Ah, holding your breath. That was a thing he
hadn't noticed from her or thought of. He couldn't remember any prior experience with water.
It continued to sneeze but those lessened after a moment. Its eyes would blink until the stinging sensation would become bearable and then cease altogether. Its gaze would turn to Vendrussel, watching in that strange way that he did. The woman demonstrated again after the scaly beings had collected near them again. It almost made him... jealous. It was so easy for the large she-wolf to dive beneath and grab the fish. While it struggled to even get its head below.
There was irritation... but it wondered if the irritation was at itself or Vendrussel for being so good at this.
He wanted to do this perfectly and yet, it was a skill that needed to be developed. Perhaps then, he was angrier at himself for being unable to execute this well and for not having demonstrated the proper skills, even after trying.
And yet... even with the burgeoning emotions there was no tell. It simply watched her, eyes unfocused as it took in everything. Words, sights.
He looked down at the water, gaze trained on the fish that slowly filtered back in. Eyes, nose. Focus on the fish. Watch them. It was motionless for a while, almost like it was in fear or uninterested in the water.
That was far from the case. He was simply a statue, opportunistic, waiting on the perfect time to strike so that he didn't
fail. Failure was not an option.
After several long moments, it waited until a fish had started to swim around underneath its nose. It memorized the position, eyes closed and like a cobra it struck.
His skill was nowhere near on par with Vendrussel's but it was still clear that his speed was excellent. He was a fast child and a fast learner, as he snagged it by the tail as it started to swim away at the movement. Triumphant, he pulled the fish from the water with a sharp tug. Okay, toss it onto the shore, and then go kill it.
He tossed--
But not hard enough.
It fell short of the beach and before he could run over to finish it off, it had flopped back into the water.
Annoyance. Severe unmitigated annoyance.
He stood in the water, staring at where the fish had disappeared. And in that moment, his lack of emotion showed more emotion than he ever had in his life.