Unalmis Raxëlilta
There were members of authority who had earned the young man's respect, rather than merely expected it. And
Captain Alarion fell resolutely into the first category. But
Unalmis was undoubtedly more familiar with their current Captain, than he was with the former Commander.
He had known
Pele when he was still an adolescent, before he even had enlisted, and during the time that she had then helped to train him, he had swiftly come to further appreciate the Ranger officer, irrespective and maybe even in spite of the rank she held. Nobody who knew her would harbour a want for
Pele to suffer needlessly, so the young man would have understood, if he had been privy to the narrowed eyes and subtle disapproval of the Captain's concerned friend.
Arnyn was clearly looking out for
Pele's best interests, and noone was likely to argue with that, let alone the Hyandaner's own vast experience in the field.
Unalmis though was of a temperament to let most cares glance off his back when they were not considered grave concerns, at least by his reckoning. He did not in this case believe that the Captain's little tumble, on relatively speaking 'safe' home ground, to be something that required taking any more seriously than he had. So when
Pele demanded a carriage, whether it be of cushions or of committed carriers,
Nal paused barely on the very brink of a returned grin and further jest, when
Arnyn had quietly added her piece.
"
Ma'am, I would carry our inconvenienced leader all the way to Mount Doom and back again, if the need arose," he vowed sincerely, picking up on an undercurrent of some threat. Though probably he did not reassure the Hyandaner, especially when he added, "
I would pick her up off the ground again as many times as it took, even after dropping her every five feet that I took, if it should come to that. We leave noone behind. Our Captain is a competent Ranger though, a wise leader and a qualified Master Healer," he recognised aloud, in his own take of defending the popular officer. "
I have every faith in her ability to bravely blaze onward," he admitted an unfailing confidence in the indomitable Captain, and an unquenchable hope that the trip would not be cancelled, "
unless there is a need to rein in this campaign because of a turned ankle. Ma'am," he added the deference a second time since
Arnyn maybe was more of a stickler for that sort of thing.
He'd never served under the blonde Hyandaner specifically before, and was likely not going to form any lasting impressions of the woman at this early stage of the proceedings. It was possibly a better idea, in fact, than any might have imagined, for their group to undertake this casual expedition, so that they might learn to better read and trust each other. To work together. The initial Rangers campaign had, after all, left many doubting (understandably) who, even amongst themselves, that they could trust with their lives when it came down to it. There was bound to be fall out after such a strange turn of events, and a faltering of faith in one another. This random little outing was exactly what they needed, and the Captain had clearly recognised the fact.
If
Pele did require carrying though, they should of course take her back to the city for treatment and rest. Whether it was by means of lifting their limping commander or liberating a gold plated carriage with cushions for her comfort. They could postpone the outing, as disappointing as that would prove. But the dauntless leader herself had accepted the stick as a practical alternative to being carried, and she did not seem too far the worse for her fall from grace.
Nal knew
Pele enough that she was not one to play damsel, though he may not have known so well as
Arnyn did, the Captain's tendency to also play down her own needs. They were soldiers, all of them, enough to expect and adjust to the occasional bumps and blisters that came with the job description.
He decided though maybe not to ask if they should try to bind the ankle, or suggest that
Pele might dare to let any of them tend to her malady for practice. They were not yet all appraised of the latest situation, so the young man shrugged his bag in place and let
Duinion know that he would go flag down any of their small company who were still at their abandoned race.