slowly, accepting the distinction.
"...No eat," he repeated.
She nodded. He resud eating, slower now, his movents more careful.
The fire crackled softly beside them, and the quiet of the garden seed to deepen, as though the world itself had slowed to match their pace.
After a few more bites, she spoke again, her voice soft but instructive.
"When we eat, we go slow. Slow keeps us safe."
She demonstrated again, her movents deliberate and calm. He followed, matching her rhythm.
He swallowed again.
She watched him carefully, then introduced the next word, her tone gentle.
"Full," she said, placing her hand lightly against her stomach.
He looked at her.
"Full ans enough food."
He repeated the gesture, placing his hand against himself, sensing the unfamiliar feeling growing within.
"...Full," he said slowly.
She smiled.
"When full, we stop eating."
He glanced down at the bowl, then took another small bite. After a mont, he paused again, his hand returning to his chest.
"...Full," he said.
She nodded.
"Yes... Full."
He lowered the spoon slowly. "Stop," he added quietly.
She smiled again.
"Yes. Stop when full."
He set the spoon carefully into the bowl. The warmth had begun to fade, but he kept holding it, as though morizing the sensation.
After a mont, she leaned back slightly.
"Rest," she said softly, demonstrating.
He followed her, leaning back into the grass. Where his hands touched, the green deepened faintly, though he did not seem to notice.
"Rest after food," she explained gently.
The fire crackled softly, the bowl cooled. Vothanael sat quietly beneath the dim glow, the new words settling slowly within him.
Food. Spoon. Blow. Chew. Swallow. Full. Stop. Rest.
And though he had ended primordial chaos, though he had fought for ages beyond mory without hunger or fatigue, he now sat quietly in the grass, learning the smallest ritual of humanity.
His first al, his first fullness, his first rest.
. . .
The quiet that followed his first al did not feel empty. It settled gently over the garden like evening dew, soft and unintrusive, as though the world itself wished not to disturb what had just taken place.
Vothanael rested where he sat, the bowl cooled in his hands, his posture calm and still. There was no hunger in him, no fatigue in the mortal sense, yet he remained seated as Amara had shown him, absorbing the unfamiliar cadence of rest that followed food.
His gaze drifted slowly across the small clearing, pausing on the fire, then the grass, then the faint shimr of light above, then at all nine of them as though each thing now held new aning rely because he had eaten.
Amara watched him for a long mont before she rose quietly, careful not to disturb his stillness.
She stepped back toward the edge of the garden, where the shadows softened near the archway of pale vines. There, leaning lightly against the stone, stood Rania, who had been watching in silence for so ti.
Rania’s eyes moved from Vothanael to Amara, and sothing like wonder lingered there, quiet but unmistakable.
"He ate," she said softly, her voice barely above the hush of the fire.
Amara nodded, though her gaze remained on him.
"He did," she replied, and there was warmth in her voice, but also sothing deeper, sothing touched by reverence rather than simple affection. "His first al..."
Rania folded her arms loosely, her expression thoughtful as she watched the still figure seated in the grass.
"It feels..." she began, then paused, searching for words. "It feels like we just witnessed sothing that shouldn’t even be possible."
Amara gave a faint, thoughtful smile.
"In a way," she murmured, "we did."
The fire cracked softly, and Vothanael shifted slightly, adjusting the bowl in his hands as though still conscious of its presence. The movent was small, yet both won watched it with quiet attention, as though even the slightest motion held significance.
Rania exhaled slowly.
"He ended the primordial chaos as per what the wall said," she said, her tone soft but edged with disbelief. "He fought for an undetermined ti... without hunger, without rest, without anything I am guessing. And now..."
She gestured gently toward him. "Now he’s learning how to blow on hot food."
Amara’s smile deepened, touched with sothing tender.
"Yes," she said softly. "Now he’s learning to be human."
Rania tilted her head slightly, studying him.
"Do you realize," she said quietly, "that no one else will ever see this? The first ti he eats. The first ti he learns what full ans. The first ti he rests after a al."
Amara’s gaze softened further.
"I know."
The words carried a quiet weight, and for a mont neither of them spoke. The garden seed to lean into the silence, as though the mont itself were being preserved.
Rania looked at Amara again.
"You’re teaching him everything," she said, her voice gentle now. "Words, actions, things we never even think about for a second ti."
Amara lowered her gaze briefly, thoughtful.
"He doesn’t have anything to start from," she replied quietly.
"Every word is... new. Every action is sothing he has never needed before." She glanced back toward Vothanael, who remained still beneath the dim glow. "He’s building himself from the smallest things."
Rania followed her gaze.
"He looked... content," she said softly. "When he said full."
Amara nodded, her voice warm.
"He understood sothing," she murmured. "Not just the word, the feeling. That... was new for him."
Rania smiled faintly, the expression touched with quiet amazent.
"Whatever he is..." she said softly, "learning satisfaction from a bowl of rice."
Amara’s eyes softened further.
"Yes," she whispered.
They stood there together for a ti, watching him in silence, the firelight flickering gently across the grass. And though nothing grand occurred, though no sky broke nor stars shifted, both of them felt with quiet certainty that sothing imnse had taken place.
Not a battle, not a cosmic upheaval, but sothing quieter.
Sothing human.
And as Vothanael rested after his first al, the world seed, for a brief and gentle mont, profoundly at peace.
To be Continued...
(Author’s Notes: Aaand Here we are Folks!! The Half Century Chapter and our dearest Vothanael learning how to eat and rest. Tell if it hits your heartstrings My dearest Readers!!
This ssage now is for @Kylar_Warp_Shinkai, thank you for being a loyal reader and following so far. A new author needs nothing more than readers like you..Likewise, any Fan/Reader who expresses their support by a gift or a golden ticket gets a shoutout for the next week as honorable ntions.
With that said, Dearest Readers!! We move onto the story!! )
Reviews
All reviews (0)