{{ voicetest / khola }}
IF YOU'RE wandering down by the river this morning, you might (for once) encounter a skinny, redheaded girl of about fifteen, sitting near a clump of tall grass on the riverbank, half-hidden from view.
She's got an (empty) curious little silver bowl in her hands, and she looks faintly displeased--although that's not exactly unusual, is it?
Bother her?

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Out of all the things she might have been expecting him to say, it certainly wasn't that. Maybe she should have: now that she thinks about it, of course the magical bookworm would want to know how to scry into the future. What doesn't he want to know?
Still, it throws her. Tara-Fay is not at all used to thinking of herself as a teacher. "You want me to teach you how to scry?" she repeats, with no small amount of incredulousness.
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On account of your bloodline, he doesn't say and doesn't need to. He doubts it, though, given what he's inferred of Vartilet. In truth he's not in the habit of thinking of Tara-Fay of all people as a teacher--or anyone, really. He's become something of an autodidact, save Alexandre's involvement. But there are no chapters on scrying in Khola's collective library. He's checked. Sometimes you just have to buckle down.
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She is . . . tempted by the offer: more, perhaps, out of an attraction to power than any compensation Tristan could give her. But she also remembers Vartilet's dire warnings, and her role in starting the whole Parsbit mess. Tara-Fay's not so prideful that she can't admit, at least to herself, there's a whole lot she doesn't actually know about scrying.
Maybe she should write Vartilet after all? Maybe Linnet would do it for her. Maybe she could pretend to be Linnet--no, that's ridiculous.
God, she's actually considering this, isn't she?
"It's a really easy thing to get wrong," she says, when she senses the silence has gone on too long. Hopefully that sounds sort of authoritative. "And you could get--everyone--in serious trouble if you did."
He'll remember Vartilet. She really doesn't need to tell him about the donkey.
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"It's just--" He hesitates. "There are some decisions... I'd rather make as informed as I can. That's all."
That's not all, but it's a start. He adds, "I'll be careful." He doesn't consider asking her to scry for him. That's off the table, for numerous reasons.
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The thought does present another point in favor of helping him, though: surely anything that might help Tristan make less stupid romantic choices is good for everyone?
"I'll think about it," she says slowly. She needs time, to write Vartilet or . . . decide not to write Vartilet in a fit of panic, more likely, or . . . well. To do something. She's also quite sure she's met her daily quota of Tristan.