21st Summer, 510 A.V. It wasn’t often that Mealla found herself in Endrykas. Her Pavilion preferred to wander the grasses alone, keeping to themselves unless otherwise required, and now was just such a time. They’d needed supplies –and, Mealla had overheard, to discuss a potential marriage match for her. She should have been married long ago- so here they were. She wasn’t sure whether or not to be excited. Marriage had never been a plan of hers. At least, not until she had travelled and seen the lands of her mother, and she would see them. She would, whatever the cost. So, she decided, if they wanted her to marry, then she wasn’t going to make easy for them, unless it was to someone who was just as willing as her to travel. Oh, there would be no issue then. She'd snap the husband's hand off. She left the adults to do what they wanted, leaving the brightly coloured tents of her Pavilion behind to wander the streets of the city, taking in the sights and the sounds of so many people gathered together. Would this be what the other cities would be like? Or would they be larger? Smaller-? She’d heard that many of them were made from stone and wood and brick, and that they never moved, and that in itself was something that she had always found hard to imagine. Cities had to move in order to survive, surely, because how else did the surrounding lands continue to survive and support thousands of people? They had to move. Had to. She pushed the thought aside and continued walking, tucking the loose strands of her hair behind her ears as she weaved her way through the crowds. It felt strange to be without Andraste, but the mare was back at the Pavilion, resting, and it was stranger still to be without a weapon, but Endrykas was safe, protected by the webbing that enclosed it. She’d spent several hours the previous day just staring at the totems, wishing and hoping that she would one day have the skills to do such a thing. Sometimes she worried that all she would be good for would be making babies – that that would be her life. She didn’t want it to be like that; she wanted more. Needed more. She wanted to be like her mother - to see some of the world and explore. Finally, she reached the centre of the city – its campfire. It was bigger than anything that she had ever seen, and she once again found herself staring in awe as she had done when she’d first seen it, and, again, she found herself wondering what other cities would be like. She hoped to the gods – to Zulrav most of all – that she would one day find out. Her eyes flicked over the fire, taking it in, until they landed on a man. “I’m not disturbing you, am I?” she asked, pushing her hair behind her ears once again. She lifted her chin, already a little defensive. “It’s just a nice place to visit, and I would like to sit, if that’s all right with you? You have no problem with that, I hope?” |