Vye tared at the husks filled with soil.
"Vye?"
At his name he looked up, "Zeal."
He spoke in low tones, not meant to carry, "What's wrong?"
"These seeds... they're alive but--"
"But what?"
Vye just shook his head with mounting perplexity.
What an oddity they were.
He could sense the seeds calling to him, but they were... empty. They didn't simply lack an aetherical signature, and neither were they lifeless for he could feel the intrinsic pull within each of them, but it was as if they were incomplete.
As if they were drawing him in.
But for all the buildup, the culmination of their efforts was sorely anticlimactic. Several brown beads pooled into his awaiting palm.
"... That's it?" Zeal raised them up to eye level, inspecting the smooth pearls.
"Do you even know what 'that' is?" Lockes asked even as several vines reached up to the higher levels, returning with a heavy sack and two hollowed log segments. These the vines pushed into Zeal's hands before he could respond.
The sack contained loose, dark, and loamy soil, while the bark husks as he found, had not been thoroughly hollowed as he first presumed. Rather, the center had been carved out while still leaving a flat at one end as a seal. A container of sorts.
It wasn't too difficult to piece two and two together, and he grabbed handfuls of soil to fill his log. As he reached to fill the other though, the Bluepine stopped him, "Not so quick now, that is Vye's log to fill."
They exchanged glances and Vye clambered off of Zeal, doing as the older Shol bid and filling the log. And so they planted their seed into their respective pots, and set about tending to it per Lockes's instruction.
"What do you think will grow?" Vye stared at the pot. Something was stirring within but oddly enough, he couldn't feel what it was.
Some plants grew swiftly, this he knew, but never had Zeal seen one go from seed to bloody plant in less than a turn of the sun.
"Your's is different from mine." Vye leaned against the husk, raising himself onto his toes that he may better see the dormant plant within.
Zeal similarly knelt down to inspect it, resisting the rising temptation to tap the bubble and jostle the seed. A rather troublesome encounter with a splash of aromatic oil from an inconspicuous bottle had given him plenty cause to be wary of even the most unassuming of things.
Vye had no such hesitation, poking and prodding the transparent baubles to his curious Heart's content.
"Vye." Zeal shook his head, laughing to himself and dragging a hand over his face. There were no words for which to describe the young Shol beside him.
The selfsame one that was now looking up at him, perplexed.
"Don't just go around poking whatever curiosity you find."
"But what's it do?"
"It's the vessel for your Time."
The small Shol at his side started, throwing bewildered glances between Zeal, the remnants of their plants, and Lockes.
At last the sharp was carefully drawn out, and the half filled orbs placed on one of the large conks jutting out of the walls of the hollow. The young Shol rubbed gingerly at the needle pricks on his sore wrist before scuttling off onto a high perch to glare distastefully at the glass baubles, the golden fluid twinkling innocently back at him. That had hurt.
And then the Bluepine whirled to face him with a smile that made his skin prickle. Zeal was suddenly very much aware of the vines still restraining him.
"No."
"Yes." The curvature and sharp points of their teeth made all the more conspicuous by the Shol's widening grin.
Some Time later Zeal was rubbing at his own sore wrist.
"Come now, that wasn't so bad, was it?" The Bluepine hummed, twirling a bauble filled with a dark red fluid.
"Blood magic? Is that what you think this is, some kind of hex or hokey magick like of those of the castaways and their ilk?" Lockes chuckled, well aware of the messy tangle of blood magic in the history of fleshlings. The baubles were set down beside Vye's.
From within the small seed germinated rapidly, green tendrils spreading through the crystal glass and forming the brackets of the hourglass as it soaked up the blood.
As the plant took in the fluids, the blood dried and disentegrated into fine powder that neither clung nor stuck.