Aurelius. That was the name of the presence, and it had taken quite a long few weeks of not annoying the voice to get that much from it. In the end, it was meant to serve as a lesson, a subtle one, one that involved Henri
not saying every odd thing that happened to cross his mind, and to think and consider his words carefully; it was, at its very core, a lesson on diplomacy, and, although not a particularly fast learner, Henri was, as was bound to happen eventually, able to pass the test. Of course, whether that was luck or not was known only to Henri, himself.
Ultimately, however, it didn't matter, because, regardless of which path he had taken, Henri would find himself in the exact same place and situation: He was outside of town, there was a wet warmth at the side of his head, the sun was setting, and, most importantly, perhaps, was the large, very angry man standing over him. He could have been a dockhand or a warehouse worker, or he could have been a militia man. He was built, muscular, broader than Roland, at least, but not quite as tall. His lips curled into a snarl.
“Smartass,” the man spat - quite literally, he spat. He spat right at Henri like it was the most natural thing in the world. “Stupid son of a bitch,” he bent over, grabbed Henri by his clothes, and hefted him up, to his feet, pushed him back a bit, and then balled his fist, reared his arm back, and lunged forwards, punching.
He can’t hurt you.
The voice spoke for the first time since this situation . . . escalated. Informative as always, the voice began to speak again:
Not if you don’t want him to, let me help you, close your eyes - think, open up. Take a deep breath, hold it. Release it. Think.
There was little emotion in its voice, like it was reading from a manual or recalling something from a long time ago, from a far away place; it was kind of persuasive though. There was a confidence about it. Given its nature, it probably could help him and prevent him from getting hurt; after all, it had told him to insult the guy, to question his degree of character, and to, which was probably what caused the guy to drag Henri outside, imply his mother regularly indulged in ill-defined sexual practices involving goats, cows, horses, and other domestic livestock. Unfortunate choice of words, considering the man’s mother had died last year . . . Regardless, as Aurelius spoke to Henri, things did seem different, at least, because the man, although going through all the motions, appeared to be moving too slowly to actually hit anything. Like he was stuck, or moving through a thick molasses.
_________________
FATAL KERNEL ERROR_
Mind link to COMP disconnected_