Timon didn't quite make a face at the idea of becoming Kala's ward immediately after being released from Torin's purview, but once she had finished he understood that being his guardian, in a legal sense, was not what she was suggesting.
"I would be honored to have you as my teacher."
If he was honest, he had been assuming that teaching was included in the giving of magic he had been asking. Though he hadn't actually said so. It might have been a slip up in other company, but in that place, with those present, he knew it wouldn't be held against him or counted as asking two boons instead of one.
Aurin's discomfort, his obvious discomfort, was as unexpected as it was welcome to the teenager who had learned his amusements partially from the sadistic redhead. The grin on Timon's face at the halting acquiescence would have made a stranger think he might actually be distantly related to Kavafis. It was such affection, expressed in different ways from all directions, that had washed away any chance of Timon failing to believe in his own worth, and if expressing it without the normal sarcasm was difficult for the fox-faced man that only made its value higher.
Learning the value of things had been a major part of Timon's education; in relationships, enchanted and alchemical wares, services, and in lives. The worth of what he was asking was high, but the worth of what he'd already been given was infinitely higher. Saying so would embarrass almost everyone at the table, so he wouldn't. Instead, he gave Aurin his wicked smirk that would hopefully restart the man's own confidence, and then turned a milder expression on Sivan, who had sat patiently while the others answered ahead of him.
Torin felt the things coming from Aurin and understood some of them. When his hand was caught and held, he held back. Not quite so hard, for his strength was something he was always worriedly aware of, but strong enough that it would feel like a mutual need. It was a mutual need. Torin had been preparing for this moment, which felt like a loss, even as he knew he was gaining a partnership. He rather badly wanted Aurin to take him somewhere private and destroy his ability to think so that he could wake up tomorrow with the new reality firmly in place and not have to exist in the middle ground. But that would not be polite to either Timon or their hosts.
"I would be honored to have you as my teacher."
If he was honest, he had been assuming that teaching was included in the giving of magic he had been asking. Though he hadn't actually said so. It might have been a slip up in other company, but in that place, with those present, he knew it wouldn't be held against him or counted as asking two boons instead of one.
Aurin's discomfort, his obvious discomfort, was as unexpected as it was welcome to the teenager who had learned his amusements partially from the sadistic redhead. The grin on Timon's face at the halting acquiescence would have made a stranger think he might actually be distantly related to Kavafis. It was such affection, expressed in different ways from all directions, that had washed away any chance of Timon failing to believe in his own worth, and if expressing it without the normal sarcasm was difficult for the fox-faced man that only made its value higher.
Learning the value of things had been a major part of Timon's education; in relationships, enchanted and alchemical wares, services, and in lives. The worth of what he was asking was high, but the worth of what he'd already been given was infinitely higher. Saying so would embarrass almost everyone at the table, so he wouldn't. Instead, he gave Aurin his wicked smirk that would hopefully restart the man's own confidence, and then turned a milder expression on Sivan, who had sat patiently while the others answered ahead of him.
Torin felt the things coming from Aurin and understood some of them. When his hand was caught and held, he held back. Not quite so hard, for his strength was something he was always worriedly aware of, but strong enough that it would feel like a mutual need. It was a mutual need. Torin had been preparing for this moment, which felt like a loss, even as he knew he was gaining a partnership. He rather badly wanted Aurin to take him somewhere private and destroy his ability to think so that he could wake up tomorrow with the new reality firmly in place and not have to exist in the middle ground. But that would not be polite to either Timon or their hosts.
