it's empty in the valley of your heart the sun rises slowly as you walk away from all the fears and all the faults you've left behind but I will hold on hope and I won't let you choke on the noose around your neck I'll find strength in pain and I will change my ways and I will know my name as it's called again - mumford & sons - Timestamp: 9th of Summer 504 AV The Bright-Eyed Mariner slipped past the lip of the sea with Syna's sun, winking out from sight while stars were starting to spangle and the moon faded in with fierce consciousness. A stranger was left standing in the diamond quality of light dusk brought, the weathered boards of the Passenger Quay beneath half buckled boots. Others might have stood with neck craned to watch their ship shrink on the horizon, but the man with a strange, serpentine swirl of muted light making a target of his countenance did not. Rather he shouldered every shred of what he owned anymore in the world, ducked his head and walked right into the heart of Denval without looking either left or right. There was no weapon at his hip or strapped to his back, nor was there the white wash of robes belonging to the Opal Order who had claimed him. Rather he looked like any one else with his head down, his stride somewhat abbreviated due to a healing injury gained and then saved from while on the high seas. A seagull flapped past, startlingly low, and the warehouses boomed with unloading of Zeltivan goods. The sign hanging from the eaves of the Stranger's Welcome creaked in a breeze blessedly cool, softening the heat of fresh summer that in the past collection of minutes seemed to have increased despite the fall of night. Denval was peaceful, protected by all of those shouldering mountains its citizens occasionally considered a prison. It looked comforting to the latest arrival, reassuring as a wall between the hunter and the hunted. It was not cage, but fortress, and he took over long to stand just without the doorway of the tavern where he hoped to acquire food and the direction of a night's lodging staring at it. At them. At the mountains that cut this place off from the rest of the world, that put it on the fringe of the sea and the end of forgetting. Mura had not felt the same. It was too close. Too open. Only there within Rak'keli's temple sanctuary had he felt for a moment, just the bliss of a split second, remotely safe and a little bit less broken. Those walls had begun to close in, however, despite the presence of calm that swept the Konti's isle. Too many people. Too many ships. A word dropped in the wrong place, at the wrong time and by the end they were begging him to go, those sensitive ladies, for he would wake them in the night with the screaming though they slept streets away. Maybe, he thought while stepping backwards in preparation to turn toward the tavern door, he should see if there was an empty house. Fellow inn patrons had a habit of complaining which often caused his own stay to be shortened. |