
The trees in the territory of the Elf race were indeed very large and tall. The trees became the home of many animals, as well as the home of the Elves themselves.
Among the trees, precisely in one part of a large tree branch that connects to other trees, Valir is seen walking followed by Vedis behind him.
"You're really gonna drive that human?" Vedis asked to be sure.
"Yes, I still have business in the city of man." Valir replied as he continued walking.
"Why do you bother to do that? Just let him go back alone." The pretty face of Vedis is full of strokes of rejection.
In a slow voice Valir replied, "Can't, haven't you seen for yourself, Jean is just a weak human woman. If we let him go back alone, he can't get through the woods."
"Then let him die eaten by wild animals, die or his life is no longer our business." Vedis says ketus.
Valir stopped walking, he looked back, "Vedis, you don't say that bad."
Hearing Valir's words, Vedis grew more and more emotional,
"Why do you even say I'm evil? from the beginning I refused you to help the man, but you didn't bully me. I shouldn't have heard your enticement to accept that man in my house, let me be completely evil in your mind."
Vedis is very angry ,Valir said he was evil when he was kind enough to put the goddamn man in his house.
Valir turned around because Vedis words were already high-pitched a sign he was furious.
"Calm Vedis, listen to me first ...."
Vedis cuts, "Listen what else!? Val, I'm like this for your own good, too. Don't you remember Vin? I don't want you to be like him."
Valir closed his eyes and inhaled a deep breath, he opened his eyes again,
"Of course I remember, I won't forget Vin. Don't equate me with him. Just so you know it's because Vin's the one I helped Jean with."
Vedis looked surprised, she took a step closer to Valir and asked further,
"Whatchu mean? What does that man have to do with Vin?"
Valir glanced right and left before whispering,
"Most likely Jean is Vin's daughter."
"Whatdidyou say? Really it?" Vedis asked back, she still could not believe it.
Valir nodded, though,
"Yes, I've seen him have Vin's sword."
"Vin Sword? Didn't you see wrong? it could have been that sword wasn't in the hands of Vin's descendants." Vedis is worried that his friend misrecognizes people.
"I didn't see it wrong, he did have Vin's sword, which is why I drove him back, so I could confirm Jean's identity." Valir obviously had another purpose.
Knowing Valir's reason, Vedis' face got better.
"Yes, I'm relieved then. If only I could get out of the woods, I'd go with you." Vedis says with a sad face.
There was a rule where female Elves could not get out of the forest territory of the Elf race, only male Elves could go out and explore other regions such as the human realm.
If Marrissa the free office lady had determined where she went to hear such a rule, she would have already clicked her tongue and complained.
"Ck ck, the Elf Race doesn't seem to understand women's emancipation yet."
The conversation was over because it was dark.
Vedis returned to her home, and she saw Jean lying on her bed looking up at the ceiling.
Jean was initially observing things from the window, but she rushed to close the window and lay on the bed after hearing the door of the room open.
The host had come so he was already preparing to receive various spicy sharp words from her.
A round object the size of a pea was affixed to Vedis using his white finger.
His thin lips seemed to whisper like a spell.
Jean widened her eyes, curious about what Vedis was doing.
The object in Vedis hands turned out to be the seeds of vines, the plant began to grow.
The Vedic hand directs the growth of the plant to form a net and ends up on the other side of the wall.
Jean was amazed by the sight, as it turned out that Elves could grow and manipulate the shape of plants.
The shape of the vines is very unique, embroidered to form a net from one wall to another.
Vedis then climbed into the net and laid himself there.
Oh, it turns out that the vines were used as hammocks.
That's a good idea, if Jean can manipulate the plants she'll easily sleep anywhere with a hammock like that, as long as the bed doesn't hang too high.
But through the hammock, Jean realized that Vedis did not like it.
Though the cotton bed that Jean slept on was very large, still enough occupied by one more person, but Vedis even made his own bed.
Jean didn't care, she turned to sleep sideways against Vedis
"Do you have a father?" the Vedic question let Jean's mind go.
"Yes, of course I have a father." Jean answered with a puzzled face, why did Vedis ask the topic of father.
"What's your father like?" The Vedis looked at Jean's back.
From the words of Valir who said Jean was Vin's daughter, it made Vedis itch to ask Jean himself.
"My dad, he's very nice. He became a great hunter, very fond of his family, I think he was the most handsome man, his nose pointed, his eye line was firm like the eyes of an eagle, his pupils were as blue as the sky, although there was a vertical scar on my father's right eyelid, he was still handsome." Marrissa said honestly according to the original thought of Jean.
Vedic hands tighten, he's inward, he's inching,
"That's Vin, it's Vin."
In Vedis memory, prior to his departure, Vin's right eye was indeed injured due to punishment.
Vedis looked at Jean with a complicated look, her heart wondering if Jean was indeed Vin's daughter?
Jean added, "But that was then, now I no longer have a father. He was gone three years ago."
Vedic eyes widen, eyes widen,
"What! How could he die?"
Jean wondered why Vedis was so curious about her father, but she still replied,
"My father's hunter's associate said that my father died pierced by a sharp thorn from the tail of a wild beast in the deep forest."
Vedis said quickly, "He can't die that easily!"
Vedis heart shaken with the news of Vin's death, she couldn't hold back her emotions.
"Hmmn," Jean turned to feel strange with Vedis' overly emotional response.
Aware if the response is too awkward Vedis immediately add up,
"You said your father was a powerful hunter, he shouldn't have died that easily."
"Oh, yes, I don't understand either because I wasn't next to my father when the accident happened." Jean's expression became haggard in light of the sad event.