67th of Summer, 514 AV.
"Go, get out," Calin's voice was sharp, as it always was, but incredibly terse. For the first time in the short amount that they'd known each other, the one man that Yra would consider an actual father was telling her to leave... and she was inclined to listen. However, the eyes of the Ethaefal were accusing and dour, blaming him as much for their predicament as he had blamed her. Between the two of them, it was easy to see where they did not get along. She was golden sunbeam strung into the fragile skin of a woman, the dusk and dawn lit in her features. He was the moonlit waters of the sea, stormy and fierce. They were unmatched.
She was loathe to consider him a father figure, but he was the only one she had, aside from that cold sliver of light in the night sky.
And he loathed her.
"Fine." Her words were snapped. She turned from him and the work she had ruined of his. Honestly, he was justified in his wrath: he'd been trying to fix a sail for days, and she'd endlessly and tirelessly questioned him about it. Of course, with his sister often in the city, she was left with little to do aside from talk to Calin, who refused to use Common and rather forced her to convey herself in Fratava, in which he took the opportunity to correct her on this word or that syllable.
They were both so frustrating to each other.
Without further pomp, she removed herself from the ship and his presence, boarding the docks without a backwards glance, but only after taking up the violin Eilin had left her. She might make some coin in the city while she was at it. People seemed to appreciate pretty buskers.
Calin returned to his work, much more relieved without the Ethaefal there. As she left him behind, she assumed it was because she sought the proper way to respond to things too many times. It was probably because she looked the way she did but she acted like she didn't know what she was doing, and to an extent, she was acting. She knew the world on an instinctive level. She wanted to understand it, though.
As the Ethaefal walked, seeking somewhere to sit down and play, she considered the storefronts looking down upon her. Few seemed welcoming, although all were beautiful. She simply noticed the looming darkness in their hearts too much, and Yra was nothing less than a child of the sun. There was only one that she encountered on this sojourn that caught her attention, earning pause.
The store was warmth. It was natural and beautiful. It immediately spoke to Yra, and she immediately wanted to enter it.
The outside was remarkable, certainly, but it was nothing compared to the inside, where the world spoke of the earth's warmth and bounty in such a way that Yra immediately envied whomever had known the dirt so well. It spoke to her of summer sunlight dappling the water, of earthy sunsets, and it smelled... beautiful. She found herself enraptured by the gold, the copper, the earthy texture and tone of everything, and she was glad. Glad enough to completely ignore the girl who spoke to her from the bar, instead stepping further inside regardless of customers.
"Go, get out," Calin's voice was sharp, as it always was, but incredibly terse. For the first time in the short amount that they'd known each other, the one man that Yra would consider an actual father was telling her to leave... and she was inclined to listen. However, the eyes of the Ethaefal were accusing and dour, blaming him as much for their predicament as he had blamed her. Between the two of them, it was easy to see where they did not get along. She was golden sunbeam strung into the fragile skin of a woman, the dusk and dawn lit in her features. He was the moonlit waters of the sea, stormy and fierce. They were unmatched.
She was loathe to consider him a father figure, but he was the only one she had, aside from that cold sliver of light in the night sky.
And he loathed her.
"Fine." Her words were snapped. She turned from him and the work she had ruined of his. Honestly, he was justified in his wrath: he'd been trying to fix a sail for days, and she'd endlessly and tirelessly questioned him about it. Of course, with his sister often in the city, she was left with little to do aside from talk to Calin, who refused to use Common and rather forced her to convey herself in Fratava, in which he took the opportunity to correct her on this word or that syllable.
They were both so frustrating to each other.
Without further pomp, she removed herself from the ship and his presence, boarding the docks without a backwards glance, but only after taking up the violin Eilin had left her. She might make some coin in the city while she was at it. People seemed to appreciate pretty buskers.
Calin returned to his work, much more relieved without the Ethaefal there. As she left him behind, she assumed it was because she sought the proper way to respond to things too many times. It was probably because she looked the way she did but she acted like she didn't know what she was doing, and to an extent, she was acting. She knew the world on an instinctive level. She wanted to understand it, though.
As the Ethaefal walked, seeking somewhere to sit down and play, she considered the storefronts looking down upon her. Few seemed welcoming, although all were beautiful. She simply noticed the looming darkness in their hearts too much, and Yra was nothing less than a child of the sun. There was only one that she encountered on this sojourn that caught her attention, earning pause.
The store was warmth. It was natural and beautiful. It immediately spoke to Yra, and she immediately wanted to enter it.
The outside was remarkable, certainly, but it was nothing compared to the inside, where the world spoke of the earth's warmth and bounty in such a way that Yra immediately envied whomever had known the dirt so well. It spoke to her of summer sunlight dappling the water, of earthy sunsets, and it smelled... beautiful. She found herself enraptured by the gold, the copper, the earthy texture and tone of everything, and she was glad. Glad enough to completely ignore the girl who spoke to her from the bar, instead stepping further inside regardless of customers.