78th Day of Spring, 510 AV
There is something magnificent to be said about the life of a traveler. Drifting in and out of grandiose cities and quiet hamlets alike with nary a word parted from their lips as the citizenry look on with all due curiosity; but as soon as their their muffled whispers and ocular surveys begin to question who this strange wanderer is, the mysterious figure slips away into the night, forgotten just as quickly as he'd arrived. 'Tis a lifestyle often romanticized in stories, typically chronicling grand adventures and perilous journeys of an epic nature where the protagonists and their companions make everything seem so simple through their own innate skill and ingenuity. Every battle is a clash of titans. Every romance a tear-wrenching sonnet of distilled emotion. Every meal a feast fit for a king.
It's a shame none of these things were factual, a fact Sikuri had long since come to terms with since his departure from Avanthal during the early Fall. The journey from his homeland had been long and arduous; more-so the former than the latter. Even now, as Sikuri sauntered wearily towards the cusp of his lengthy trek and strove to fight off the now all-too-familiar hunger pangs in his gullet, the doldrums of his sojourn from Nyek had already began to weave their way into Sikuri’s very existence. But even with all of these detracting factors; despite all of his trials and hardships over the last two seasons, there was one particularly distasteful cultural shift the young Vantha had both expected and yet still managed to catch him by surprise…
“Why? Why must it be so warm?” bemoaned the Talderan out-loud in his native tongue, back hunched forward from the strain of carrying his pack as a bead of sweat streaked its way down his dark-skinned face.
Ah, yes; the unusually warm weather. How anyone could exist comfortably in this… this… sweltering sauna was beyond Sikuri’s reckoning! Even after relinquishing his traditional garb in favor of a more regionally befitting wardrobe of low-cut brown boots, a pair of knee-length beige breeches, and a simple white linen shirt; the gentle Sylirian breeze did little to stave off the uncommon warmth the weary wanderer felt, an unfortunate side-effect of being Marked by the Queen of Snow.
All complaints aside, the trip hadn’t been all that bad. And now, it would seem at long last that all of his meandering would come to an end as the road Sikuri had been treading alone for so long finally came to a head. There in the distance it stood, like some sort of golden pillar of civilization, glowing with an intensity that nearly rivaled Morwen’s Lights themselves as the mid-day sun gleamed down upon its architectural splendor, almost blinding Sikuri with both its beauty and strangeness as he lifted his dreary, bagged eyes to gaze onwards in silent awe.
There stood Syliras, capital of Sylira. And what a sight it was.
Straightening up with a heaved sigh against the weight of his gear and brushing a wayward lock of hair from his muted sunflower eyes, a lightly beleaguered smile crept its way across the Vantha's besmirched face. To have made it so far from his home was in and of itself a fairly impressive -- albeit dangerous -- accomplishment in and of itself, and if it weren't for the fact Sikuri was on the brink of starvation and exhaustion, he might have taken the time to truly appreciate the situation; maybe even composing a more artistic tale about his pugnacious trip despite acclimate trials galore beyond those dedicated within his stalwartly resilient journal.
Right now, however, all Sikuri wanted was a hot meal. Having gone nearly eight days without so much as a crumb had left the soul-searching journeyman more than a bit peckish.
With renewed vim and vigor at the prospect of food and shelter against the elements, Sikuri once more returned to the move, the mistakenly melodic pitter-patter of leather against the well-tread road in his ears the only companion to accompany him as he redoubled his efforts to reach his intended destination. Closer and closer he grew, distinct figures in the distance becoming more and more detailed: two men stood astride the gateway into that most marvelous of Sylirian cities, the tell-tale gleam of weaponry against the highborn sun plainly illuminated as what could only be a deterrent for those of foolish inclination. Atop the bulwark, eyes peered down at the lone passer-by, the feathered ends of arrows protruding from quivers slung across their shoulders in preparation of the worst.
A silent cringe and pursed lips takes the place of that once alleviated smile of Sikuri's, a knot firmly lodged deep in his throat as he approached the armed soldiers.
"Halt, stranger!" demanded one of the guardsmen in Common, hand outstretched with an air of command as his compatriot moved in tandem with his fellow to stop Sikuri in his tracks. "State your business."
"Hello." replied the enervated Vantha in heavily-accented Common, a roar from his stomach and a lone bead of sweat trailing down his dark brow as he gave his best smile; the tightness in his throat growing ever so slightly as memories of his arrival in Nyek reminded him of the caution necessary in this new, strange world he'd found himself in. "My name is Sikuri. I have traveled far to reach your capital, sir, in the hopes of taking up... uh... what is the word..." the Talderan begins to explain, only to stumble in his modest Common vocabulary...
"Residency!" he finally blurts, jerking his head back from the ground to meet the guard's own again as the word leaps into his mind. "In taking up residency, as well as finding something to eat."
After a solemn survey, the lead gatekeeper gives the odd-looking foreigner a harsh squint, followed by a particularly morose head gib towards his comrade-in-arms.
"Very well." retorted the leader of the armed duo, "If food and lodging are what you seek, stranger, then follow the road towards Stormhold Castle and look for the sign to The White Swan Inn. You cannot miss it."
"Enjoy your stay in Syliras." interjected the second man, waving admittance into the city proper as he stepped aside from his.
"Thank you, sirs." Sikuri replied, a gleeful albeit weary bow given in turn for the clemency granted him.
Finally, he had made it. With one sore foot in front of the other against the paved cobblestone, the self-exiled pilgrim stepped forward into his new world, eager to explore the other spectrum of his life; to discover what he had missed out on that his own people could not impart to him...
A chance to discover whom he truly was. His only chance.