"Ahoy!"
He'd shouted it a few times in both Fratava and Common, raising his voice well above the luffing of his sails in the wind as he worked to slow The Handmade'n, frustrated that the stiff end-of-summer breeze was making it so difficult to bring his casinor to a stop as quickly as he'd like to.
"Anyone aboard?"
Blue eyes slid listlessly over the water for signs of life, before glancing back to the other ship. The itinerant shipwright immediately noticed the broken mast, torn sail, crushed railing. He winced. It had been a rough storm a few days back. Rough enough to toss him and his casinor about the open sea as well, leaving him more battered and sore than his boat. His mains'l, too, had some tears that needed sewn, but near a reef like the one that crawled below, boats and their inhabitants could surely be crushed, broken, and drowned. Hoping someone would emerge from belowdecks at his shouting, Finian finally resolved himself to further investigation once he was met with still more silence.
He'd seen the battered casinor on the horizon at first light, hovering just within his groggy view as he woke. At first, he was too far to think much of it, but as it was just a few degrees off of his current course toward a handful of rocky, forested isles that peeked up out of the sea, he decided it was worth steering towards. What if the storm had left someone injured? Or what if there was some work to be had? The islands were tiny things with just enough beach to stretch out on and a handful of trees to string a hammock up in, but they were big enough to use as shelter should another storm crash through. Syliras was only a day or so from there, but Ian wanted to repair his sails before the winds picked up again or the seas got ugly in another sudden weather change.
The seasons were shifting, that much he knew. Mornings were chilled and the stars had become more crisp. Early fall storms were dangerous, and once he got close enough to the other casinor to see how broken it was, Ian became worried.
Lagoon blue eyes continued to search for some sign of movement even as he let calloused hands slack his mains'l before casting his heads'l sheets all the way. Dumping the wind, he felt his casinor lurch, rounding up like a windvane and coming to a full stop. Water splashed over his starboard rails and he turned to drop anchor. The mainsheet fell completely slack and as he stood, he secured the boom to keep it that way.
Finian shrugged off his vest, stepping carefully across his deck. He paused to tuck his hatchet into his belt before slipping almost thoughtlessly into the sea. The water was cold enough to make him gasp, wincing as his more enjoyable bits attempted to flee all the way into his diaphragm. The reef was close enough to the surface to be visible, wafting with kelp and sealife. With a breath or two, he ducked under the waves, scanning the sunlit water for signs of the broken ship's residents.
When he couldn't see anyone, he swam the few strokes toward the other casinor. Using the broken railing as his entrance, the Svefra clambered ungracefully onto the deck. Fish and kelp lay sunning on the bow, but the scent of spoiled food clung to the rest of the ship. It was an odd mix of sights and scents. No other signs of anyone being on deck caught Finian's eye. No blood, either, which he allowed as an encouragement.
"Hello!" He called again in Fratava, running fingers over torn sailcloth and rigging as he ducked under the boom.
Well, if no one was around, if the crew had drown in the storm, then there surely was enough wood around to take as scrap. He'd have to poke his head belowdecks before coming to that conclusion, however. Not all of the sailcloth was ruined, either. The heads'l still looked in good shape even if the mains'l had been mangled.
But who set out food to sun before dying? Was it some offering to Laviku left behind? Well, it looked tasty enough either way.
Finian found himself munching on a fistful of whatever was sunning on the bow without a second thought, wandering the rest of the deck, lagoon blue eyes taking note of the damage. One hand on his hatchet, the other shoving fresh fish into his mouth, he stopped looking for life as soon as he became distracted examining what the storm had done to the casinor, a ship much older than his own.
The damage didn't appear to destroy the seaworthiness of the vessel, but it certainly wasn't going to go anywhere without repairing the mast.
Perhaps it could be towed. The islets he had in mind weren't too far away.
Surely he could figure out a way to tug the crippled ship along with his own, if the wind was strong enough, and salvage what he could at his leisure while fixing up his sails.
Mmm.
Fish.
He had been hungry.
Convenient, Ian thought inwardly, reminding himself to find an appropriate thanks for Laviku's kindness after he finished his investigations.
He'd started to get lost in some of the eccentric signs of good craftsmanship hidden about the ship when he heard the splashing off the bow. Startled, Ian had given up on there being anyone living aboard. A bit of stolen sea food still in his teeth, he turned in surprise, one hand reaching for his hatchet as the other grabbed for some of the rigging to keep himself from slipping. Only, the rigging his hand found was torn and broken, which meant there was nothing there to catch his weight.
"Hell—"
Finian began a friendly, if not slightly cautious greeting despite his mouth being full. Then, rather unexpectedly to himself, he slipped when there was nothing to hold him up. Sprawling across the deck in a blur of blond locks and tanned skin, he trailed his,
"—ooh!" in a different, more pained tone, all without getting a good look at who was coming aboard.
Petch. He hoped they weren't someone else coming to salvage his find.