Fourteenth of Spring, AV 514
Twenty first bell
OOCNo posting order needed, to reflect the chaos of the bar. Of course, respect others and chronology, but otherwise drink and duck!
Twenty first bell
OOCNo posting order needed, to reflect the chaos of the bar. Of course, respect others and chronology, but otherwise drink and duck!
As night rolled in like the tide, so did the many patrons of the Kelp Bar roll in like a wave of rotten kelp. No, that was the beer, but there were many people in the bar, as far as Pulren could tell. The din in the small, dimly lit place was louder than the docks when the merchant barges rolled in with new supplies for the hungry of Zeltiva. Sailors and citizens alike filled the room to near capacity, a lone table with three empty chairs the only place to sit. Laughter and insults flew through the air like sea gulls. The staff was as busy as ever.
Pulren glugged down his second tankard of the kelp, its smell still stinging his nostrils. Just because Zeltivans were accustomed to the only staple that wasn't rationed, it didn't make them sniff and taste it. You just drank it down until you didn't care about it anymore. He was getting there, but the scent had the extra bonus of reminding of him of Uncle Pal, who almost always stunk of it. He raised his mug to the air before finishing it off. "To you, Uncle Pal! May your salty bones roll in the tide!" He finished it off and fished out a miza for another pair of mugs. Training had been tough and he wanted another four or five forgets.
That's when he heard a swell of laughter from a table of sailors. "Are ye kiddin me?! Look, lads, it's Pal's little pal. Come over here, ye little shyke. We gots some fish te scrape and NOBODY scrapes fish like Pal's little Pal!" If smoke could leave Pulren's nostrils, it would have, rolling over the bar. A fist full of the drink duo, he spun on his heel to face the table of sailors, their faces just familiar enough to bring his blood to a boil. The faces of those who would jump in with Pal at Pulren's expense and the same that probably helped his uncle to a fairly early grave in Winter. A spilling swig and Pulren was tracing a curving line toward the table.
Pulren glugged down his second tankard of the kelp, its smell still stinging his nostrils. Just because Zeltivans were accustomed to the only staple that wasn't rationed, it didn't make them sniff and taste it. You just drank it down until you didn't care about it anymore. He was getting there, but the scent had the extra bonus of reminding of him of Uncle Pal, who almost always stunk of it. He raised his mug to the air before finishing it off. "To you, Uncle Pal! May your salty bones roll in the tide!" He finished it off and fished out a miza for another pair of mugs. Training had been tough and he wanted another four or five forgets.
That's when he heard a swell of laughter from a table of sailors. "Are ye kiddin me?! Look, lads, it's Pal's little pal. Come over here, ye little shyke. We gots some fish te scrape and NOBODY scrapes fish like Pal's little Pal!" If smoke could leave Pulren's nostrils, it would have, rolling over the bar. A fist full of the drink duo, he spun on his heel to face the table of sailors, their faces just familiar enough to bring his blood to a boil. The faces of those who would jump in with Pal at Pulren's expense and the same that probably helped his uncle to a fairly early grave in Winter. A spilling swig and Pulren was tracing a curving line toward the table.