Flashback. 18th Fall, 507AV.
Johanne had been watching the Zeltivan cargo ship inch its way closer and closer to Denval for the last while. She always thought it was ironic that they'd sailed so far, from one end of the continent to the other, only to be delayed by the shallow and treacherous waters around Denval. She swung her legs as she sat on the edge of the passenger quay, watching the way her shadow flickered over the murky waters, giving glimpses of rocks, pebbles and debris around the base of the structure. She smiled slightly when the wind picked up, residual warmth from summer caressing along her flesh. Glancing down, she picked at a cuticle with her other fingers, tearing away the dead and useless skin, only to hiss slightly when blood welled to the surface. Cursing, she looked up. The ship had not inched any closer, approaching the shore as slowly as Time. It was time for the shallow Denvalian boats to ferry the Zeltivans in to their isolated town. Johanne sighed again.
At seventeen years of age, Johanne felt malaise seep into her bones and become more potent with each inhalation of breath. She was young and filled with melancholy, her long and gangly limbs creaking with discontent. This town was small, suffocatingly so. She saw too many familiar faces, the same cobblestone streets, the same drunkards stumbling home each evening. She knew every nook and cranny of the bars and temples around the place, even knew the piles of rubble intimately, those closest to the town. How she longed to scramble over the debris, cutting her knees and scraping her palms, before jumping and setting flight to Wind Reach, or the mystical Sylira. Everything seemed so far away and so desirable, and everything that she had within grasp, she wanted less and less with each passing moment.
Save the Quay. She loved the quay, the way she was so close to the water and thus, the rest of the world. It was here she came when she felt she was inches away from stabbing her mother in the eyeball or somewhere equally unpleasant. It was here she came when her brothers were too loud, or her father's silence, deafening. She would watch the rare ships bring stories, tales, accents and goods to her home, her home that she loathed and loved more than anything. She would watch the Denvali ferries bring in strange men with tans and tattoos, tattoos she admired and would seek to emulate on those Denvalians brave enough to let ink stain their flesh. Here, at the Passenger Quay, with its rare hustle and plentiful silence, Johanne could watch the reflective water and try to see inside herself, tried to make her desires, wants and needs as transparent as the sea. She didn't know what she wanted, and that was half the pain of existing.
Syna's light was blocked by the everpresent grey clouds around this time of year, the world seeming muted and gray. Everything was dull, and seemed trapped within a cage of silence, as the ferry reached the cargo ship and began to hoist the Zeltivans onto the boat. They'd return later for the cargo, but right now what was most important was the pressing need for beer, hot food and tales of a world that had forgotten them for so long. If Johanne squinted, she could just see the small shapes jumping into the ferry, watching the Denvali ship bob in the water. She waited. Not long now, until she saw strangers from a world that she was beginning to want to see.
(Perhaps somewhere inside her, Johanne knew that she would one day leave. But not today. She did not know it today.)
The slightest light change, a flash of shadow across Johanne's face alerted her to the presence of someone else. Without looking up, but clutching her personal belongings closer to her, Johanne watched her feet dangle over the stone quay.
"Hello, Jo," she said, quietly.
"Hey, Jo," chirped Jolan, and with a flop, the young Kelvic sat beside her. The two had the barest of knowledge of each other, Johanne knowing Jolan from seeing him about the quay so often. Their comaraderie sprouted mainly from their shared beginnings, both being known as Jo. Jo looked up, saw the sprightly young Kelvic, and smiled. While Johanne was so discontent with her world, Jolan revelled in his small little domain, where he begged and busked and stole happily. Perhaps, though, it was comforting to Jolan to know he could fly away at any one time. Johanne had not the luxury of wings.
The two watched the ferry come closer and closer quietly for a while, until they could see the burly men sitting side by side in the little boat. Their features became more and more pronounced, until Jolan jumped up, just as suddenly as he had arrived.
"Business as usual?" Johanne smiled, watching the young boy almost quiver with glee, watching his fingers itch.
"Of course! See you, Jo," and he ran down the quay as quickly as he had come, ready to do some honest thieving. There was a boy who knew how to live, whilst Johanne felt suffocated in the routines of mundane existence.
When Johanne turned away from the last flicker of Jolan disappearing, she saw that the Zeltivans had just arrived at the quay, and were alighting the rickety ferry.
