If she ever does decide to ask him about that learning curve, she'll have to be prepared for an ugly answer. That's a tortured part of his past he wishes he could forget yet never has, as long as he has lived.
She's close enough still that he can feel her tense. Now, he knows he's made the right judgement of her. That's gratifying in its own way. He likes the confirmation that he can still read certain things even if his sight is gone.
"I agree." He finally draws completely back from her, and aims his face in the approximate direction of hers. "We'll see how things stand after three months. Living in the same apartment, I'm sure, may reveal traits that we can't yet know of each other. For now, I am safe from immediate danger, thanks to you. And I will take the time until we have formalized the paperwork with the city to think if there are any provisions that should be clarified. I'm sure you will do the same."
With the distance between them asserted, it's only a matter of returning to a more composed state — even if her skin thrums with a different awareness than she possessed when she first entered the apartment, as though she is more primed to pay attention to his exact movements now.
It's fortunate that he can't witness the expression on her face, though she's schooled her features into something much more impenetrable once more — and with the wounds at her throat healed, it's almost as if it never happened, save for the part where she now knows the sensation of his bite, and he now possesses the knowledge of what her blood tastes like. (She has half a mind to ask whether hers is different from any others he may have fed on here already, but dismisses that idea just as quickly.)
"You have all that you need, then, before we arrange a meeting to have the contract officially drawn up." Meaning his appetites have been sated, at least for the time being, and he won't be inclined to force himself to rely on anyone else's generosity while he's still somewhat incapacitated. She senses that it would be a greater insult if she attempted to coddle him, or tend to him in any significant manner, so she doesn't try to feign sympathy. If he has any more requests to make of her, she's certain that he'll voice them one way or another.
"I do." His tone is back to being detached and matter-of-fact.
It was bruising enough to his pride to have to ask this much of her and to reveal his weakness. She's right that he would be insulted if she now tried to coddle. Even if that may be some small part of her role now that he's secured in a contract with her, in blood if not in legally binding ink yet. It should be a relief. He won't be sent to the zoo. But a part of him still feels as if his humiliation is now complete just as this city intended. They win. This time. Still. It always could have been worse.
"Thank you, Yennefer." He no longer has the right to dismiss her, but there is finality in that thanks. And he stays silent after. Nothing more needs saying at this time as far as he's concerned.
She doesn't necessarily acknowledge his thanks beyond anything but a brief hum, but she does acknowledge it, and a brief turn of fingers by her side, along with some quiet murmuring, is enough to open the portal from which she had come through before — the same one that leads back to her apartment, in the Up.
She doesn't extend an invitation to him to join her, not yet, thinking that that might be perceived as further attempt to satiate him, but chances are he'll be able to sense that she isn't planning on leaving this room by mere door, not if the sensation of wind licking at the portal's edges is any indication.
"Until we speak again, then," she responds, and casts one final glance back in his direction before stepping through, the portal remaining open only for a few more seconds before it, too, winks out behind her.
no subject
She's close enough still that he can feel her tense. Now, he knows he's made the right judgement of her. That's gratifying in its own way. He likes the confirmation that he can still read certain things even if his sight is gone.
"I agree." He finally draws completely back from her, and aims his face in the approximate direction of hers. "We'll see how things stand after three months. Living in the same apartment, I'm sure, may reveal traits that we can't yet know of each other. For now, I am safe from immediate danger, thanks to you. And I will take the time until we have formalized the paperwork with the city to think if there are any provisions that should be clarified. I'm sure you will do the same."
no subject
It's fortunate that he can't witness the expression on her face, though she's schooled her features into something much more impenetrable once more — and with the wounds at her throat healed, it's almost as if it never happened, save for the part where she now knows the sensation of his bite, and he now possesses the knowledge of what her blood tastes like. (She has half a mind to ask whether hers is different from any others he may have fed on here already, but dismisses that idea just as quickly.)
"You have all that you need, then, before we arrange a meeting to have the contract officially drawn up." Meaning his appetites have been sated, at least for the time being, and he won't be inclined to force himself to rely on anyone else's generosity while he's still somewhat incapacitated. She senses that it would be a greater insult if she attempted to coddle him, or tend to him in any significant manner, so she doesn't try to feign sympathy. If he has any more requests to make of her, she's certain that he'll voice them one way or another.
no subject
It was bruising enough to his pride to have to ask this much of her and to reveal his weakness. She's right that he would be insulted if she now tried to coddle. Even if that may be some small part of her role now that he's secured in a contract with her, in blood if not in legally binding ink yet. It should be a relief. He won't be sent to the zoo. But a part of him still feels as if his humiliation is now complete just as this city intended. They win. This time. Still. It always could have been worse.
"Thank you, Yennefer." He no longer has the right to dismiss her, but there is finality in that thanks. And he stays silent after. Nothing more needs saying at this time as far as he's concerned.
no subject
She doesn't extend an invitation to him to join her, not yet, thinking that that might be perceived as further attempt to satiate him, but chances are he'll be able to sense that she isn't planning on leaving this room by mere door, not if the sensation of wind licking at the portal's edges is any indication.
"Until we speak again, then," she responds, and casts one final glance back in his direction before stepping through, the portal remaining open only for a few more seconds before it, too, winks out behind her.