Disclaimer: This thread takes place before Roan takes up that name. He is still called Claus in during this thread and the man who will later be his mentor is called Roan. 13th day of Spring, 513 AV South of Sunberth off the Syliran coast “It seems Zulrav and Semele are havin' a spat.” the captain said with a dismal look in his eyes. “Get yer father and get to the deckhouse boy. Now.” His spirited smirk shriveled into a scowl; his felicitous storytelling came to an abrupt end. Just moments earlier he'd been enthusiastically bragging about his journeys to Claus. The tales he spun were dubious at best, but the rugged old seaman had been in this trade for over two decades. Though utterly lost, Claus knew to listen. He acknowledged the urgency and hastily scrambled to do as he was told. As fast as his legs permitted, Claus raced around the ship. He spotted his father calmly smoking a pipe by the stern. While still in motion Claus shouted. “Hurry father! The captain told us to take shelter in the deckhouse.” The young man's father didn't stir; his gaze stood fixed on the gently churning tides. He slowly took a long drag of the pipe and didn't quicken a chime on the exhale. “Why?” He asked with his eyes still firmly on the water. “Well...I honestly don't know.” Claus confessed. The waves gently rolled and the clouds innocently formed wispy white streaks across clear skies—it didn't seem different from the other days at sea. His father couldn't help but shake his head with a sigh—not in a slow way as if saying “no”, but in a waggling way that might shake the irritation from his brain should he get lucky. His contemptuous gaze met his son's at last; he couldn't avoid it any longer. “Let's go. The captain knows the ocean well.” Claus's father was a longtime friend of the captain and wouldn't question his authority, the disdain was solely directed at his son. The two made their way to the deckhouse in silence. Once inside, Claus settled into a hammock strung between wooden beams and his father sat in a chair on the opposite end of the room; conversation clearly wasn't welcome. Not 30 chimes of silence passed before the hammock began to softly sway. Claus's thoughts interrupted his book, he laid its open pages on his chest to mark his place and stared at the ceiling. “Is this what the captain anticipated? He sure loves to exaggerate. Or perhaps the world he experiences is different from mine; it could be that he isn't exaggerating at all. In fact, are my experiences truly in line with those of the people around me? They probably are. How else would we even remotely agree on our senses? The problem may lie instead in language. Language is rather fickle and a rightly subjective construct. Maybe it's-” An ominous howl brought the young man's thoughts to an unforeseen conclusion. The wind came to life with remarkable vigor. It battered the ship with the unrelenting persistence of a starving man cracking open a coconut. The vessel heaved and tossed in the rising swell, her frame groaned with every blow from the liquid hammers. Plucked from his seat, Claus's father slid across the room in a blur. Though muted by the storm's dissonant roars, he crashed into the door with a loud thud. Before he could curse his luck he was forced to scramble for the beam's safety; the impact provided the wind with the assistance it needed to pry open the door. Torn from its hinges as if they were made of paper, the cabin's door was snatched by the ravaging gusts. Those two inches of wood had been acting as a veil of hope for the father and son duo. To these naive scholars, with no perception of the sea's horrors, it had maintained some semblance of order on the ship and cast the illusion that this was just turbulence. Now that it was gone the madness on deck became a reality. From a door frame sized peephole Claus watched sailors run to and fro as rain came down on their heads like daggers. A sinister backdrop of heavy black clouds with crackling lightning eclipsed the sky. Towering waves rhythmically fell on deck, their ferocious jowls snatched up unfortunate sailors, their might caused the ship to keel then straighten. The captain marched across deck towards the now exposed cabin while barking orders, his confident steps reflected his ample experience. The term sea legs took on a new meaning for Claus. As the ship violently swayed the captain adjusted accordingly and when the waters came crashing he braced himself; it was as if he had a sixth sense. Clutching the door frame for stability, the captain yelled at the helpless pair. “Don't be sittin' there slack jawed ya fools, get outta 'ere! She won't be survivin' this.” |