Date: 90 Fall, 513
Location: A day's sail from Syliras
More or less continued from here.
It had taken a little longer than Finian guessed to reach the little islets of his memory. First, the challenge had been figuring out how to tow another casinor. Second, the blond shipwright had to read a map and get his bearings (thank Laviku for the reef Rheyine had been fishing). Lastly, it had simply been further away than he thought. The storm had really thrown him off.
Once the islets were in sight, however, Ian was relieved.
There were a handful of little islands, mostly dark rock rising up out of the depths of the northern Suvan. A bit of shallow water stretched between them, thriving with kelp and sea life. The largest of the little islands was still a tiny thing that could be crossed in less than a bell on foot. It was covered in trees and shrub and birds, with a dark sand beach that curved around one side of the entire island. Half of the beach was a cove protected by an arch of wave-carved rock that stayed dry during high tide. It was a little haven of sorts, and a nook had been carved deep in the arch as a shrine to Laviku.
It was a nice little way point outside of Syliras, and one that Finian had traveled to when gathering ship-making supplies from the Fortress City with his father and brothers and cousins years ago. Many Svefra had obviously stopped here before, but as the season had turned from summer to fall and finally to winter, the Flotilla had long since drifted west, the islets were abandoned.
The storm had tossed some trees over. One or two sprawled on the beach like dead giants, a reminder of the fierceness of the coming of winter.
The pair arrived before the sun set, but it took some time to beach Rheyine's crippled Storm Runner in a way that suited Finian's perfectionist tastes. If he was going to work on the casinor, he had to ensure a decent workspace. Ian anchored The Handmade'n in the shallows nearby so his tools were at hand. By the time they'd settled their ships, Syna was just beginning to dip toward the horizon. A chill would hang in the air come dark, and a fog quickly began to blanket the islets.
There would be enough light to make preparations for the night, but there would be no time to begin working on repairs.
Ian stood dripping on the beach after swimming from his casinor, dark sand warming his bare feet. He brought ashore a few of his things for the night, balanced precariously on his platinum-locked head to keep them dry. Scanning over the mangled trees toward the stone archway, he tried to remember where he had sheltered last time he was here several years ago.
He waited for the blonde fisherwoman to catch up; her own casinor lurching precariously to one side as the tide slipped away to leave it bare on the beach. Lagoon blue eyes scanned its hull, and he actually felt himself ache to scrape it clean of barnacles right then and there. Time for that could come later. He was thankful the Storm Runner wasn't taking on water, but there was still plenty of work to do on the old thing. Finian sighed with his particular form of excitement. He did love boats.
Anything else was just a shine on the treasure for the shipwright.
"I think there's at least an old firepit that way, and there's somewhere we can thank Laviku for his kindness." He broke the relative quiet, speaking above the crashing of waves and wind rustling the leaves. The chill had already raised goosebumps on his tanned skin, "It's probably less windy, if nothing else."