40th of Summer, 514 AV OOC :
It had been a very long summer. Decidedly the longest and most arduous Roscoe could ever recall experiencing. He had just wanted to pass through Kenash. He had never intended to stay, never intended to get mixed up in so much. His life was not one of constant political intrigue and fashionability and land grabs or anything like that. Though it might be that one day, he hadn’t intended to get into the game so early. He was just a wayfaring traveler looking to hold over for a day or two on his way to Riverfall. But so much had happened since then. He had done so many things, seen so much, met so many people. Nyxie, Willum, Lancaster, Jed, Estrellir. People he would call friends, people he would call strong. The first weeks, the first month, those were tough days. He was still recovering from his failings in the Spring, still trying to wrap his mind around that infernal letter, still living as a weak man, ruled by emotion and circumstance. But he had risen out of that. And it had only been by watching the example of those he now might even consider his betters. Men like Jed Radacke, women like Estrellir Konrath, truly remarkable folk. Truly unlike anything he had ever encountered. As time had gone by, it became abundantly clear that Kenash was never meant to be a curse. It was not a punishment, nor was it an accident. He was sure of it- the gods led him here. They brought him to this place, this city on the swamp, to test him and make him stronger. To prepare him for the long difficult roads ahead. He’d said a daily prayer of thanks to Wysar for the last week, knowing that it was only by his blessing he had come so far. But Kenash was not simply a city where the gods would test his mettle, where they would mold and shape him. It was more than that. The place itself, it was truly wonderful. A paradise in its own right. They had the most delicious rum he’d ever tasted. The finest ales. The most beautiful women. They had gambling, they had vicious flora and fauna. They had battle and conflict. They had beautiful art. But most importantly, they had tobacco. And not just any tobacco. The tobacco in Kenash was truly an art in and of itself. A beautiful, nearly flawless creation. The smoke was smooth, the flavors were varied- though all were grand. It was a smokers dream come true. That is, it was Ros’ dream come true. And he had decided that today, with the calm about the city following so many intense and difficult events, he would treat himself to a blending session. The first step of that was clearly laid out before him: He needed to get some tobacco. He had run out of his personal stash of Swamp Weed weeks before. It had been tough times, with no tobacco and so much drama. Slaves running off, Rujaro attacks, all the dynasty brats fussing about the wedding and being fashionable. Ros figured he’d earned himself a good smoke. And petch anybody who disagreed. His first stop had been Sweet Secrets, a little shop run by one of the Zulaca, and the place where he acquired the famous Zulaca sweet tobacco. That particular meeting had gone by with significantly more gusto than Ros had expected from the nuit. It probably had something- more like everything- to do with his lack of proper dress and his unwillingness to purchase new clothes from the shop. His seemingly indomitable will to maintain his status as unfashionable earned Ros more than a few odd looks and undoubtedly plenty of scorn from the brats that ran the city. For the life of him he just couldn’t understand why clothing was so petching important to them around here. Like it was life or death. Like you weren’t even a real petching person if you didn’t wear blue and silver silks. Yes, and even if you got the colors right you’d better not be found wearing cotton. For all the beautiful and wonderful things Kenash represented and offered, he could not get behind that particular peculiarity. But it didn’t really bother him. If the worse he ever got was not being invited to parties or a mean look and hurried transaction by a shop owner, then so be it. In light of all that, Roscoe did not let himself be surprised to encounter the same treatment at the Iron Pipe. But no matter. He got his tobacco, he got a fresh pipe, and that was enough for him. He’d gathered up the cloth sacks they were divvied up into and walked himself on over to Reed Park on Blade Island. It was a location he’d discovered on a recent walk through the city and it offered an experience unlike any other. He found himself not sitting on a bench in one of the larger, open deck areas where people would linger to fish and talk. It wasn’t even noon yet, and the park was still mostly empty, giving him all the time and privacy he liked to enjoy his most favorite pastime. He sat there on the bench, not even moving to do anything with the tobacco sitting beside him but just taking in the view. The reeds stretched on into the distance, covering all but a few snaking streams of fast moving water, lending a constant rustling noise to complement the mild watery rush. Laden atop those background noises were all manner of unique natural instruments. At least four different species of bird were distinguishable amidst the chatter, belting out their hums, their chirps, their screeches. All so chaotic to the ear at first, but after a moment they became instruments in a natural symphony. Along with that were the occasional splashes caused by the muskrats entering and exiting the water, or the fish jumping as fish were wont to do. Or the periodic yelps thrown forth by the otter that inhabited the marsh. And even that was only the song of the reeds, and their was so much more to this piece of art. All around insects flew, big and small, among and away from the birds, all flitting through the air. Some were bigger than a mans hand, with their vibrant colors and the low hum of their wings beating against the crisp morning air. Some were slow and majestic, crawling along the pier at an easy pace, fearing nothing. The birds themselves came in an array of colors. Reds and blues and greens and greys were all easily visible somewhere in the air. Then there were the smells. The water in Kenash had a pungent aroma, though not a bad one. It smelled of life, of all the things living in and around and through it. Like the wet fur of the otter, like the scales of the fish swimming all throughout. It was an animal smell, but by no means a bad one. All that was lacking was touch, and under different circumstances that may too have been indulged. But not today. After taking several moments to take in the majestic beauty that surrounded and consumed him, Roscoe turned to the bags of tobacco, ready to add to the beautiful symphony that was his life. |