20th Winter, 512 AV
Cerulean Pier
Sometime in the morning.
It was the crashing sound of the waves that attracted Weylin to this place, the roar of the white spray as it crashed against the rocks. It was the rumble of the deep, the coming from the deep as the water thrashed its way to the surface. But Weylin simply stared out, her expression vacant as she looked out across the ocean. She never had the opportunity to look out across the blue expanse, instead she had the Sea of Grass to look upon, to see the fauna twist and turn, to be caught by the wind and ripple across to the horizon. It was however no where near the beauty of the waves, it was far beyond that. Further up the pier she could see the remains of what had collapsed into the sea, the water reaching up to drag it down. It was indeed a powerful force.
She brought her cloak closer around her, stopping it from suddenly snapping in the wind, and catching around something. She continued to stare, watching the boats bob about, rising and falling, admiring the beauty of what laid before her. No matter how much Weylin tried to tell herself otherwise, she found the ocean fascinating, but the ideals of swimming or boats unnerved her. It was tempting fate in taking to the ocean in those wooden hulls, but then the same could be said about riding about the Sea of Grass upon the back of a Strider.
She took in a deep breath of the sea air, and perched herself down at the pier edge, letting her legs swing back and forth above the mighty drop. She wince at the pain in her left shin, and looked down at the bandaging she wore there. It was a memory indeed, and perhaps one that seemed to of occurred over an age ago in another life. But it was the pain of the healing would that reminded her that the past was real. She drew her attention away, watching the waves turn and roll, and admiring the work of Laviku this time in finer detail, no longer giving him challenging looks like she did at the fountain a few days before, for she accepted he was doing his work elsewhere. And now she had a perfect view of it.