Johanne had been watching the Zeltivan cargo ship inch its way closer and closer to Denval for the last while. She always thought it was ironic that they'd sailed so far, from one end of the continent to the other, only to be delayed by the shallow and treacherous waters around Denval. She swung her legs as she sat on the edge of the passenger quay, watching the way her shadow flickered over the murky waters, giving glimpses of rocks, pebbles and debris around the base of the structure. She smiled slightly when the wind picked up, residual warmth from summer caressing along her flesh. Glancing down, she picked at a cuticle with her other fingers, tearing away the dead and useless skin, only to hiss slightly when blood welled to the surface. Cursing, she looked up. The ship had not inched any closer, approaching the shore as slowly as Time. It was time for the shallow Denvalian boats to ferry the Zeltivans in to their isolated town. Johanne sighed again.
At seventeen years of age, Johanne felt malaise seep into her bones and become more potent with each inhalation of breath. She was young and filled with melancholy, her long and gangly limbs creaking with discontent. This town was small, suffocatingly so. She saw too many familiar faces, the same cobblestone streets, the same drunkards stumbling home each evening. She knew every nook and cranny of the bars and temples around the place, even knew the piles of rubble intimately, those closest to the town. How she longed to scramble over the debris, cutting her knees and scraping her palms, before jumping and setting flight to Wind Reach, or the mystical Sylira. Everything seemed so far away and so desirable, and everything that she had within grasp, she wanted less and less with each passing moment.
Save the Quay. She loved the quay, the way she was so close to the water and thus, the rest of the world. It was here she came when she felt she was inches away from stabbing her mother in the eyeball or somewhere equally unpleasant. It was here she came when her brothers were too loud, or her father's silence, deafening. She would watch the rare ships bring stories, tales, accents and goods to her home, her home that she loathed and loved more than anything. She would watch the Denvali ferries bring in strange men with tans and tattoos, tattoos she admired and would seek to emulate on those Denvalians brave enough to let ink stain their flesh. Here, at the Passenger Quay, with its rare hustle and plentiful silence, Johanne could watch the reflective water and try to see inside herself, tried to make her desires, wants and needs as transparent as the sea. She didn't know what she wanted, and that was half the pain of existing.
Syna's light was blocked by the everpresent grey clouds around this time of year, the world seeming muted and gray. Everything was dull, and seemed trapped within a cage of silence, as the ferry reached the cargo ship and began to hoist the Zeltivans onto the boat. They'd return later for the cargo, but right now what was most important was the pressing need for beer, hot food and tales of a world that had forgotten them for so long. If Johanne squinted, she could just see the small shapes jumping into the ferry, watching the Denvali ship bob in the water. She waited. Not long now, until she saw strangers from a world that she was beginning to want to see.
(Perhaps somewhere inside her, Johanne knew that she would one day leave. But not today. She did not know it today.)
The slightest light change, a flash of shadow across Johanne's face alerted her to the presence of someone else. Without looking up, but clutching her personal belongings closer to her, Johanne watched her feet dangle over the stone quay.
"Hello, Jo," she said, quietly.
"Hey, Jo," chirped Jolan, and with a flop, the young Kelvic sat beside her. The two had the barest of knowledge of each other, Johanne knowing Jolan from seeing him about the quay so often. Their comaraderie sprouted mainly from their shared beginnings, both being known as Jo. Jo looked up, saw the sprightly young Kelvic, and smiled. While Johanne was so discontent with her world, Jolan revelled in his small little domain, where he begged and busked and stole happily. Perhaps, though, it was comforting to Jolan to know he could fly away at any one time. Johanne had not the luxury of wings.
The two watched the ferry come closer and closer quietly for a while, until they could see the burly men sitting side by side in the little boat. Their features became more and more pronounced, until Jolan jumped up, just as suddenly as he had arrived.
"Business as usual?" Johanne smiled, watching the young boy almost quiver with glee, watching his fingers itch.
"Of course! See you, Jo," and he ran down the quay as quickly as he had come, ready to do some honest thieving. There was a boy who knew how to live, whilst Johanne felt suffocated in the routines of mundane existence.
When Johanne turned away from the last flicker of Jolan disappearing, she saw that the Zeltivans had just arrived at the quay, and were alighting the rickety ferry.