45th Day of Spring
Anchorage Flotilla
1st Bell
One thing Razkar was fast learning about the Flotilla was that it was never truly asleep. Like any port, ships were always coming and going, whether it was noon or midnight. Always there were deals being struck and wagers made, Svefra reuniting and separating, training, socializing, carousing, arguing... it truly was a city. Like any city, it had it's culture, it's nightlife.
And, bizarrely enough, it's bonfires.
Razkar walked across planks and rope bridges, seeing pinpoints of blazing light stretched out across the horizon-stretching wooden plain. Some were no bigger than torches, and some took up sizable chunks of and ship's deck, stone underneath to stop the fires eating into the ship... and people did not shirk from them.
Fire and flames roared towards the skies, and yet the Svefra gathered around them... and told stories.
Cloaked in shadow and, well, his own cloak, the Myrian moved closer to one. A bearded Svefra was enthralling a circle of enraptured faces with a story in Fratava, arms swinging, voice alternating between low and hushed, scared, and booming, shouting like a sea god.
Some eyes turned at his approach. They took in the dark, tattooed skin, marked with ink and scars and piercings. Hung with weapons and half-naked. Stinking of death and battle.
But despite all of that, the Sea People did not turn their eyes from him. They did not sneer or mutter (not all of them, anyway). They noticed him, they saw him arrive... and then turned back to the storyteller.
"Vast it was, my friends!" The old man intoned, sweeping a hand round in front of a row of children, hands like claws. "Rising from the surf and boiling water like a Krar-Ken of the Old World! Tentacles like tree trunks... and a beak as broad as this very ship!"
Razkar found himself smiling softly. Storytellers. He knew them well. Masters of drama and theater, they could not just tell a tale, but conjure it into life. Make you truly believe you were witnessing the event. The Shorn Skulls had theirs, and Taloba had plenty more.
The Myrian sat to one side of the bonfire, black eyes fixed on the unfolding saga before him. It sounded like a good one. He hoped it had a fine finish...
Anchorage Flotilla
1st Bell
One thing Razkar was fast learning about the Flotilla was that it was never truly asleep. Like any port, ships were always coming and going, whether it was noon or midnight. Always there were deals being struck and wagers made, Svefra reuniting and separating, training, socializing, carousing, arguing... it truly was a city. Like any city, it had it's culture, it's nightlife.
And, bizarrely enough, it's bonfires.
Razkar walked across planks and rope bridges, seeing pinpoints of blazing light stretched out across the horizon-stretching wooden plain. Some were no bigger than torches, and some took up sizable chunks of and ship's deck, stone underneath to stop the fires eating into the ship... and people did not shirk from them.
Fire and flames roared towards the skies, and yet the Svefra gathered around them... and told stories.
Cloaked in shadow and, well, his own cloak, the Myrian moved closer to one. A bearded Svefra was enthralling a circle of enraptured faces with a story in Fratava, arms swinging, voice alternating between low and hushed, scared, and booming, shouting like a sea god.
Some eyes turned at his approach. They took in the dark, tattooed skin, marked with ink and scars and piercings. Hung with weapons and half-naked. Stinking of death and battle.
But despite all of that, the Sea People did not turn their eyes from him. They did not sneer or mutter (not all of them, anyway). They noticed him, they saw him arrive... and then turned back to the storyteller.
"Vast it was, my friends!" The old man intoned, sweeping a hand round in front of a row of children, hands like claws. "Rising from the surf and boiling water like a Krar-Ken of the Old World! Tentacles like tree trunks... and a beak as broad as this very ship!"
Razkar found himself smiling softly. Storytellers. He knew them well. Masters of drama and theater, they could not just tell a tale, but conjure it into life. Make you truly believe you were witnessing the event. The Shorn Skulls had theirs, and Taloba had plenty more.
The Myrian sat to one side of the bonfire, black eyes fixed on the unfolding saga before him. It sounded like a good one. He hoped it had a fine finish...