a gift of you. Guest Moderation Approval Characters: Dazen Gyre, Izdihar Timestamp: 1st Fall, 511 A.V. Sing to me of the man, O Qalaya, the man of twists and turns Driven time and again off course, once he had plundered The divine depths of Laviku's halls. --Ifran of the North Winds Syna chased her lover from the sky as the Southwinder ship came into view of the jewel of Eyktol. Her first arrows launched from the easterly horizon struck the towers, some still gleaming with beaten gold, others crumbling, pregnant palms nodding sleepily in the breezes, heavy with their hard-shelled fruits. It was a warm and welcome sight for Aru re P'aaleq; not so for his human cargo. The four-armed servant of the House of the North Winds in general and Ifran, its son, in particular, glanced at the Svefra with his usual, unflappable calm. The slippery fish of a man had made several attempts to escape the slavers who had caught him, but not so with his new captor. He was regularly trussed with silken ropes, the better to prevent harm to his skin. Eypharian nobility were picky about their slaves, preferring them unblemished as any sacrifice. But once they were farther from the sea, his goal would be out of sight and, eventually, out of mind. Indeed, Ifran had inspected the Svefra-out-of-water much as a Drykas might potential horseflesh for their herds. Dawn was working toward full morning by the time they docked on the stone quays of Ahnatep, and servants of the Noble House collected Aru and his charge, spiriting them up and into the family's palace. All around, they spoke the liquid syllables of Arumenic, Dazen's steward catching up on the latest or so it would seem. Though no tension showed upon him, he felt markedly more relaxed to know that Sadiki still lived, governing the Noble House and advising the Pressorah. Within the North Wind complex, Dazen was bathed and prepared by various slaves. One might have enjoyed the pampering, but this was not the man's element. When he saw Aru again, his keeper had received much the same treatment, though his personal decoration remained austere as any in the Ano Cult. They were quickly and lightly fed, then back on the road, this time in a silken palanquin born by slaves. A person of quality did not walk the streets of Ahnatep in most cases, nor the gifts and highest servants of such people. Dazen had only had a panoramic view of Ahnatep from the sea, snatches of the opulence of Ifran's home, and peeks through the silken panels that shaded their travels around the city. Their destination, the palatial home of the House of the West Winds, was a sprawling plantation on the edge of town, redolent with the scents wafting from its orchards and fields, some of them tickling and intoxicating, others more healthful and wholesome. His measured Arumenic had them seen in through a side door and left to wait in a sumptuous sitting room to await the Lady, while Aru gave him a critical once over with dark eyes. The barefoot slave had golden starfish painted up his muscled legs, disappearing into a heavy kilt of a delicate approximation of fishing net, wrapped and wrapped for a bit of modesty, though it only left a touch of his anatomy to the imagination. From the low-slung waist of the kilt, his body was covered in sand that stuck to him worse than a roll on the beach, the honest sand embellished with glittering mica. Only his honest jaw and open face were left without artifice, his skin scrubbed clean and oiled with unguents to prevent his years of sun and sea spray from desiccating his skin. Blue eyes like that needed no augmentation, the treasures of Laviku. He remained bound, though only a fool would flee now. The Eypharians had ways of punishing runaway slaves that left no permanent damage upon their hides. No doubt someone had informed Dazen of that fact. All the same, he was now bound by fine fishing wire, which could well cut into his skin if he was stupid, but Izdihar was a soft touch, or so Ifran had said. She would beguile her slave into loyalty. He was sure of this. It was known. "You will be obedient," Aru said in careful, correct Common, his words methodical and inexorable, as if he were trying to fit all the nuances of his native tongue into the lesser language. |