Ide Amaya wrote:She flushed and hid behind her fan, the Moto were unrefined but she held her cousins in great esteem, "my apologies if I have given offence, Matsu-Sama. The Moto are a strong people with long traditions. They claim no use for the pretty words the Ide say."
"It's hard to say which family needed the other more as we travelled. The Moto protected us by their strength, and in turn the Ide ensured that no feathers became too ruffled nor that our encounters on our journey turn to unnecessary violence." She did not add that - in dealing with merchants, caravans, or just their newly reunited kin - she believed violence to alway be unnecessary.
Iuchi Saksaha wrote:Saksaha brushes an errant strand of beads back from her cheek and smiles. "I hope it is so."
Speaking of which...
"Now, I think there will be no more bariqu today," she guesses with a slight sigh. "And I have things I must do, and do not want Soshi-san to find my company stale too quickly. I will go, I think, but... I might see you another time?"
Ide Amaya wrote:"That, and some of the Unicorn simply took fancy to the way the names sounded. My mother was Moto, a Battle Maiden, she thought that Rokugani names were pretty." Amaya smiled, she admired the intelligence of his questions, and even more the interest they showed.
"Some of these marriages were political, and brokered by the Ide, but some were made for love. The Moto have many stories of 'heroes' who kidnapped their wives from other races, and Unicorn songs and poems tell of spouses who fled their homes in the night to elope with a Unicorn they desired."
Moto Butaj wrote:"A strong, honest handshake is a good way to greet and to say goodbye. Butaj, like most Moto, bows less and grips hands more. This is how Butaj expresses respect. But if Matsu Yurio is not ready to accept our customs, Butaj can live with it." Butaj explains, having the ear on Amaya's conversation.
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