Kova's Well, Dusk
65th of Summer, 510AV
Rhuryc never liked the well. Not the well itself, but what it represented. Questions. Unsure hope. Day after day the inhabitants of Syliras visited the street that was Kova's domain and tossed their coin in the hopes of some mystical guidance, an exterior force so mysterious that the name was a guess. Even the stones themselves were an unknown factor. They could have originated from anywhere; the other side of the world for all anyone knew. So it was that Rhuryc came to his decision, one that he had stuck to for several years - most of his life. Yet here he was. As usual the young man stood at the edge of the well, his eyes cast down into the deep, blackened pool filled to the brim with gold and silver. He mused on the wealth one would find at the bottom. Perhaps there was no spirit and the figure that appeared was just a lone, brilliant conman, guides as a ghost while he collected his due. Funny. He imagined that such a hoodwink might actually work.
With his borrowed bucket - taken willingly from his Master's forge - Rhuryc poured a healthy helping of fresh water into the flowers set atop the well. In the heat of summer the people often forgot to feed the plants that marked the well for its poison, a fact that Rhuryc was none to keen to forget. Once he had witnessed a foreign drink from the coin-filled waters and while he was quick to exhale the liquid the man suffered from some kind of unique illness. Consuming decayed gold had strange effects no doubt. When he finished his self-appointed duties Rhuryc turned away from the well and observed the declining traffic, his gaze sweeping toward the sky at the very moment of dusk.
The sun, on its final decent into darkness, gave way to night and shadow. Already the streets began to fill with the flicker of torchlight, the main paths illuminated enough for the common passerby to find his way. A few stars dotted the waning sky and the moon was high on the rise, a mark for the apprentice himself to find some shelter. A quick step brought him away from the well, but for some unknown reason he stopped. His attention was brought to the stones again and with long, hard stare, Rhuryc found himself with a queer feeling. He tucked his bucket under an arm and finished a hand into his coin purse, careful to avoid the hilt of the sword belted to the same waist. With little effort he produced a gold rimmed and Miza and stepped back, a flick issuing the currency into the well to never be seen again.
His wish, oddly, was absent.