Lieutenant Arnyn Dealedwen
Headquarters
Urimë 15
She noted the sideway glance
Pele threw her way, and acknowledged it with a very light nod to the side Pele was standing.
Arnyn didn't look at the
Captain though, thinking that might draw too much attention to their silent communication.
The
Lieutenant smiled faintly when
Pele commended
Trastion for his efforts in fighting the fire. Yes, they had heard. "As it turns out, the barracks master does not only report
infractions in his domain,"
Arnyn added to
Pele's words, feeling that it was her place to say something here if she would, given she was
Trastion's mentor. She was smiling at the young man's utter surprise at the praise.
When
Pele continued, however, and mentioned
Mourgan, her face fell into more serious lines again. Thank Manwë that he lived. He was a fighter, though - and it showed even in the way he was recovering from the wounds which had been so cruelly inflicted upon him.
The mention of her
own name made
Arnyn cast down her eyes, before looking sideways at
Pele. What else was she supposed to have done? Or rather, tried to do? She had merely been lucky that her attempts had proven successful in stopping the sorceress. It might as well have proven much less wise, with more calamity as a result. Yet she did not protest that verbally, not in front of the others. And some of the attention was drawn away then by
Isys, who put in
Cali's name.
Arnyn gave the
Ehtyar a soft smile then, although she held little hope the Belfalasian would understand why.
The
Captain's next words, and subsequent question, jarred
Arnyn a little. Her dark eyes flicked to the friend beside her, seeking out
Pele's eyes before she could stop herself. That had sounded as if
Pele was going to wrap up the debrief already? Surely, that would not be the case?
After her initial reaction had subsided,
Arnyn told herself that
Pele must only be asking if there were any questions about the logistical situation at the barracks - and once they had covered that, the debrief would continue.
After all,
Pele and
Arnyn had briefly discussed this debrief beforehand, and while they had agreed neither of them was looking forward to it - especially not the questions that would inevitably follow - they
had agreed it was important to share what had happened -- exempting
Pele's personal history with
Relic, if that made her too uncomfortable.
Arnyn had told
Pele she would not press for her to share anything she was unwilling to disclose - meaning, details of her personal history with Relic. While she
had pushed for her friend to share before, within the small group of people at the meeting on Náriïe 20th, this was not the same. There had been only a handful of people then. It had been a
nudge. To do the same with the main hall of headquarters filled with rangers? That would be like pushing
Pele off a mountain.
Trastion did seem to have questions. And concern wedged itself back into
Arnyn's mind. He was not asking about the living situation at the barracks... even though his questions
were barracks-related. Had everyone gotten the same impression that had settled on her own self in the first moments after
Pele had asked for questions? Were all the rangers here now assuming they would not be told anything else?
Perhaps
Arnyn was getting ahead of herself.
Wait, she therefore told herself adamantly.
And listen. Three questions were posed by the young man, and the last question might be dangerous territory.
Arnyn lightly touched
Pele's wrist again, in a wordless message that she was here, if
Pele needed her. In whatever way that might turn out to be.
Then Karis spoke, addressing
Pele by rank, and
Arnyn smiled faintly as her gaze sought out another longtime friend. She asked some excellent questions: How was
Relic defeated? Not everyone knew the same amount about how it came to pass. What exactly happened to
Relic and where was she now? What had prompted the confrontation? Arnyn nodded s Karis paused, approving of the questions. Perhaps this was the nudge
Pele needed, in this instance, to share what needed to be told. And Karis had done so in a way that was --
Arnyn's thoughts were cut off as
Karis spoke again. She was a bit surprised at the
Cúner's plea to share more details. After all, the questions she had
just posed had already asked for such details? And Arnyn had never known Karis to be inclined to repeat herself. The
Lieutenant's sensitivity lowered again when
Karis explained what she had known before and how the conclusion to the problem seemed to sudden.
Arnyn could definitely understand that. And she was sure that, between
Pele and herself, they could satisfy the need for more information.
Then
Karis' spoke her last sentence. '
Your Rangers deserve to know.' Once again followed by the request to share how
Relic was engaged and exactly how she was defeated.
Arnyn's dark eyes grew steely then, as the protective beast inside of her stirred and she focused on
Karis. There was no question that the Rangers all
deserved to know more. But
Pele surely did
not need a reminder of that.
Pele knew her duty. And if, as it so happened,
Pele were to be momentarily distracted - the reasons for which
Karis knew well enough - then
Arnyn would gently lead her back to the path her distractions had made her stray from.
Three times -
in two breaths -
Karis had asked for the
same information. As if she had too little faith in Pele to believe the Captain would answer her questions the first time? Or the second time? And along with the third time she had now asked these questions without giving Pele the room to respond to the first or second time,
Karis had added the sentiment that
Pele would be in the wrong not to answer her questions.
Her own sense of respect for the hierarchy yelled at the
Lieutenant to wait - wait for
Pele, as
Captain, to speak. Yet this was one part of her. That was the
reasonable part. The other part, the
emotional part, felt strong indignation at this last sentence in particular, and demanded a response to it.
Karis had spoken bluntly - in public. She should not be surprised if she received a blunt reply in return. In the end, it was
Arnyn's knowledge that
Pele would choose to move forward rather than ruffle feathers, that forced the
Lieutenant to keep her peace. Despite the way her shoulders and neck had tensed. Her gaze, which had turned cold and had rested on
Karis for a while now, then pointedly moved away. She would limit herself to this rebuke. Reason had defeated emotion.
Arnyn would wait for the
Captain's response and follow her commander's lead.