Closed Men, