Initially annoyed by the interruption, Nastya just wanted one moment of peace and quiet before anymore drama happened that open day. However, the older lady looked nervous to be approaching her and extraordinarily sweet and so Anastasiya couldn't help but smile at her kindly. "It is no trouble at all, I will personally fetch a form from our office." She told her, nodding her head as she took her leave. "I'll be back in a few minutes or so."
Reluctantly, and keeping her eye on Zinaida for as long as she could, Nastya left the main practice arena. Since she still wanted a decent lunch break, it meant she had to be pretty quick, so once she reached the corridor the younger Tikhomirova sibling broke into a run. Stopping abruptly outside the office, she bent down with her hands on her knees to catch her breath for a few seconds before she would enter. She hoped that Aglaya would have either left the office by now, or would just ignore her presence so that she could get in and out with the form within a matter of seconds. As her breathing slowed and quietened though, Nastya heard an odd shuffling and a kind of... gurgle?
Her brow furrowed, and she called out "Aglayka?" as she hesitantly opened the door. Looking down, Anastasiya did not expect the sight she saw. Her older sister, on the ground, seizing. Suddenly her vision changed and Nastya was back at the World Championships three years prior when a similar scene lay before her. She staggered back and lent against the door, causing it to close loudly. "Oh no... No..." She whispered, shaking her head frantically. History felt like it was repeating herself, the same sight and the same sick feeling in her stomach, the same fear.
But this time, there was no Andrey Viktorovich to hold her back, and Nastya flung herself to her knees by her sister, trying to frantically grab her sister's moving hands and terrified by what was happened. "Aglaechka!" She cried, the first time she'd used the childhood name for more than a decade. "What's wrong? Can you hear me? Say something, please!" Her voice cracked, and Nastya realised how utterly useless she was being. She had to keep it together, for Aglaya's sake. The adrenaline rush calmed her enough to immobilise her sister's head and cushion the convulsions using her lap as a pillow and her hands clamping her head down. Aglaya had a concussion one time before, and Nastya was damned if she was going to let another happen on her watch. "Hey, hey, stay calm for me, okay?" She gently encouraged Aglaya, determined that even if Aglaya could not hear her that she was going to try anyway.
Unsure what to do next, Anastasiya suddenly remembered their mother was a healer and that there was nothing more she could do now. "Mother!" She cried out, wondering where the hell she was. "MOTHER!" She tried again, louder. "ALYONA!" She screamed, fighting her panic and worry against the need to be calm to help her sister. "I got you," she murmured low to Aglaya, "breathe." At that point she didn't know if she was addressing her sister or herself. She could feel her heart beating like crazy waiting for their mother, whose footsteps she could hear rapidly approaching, and she tried to take deep breathes.
Her eyes drifted over to the desk where Aglaya last was when she left her, and she spotted the opened praline box, a single praline missing. Her heart skipped a beat. The pralines, the pralines she had given her from that superfan... they had to be the cause of this. If only she had destroyed the box like she had wanted to in the first place, her reputation be damned. "Oh, crap." She whispered. Screw calm, this was serious stuff. She had accidentally helped poison her own sister.
The door opened and Nastya didn't even look to see if it was actually her mother who had entered before she let the tears start streaming down her face. "Mama, help her... please, I don't know what to do!" She sobbed, barely intelligible and unable to stay strong now that her mother was there. She was a healer and she would heal Aglaya and everything would be fine. It just had to be. "I think she was poisoned..." Her sobs made it mainly unintelligible, but she hoped that her free hand pointing to the forsaken praline box would help. If she could help heal her, maybe she'd get rid of the guilt that was now eating her alive.