The night was dark, so that the first vision Minnie had of the City of the Akvatari was by lamplight. It was a disorienting experience - the moon was a thin tongue of yellow rind, and the last leavings of a sirocco wend blew hot and dry from the continent, leaving the air hazy, and so when the lamps first appeared, swinging and twinkling in the wind, they appeared almost like a great, vast city. Growing closer, it became clear that the lamps she thought were on distant hills were actually simply atop the spires quite close to the water's edge. Green harbor lamps swung slow arcs near the dock, in the mucky air, and reminded her of Zeltiva. But then, closer still, the depth of field of the city changed again, for she began to see the shadowy shapes of the spires themselves, and saw that many sat quite far back from teh waterline - but that many were barely lit at all. The city was, indeed, vast in size, but hollow, mostly empty. A city of winding ghosts, like empty conches and denuded trees. It was beautiful in the dark, but beautiful in a way that made Minnie look down to the water, and gasp a little bit.
She was surprised, to feel a hand on her own gloved hand, squeezing it gently, then. She looked to see whose hand it was and saw Raisa smiling back. Seh did not speak but reutrned the smile, and watched, instead of the morunful spires, the broad, familiar sweep of the harbor lamp. A ship swung gently in the deep waters, and from the trim of its high, bowed hull, she recognized the Magpie. Their whaleboat grew closer to it, and Minnie saw other boats gathered round it, with stevedore's rushing back and forth unloading barrels, crates, bundles, all the bits and pieces that Zeltiva brought to the city on the edge of the wastes. A derrick had been put up and was groaning beneath the weight of the granite blocks that Minnie had seen stowed in the hull. She opened her mouth, suddenly acutely aware that her boxes were unattended in all the hubbub, but from the corner of her eye, she saw the Akvatari sculptor, who still wept quietly at his oar, and she stayed silent, as she had promised, waiting.
When they finally reached the shore, she came to her feet slowly, suddenly very aware of the stiffness of a long trip by boat, and of age and late hours. Raisa, by the time she turned, already had stepped on to the wharf, and reached a hand back to take Minnies. The Akvatari, tied teh boat to the pilings. Minnie took the proferred hand and stepped carefulyl to shore.
"Raisa--" she stopped herself, quickly, "Master Wright-Allwave, please forgive me, but my t'ings, they are... they are a-ship, still. They are... very important, I shunny ha' left them unkept so long."
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She was surprised, to feel a hand on her own gloved hand, squeezing it gently, then. She looked to see whose hand it was and saw Raisa smiling back. Seh did not speak but reutrned the smile, and watched, instead of the morunful spires, the broad, familiar sweep of the harbor lamp. A ship swung gently in the deep waters, and from the trim of its high, bowed hull, she recognized the Magpie. Their whaleboat grew closer to it, and Minnie saw other boats gathered round it, with stevedore's rushing back and forth unloading barrels, crates, bundles, all the bits and pieces that Zeltiva brought to the city on the edge of the wastes. A derrick had been put up and was groaning beneath the weight of the granite blocks that Minnie had seen stowed in the hull. She opened her mouth, suddenly acutely aware that her boxes were unattended in all the hubbub, but from the corner of her eye, she saw the Akvatari sculptor, who still wept quietly at his oar, and she stayed silent, as she had promised, waiting.
When they finally reached the shore, she came to her feet slowly, suddenly very aware of the stiffness of a long trip by boat, and of age and late hours. Raisa, by the time she turned, already had stepped on to the wharf, and reached a hand back to take Minnies. The Akvatari, tied teh boat to the pilings. Minnie took the proferred hand and stepped carefulyl to shore.
"Raisa--" she stopped herself, quickly, "Master Wright-Allwave, please forgive me, but my t'ings, they are... they are a-ship, still. They are... very important, I shunny ha' left them unkept so long."
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