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Chapter 21

  As dawn broke the next day, the shop door creaked open once more, a hesitant sound this time, quite unlike the forceful exit of moments before. Myra stood on the threshold, her shoulders slightly slumped, the heavy book still clutched in her arms. Her gaze, when it met Freya’s, held a clear expression of remorse.

  “Freya,” Myra began, her voice soft and contrite, “I… I came back to apologize. My behavior was rude and uncalled for. There was no reason for me to storm out like that.” She took a few steps into the shop, her eyes fixed on the floor as if avoiding Freya’s gaze. “I was… I don’t know. Overwhelmed, maybe. And perhaps a little… silly.”

  She looked up then, offering a small, slightly nervous smile. In her other hand, she held a small, carefully wrapped parcel. “I also… I brought this.” She extended the offering towards Freya. “It’s a bolt of finely woven linen that I purchased in the vilge. I remembered you mentioning needing some for… well, for your various needs around the shop. And…”

  Myra hesitated again, her cheeks flushing slightly. “And I also bought this.” She held up the other item, a small, intricately decorated wooden box. “It’s a honey cake, a local delicacy. I thought… perhaps you might like to try it. It’s very sweet.” Her eyes flickered up to meet Freya’s, a hopeful, almost childlike expression on her face. “I know it’s… mortal food, but I thought… maybe…” Her voice trailed off, leaving the unspoken apology and the hopeful offering hanging in the air. The sudden anger had vanished, repced by a sheepish contrition and a tentative attempt to mend the unexpected rift between them.

  Freya watched Myra’s return with a curious gaze, the earlier confusion slowly giving way to a flicker of something akin to understanding. The storminess had passed quickly, repced by an earnest apology and these unexpected offerings. It was a testament to the votile and often endearing nature of humans.

  A faint smile touched Freya’s lips as she observed the bolt of linen and the small wooden box. “Myra,” she said, her voice softening from its earlier bemusement. “You surprise me yet again.”

  She inclined her head slightly towards the linen. “The linen is… thoughtful. It will indeed be useful.” Her crimson eyes then settled on the honey cake. A flicker of something unreadable crossed her features. She had long since ceased to partake in mortal food, finding little sustenance and even less pleasure in it. Yet, the sincerity of Myra’s offering was undeniable.

  “And this… honey cake,” Freya continued, stepping closer to examine the intricately carved box. “You thought I, a creature who sustains herself on the very essence of life, would have an inclination for… sweets?” A pyful lilt entered her voice.

  Despite the gentle teasing, there was no mockery in her tone. She reached out and took the wooden box, her slender fingers brushing against Myra’s. “Nevertheless,” she said, her gaze meeting Myra’s with a hint of warmth, “the gesture is… appreciated. It suggests a thoughtfulness I did not entirely expect after your hasty departure.”

  Freya pced the honey cake on a nearby shelf, beside a collection of equally ancient and untouched artifacts. “As for your apology,” she continued, her gaze softening further, “it is accepted, Myra. Emotions, I have observed, are a turbulent current within mortals. I confess, even after centuries of observation, I do not always comprehend their ebbs and flows. But your return speaks well of your character.”

  She paused, considering Myra for a moment. “Now, tell me, what prompted this sudden change of heart? What was it that fueled your… ‘silliness,’ as you so aptly put it, and what brought you back to offer these unexpected gifts?”

  Myra let out a small sigh of relief at Freya's accepting words. The tension that had gripped her since her hasty exit began to ease. She watched as Freya examined the linen and the honey cake, a nervous anticipation fluttering in her chest.

  “Well,” Myra began, a slight blush still lingering on her cheeks, “when I left, I felt… foolish, really. You had just shared all this invaluable knowledge with me, something I desperately needed, and I reacted… childishly. You simply expined a fact about your existence, and I somehow took it as… as a dismissal, I think. As if our arrangement was truly just a transaction and nothing more.”

  She shifted her weight slightly, her gaze dropping momentarily before returning to meet Freya’s. “But then I thought about all the time you spent transting, the patience you showed, even the… moments of… well, connection we had while doing it. It didn't feel like just a transaction. And your refusal to drink more blood earlier… it seemed to show a consideration for me that I hadn’t fully appreciated in my rush to leave.”

  Myra’s hands fidgeted with the strap of the book she still held. “The anger… it was silly. It was a mix of feeling a bit drained and, I suppose, a lingering sense of… vulnerability from the feeding. But mostly, it was unfair to you. You helped me, and I reacted poorly to your honesty about your own needs, or ck thereof at that moment.”

  She gestured towards the linen and the honey cake. “These… they’re just small tokens of my genuine gratitude. The linen because you mentioned needing some, and the honey cake… well, everyone deserves a little sweetness, don’t they? Even someone who doesn’t technically need to eat.” A small, hopeful smile touched her lips. “I just wanted to show you that I do appreciate everything you’ve done, and that I value… well, our unusual arrangement.”

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