Bishop's words stung and jabbed at him as though he had walked head first into a thicket of thorns. She even rejected his touch by leaning away, "I don't have you. She has you. You haven't been mine since I got here. It's like you left home and you left me." Rook's first instinct was to recoil, to also withdraw from her just as she had done to him. He managed to sit still though, the deepness and emotional turmoil in her words giving him a shock that he also should have foreseen. She continued to squall, calling him out on the momentary neglect he had unintentionally bestowed upon her.
As quickly as his ears had come up, they fell back down as she told him that she was who she was because of him. Rook's lower jaw lowered so that his lips slightly parted, taken aback by the next wave of emotional outburst, "You're my twin, Rook, my twin." She was afraid, that much was obvious and, all the while, her brother was starting to become afraid of what he had done, what he might have started just by asking if he could embark on this journey to Relic Lore.
"I scare myself, she then said, "I just... I scare myself." If he could have hugged her, held her close, he would have. In a heartbeat. With her being as she was, he was somewhat uncertain how to approach her. This wasn't the first time she had done such a thing as become so emotional that it rendered him speechless but, for the first time, it seemed, he was able to counter it. They were older now and as his logic-driven self saw it, he should have been able to meet her halfway just as he always had been able to in the past.
At first he wanted nothing more than to yell back at her, to make her see sense, to envelope her with the words and tone he usually used to entice her back to him, calm and collected. His twin sister. Bishop. On a second impression, the words she had first spoken had slashed into him, bruised and lacerated him completely from within. "That's the way it is supposed to be," he flatly stated. Hadn't their parents almost always physically retrieved them from the borders or reminded them to never stray too far? Hadn't their family constantly kept them within their sight? "Life is supposed be scary," he reworded himself. "It's supposed to have trials and tribulations and temptation."
He moved his tail so that it was kept close against him. "Bishop," he said her name in such a way that suggested that he might have been speaking to a bird with a broken wing. "I wish I could make you see," he murmured, his saddened eyes truly focusing on her, seeing her pain and her anguish as clear as day. "I really wish you could see yourself just as I see you now. You are my twin, and nothing and no one in the world could ever replace you." His lips sealed tight for a while as he tried to catch her gaze and full on attention, "If you can't hear me out, then tell me what you want to hear. What is it that you're crying out for me to do... for you? I promised Mom that I would do this... for Dad, for her, for our family... I trusted Namid to help us, and she has done nothing but that." His stare locked on her then, his eyes slightly narrowing in a dangerous fashion, "- if we're going to make this work, we have to let others in, to trust them, work with them. Prudence -" He dared to use her special, secret moniker, if only to try and fully establish and ground their connection to one another, "We can't do this all by ourselves if we're going to help Dad get better."