Who: Aello
Time Stamp: 7th of Summer, 511 AV [Grandfathered]
It was late afternoon, and the day was fading fast. Common sense normally dictated that one left the forests at night, because while what came about in the day was dangerous enough, the night held its own dangers for a loner who could not see in the dark. One heard sounds out there that they didn’t know the source of - and if you were smart, you didn’t want to know the source. It was warm, as it normally was this early in the summer, even up north, outside of Ravok, but it was cooling down quickly as Leth prepared to take his turn in the sky. Soon it would be cold, and with the wind howling through the trees, competing with her own hearing, heading back into the confines of the city would be wise.
A storm must be coming - when cold fronts rolled in like that, they clashed with the warmer air currents, and the result was fog. There didn’t seem to be anything unnatural about it. It was simply the basics of weather. There were few boats waiting for the last of the stragglers to come to cross, and all but one of them already had someone heading their way. Upon approaching the boat, she might well have stopped to pause - this boater didn’t look like the usual sailors who ran the boats to the city, and that could have been a good thing or a bad thing. After all, everything in Ravok was starkly regulated by the Black Sun and the Ebonstryfe. And yet... they were going unmolested by the guards or the other sailers.
The boat was different, as black as night, though it seemed to be made of stained wood - grey lines stood out, displaying the grain, and the person standing at the back of the gondola carried not a normal, simple straight pole, or oars, but a shepherd’s crook that couldn’t possibly be long enough to propel them across the water. But the end was submerged, so who knew? Maybe. Maybe not. But either way, the gondolier was cloaked in black, though their gloves were blood red. With the hood, it was impossible to see who or what ther boatsperson was. Humanoid, certainly, but that... that wasn’t terribly helpful. Nor could she discern if they were male or female. They didn’t speak or address her, just waited. Through the fog, she couldn’t see any other boats coming back, and this one might have been her only chance to get back to the city for the night.
The choice was hers.