It was as if she'd — well, the both of them, perhaps — had been drifting for hours like abandoned ships on a sea without a horizon, only to list and happen upon another by blizzard's chance. Nell looked into the face that crinkled at her; the one that tried to peer into hers, with indeterminate eyes, and one of which that teared;
before something-or-other rustled and
rummaged 'round beneath the lid.
And so it was yet another moment that the yearling often wished she hadn't so keen a herbalist's eye.
If she hadn't choked on her tongue, she might've proffered many an
I'm sorries and
As well as I can be, despite it all and chimed vaguely about the weather that currently attended them. Instead, though, Pimpernel found herself clumsy; lurching away at the sight of the whatever-it-was that had made a home beneath that odd, winking brow.
... But perhaps then she felt a tad ashamed of herself, and returned to the older loner with a bowed head and a guilty kink in her tail.
"I suppose I'll ask the same of you. Forgive me," a sheepish nod towards his person,
"but, might there be ... err, some thing that ails you?"
A selfish, girlish part of her didn't want to, and squirmed in protest.
Her mother would've
tsk-tsked at her, though:
There is worse to be found that this. You'll see.
Hadn't she already?