eace was not something Kavala thought she'd find after the days of captivity. Still wary, Kavala roamed Riverfall familiarizing herself with the lay of the land, and was startled by what she was actually seeing. Though she was somewhat in a daze, she didn't hide in her room in Godivas. She was a grasslander and the Drykas needed fresh air, lots of blue sky, and the wind in their hair to be happy. Kavala knew she had some time. The Akalak had made it clear to her that there was no debt and that she was free to do as she wanted now. In fact, she had ten days she could stay in the woman's shelter which was truthfully more of a resort, until she decided what to do with her life. It had been made clear that she was free. It seemed such a strange word after the trauma of the last month. Kavala looked around, her bare feet carefully padding along a clean swept stone path that meandered around a water fall and swimming pool that only had a few people wandering by. Kavala thought she would shy away from the men here, but the truth was the midnight-skinned warriors looked so little like her tormentors that it hadn't bothered her much to speak to them. What bothered her was her debt. She owed them. Though they said she didn't, Kavala was a woman of honor from a people that would never take charity. So she felt the debt acutely. And she had no coin to pay them with. She was lucky she had anything at all. If her horse hadn't survived the fall somehow, she wouldn't have even a piece of clothing to her name. Kavala sat down on the edge of the pool and slipped her feet into the water, knowing that winter would soon bring cold weather and storms, even though the day was still somewhat warm. She waited quietly, a bit lost in thought, trying not to remember the immediate past, and trying to decide - though she still felt lost - what she was going to do with the future. She knew nothing about the Akalak. Truthfully, she barely knew much about the Konti even though she'd just been living with them for the last year studying medicine. So repaying a debt was hard if one didn't know anything about the people one owed. Kavala sighed, stretched, and ran a hand through her hair sighing softly. Kavala wanted to feel better... truthfully she did... but sitting around relaxing wasn't exactly going to get the job done. NoteFeel free to jump in ... I'm open to just about any sort of interaction. |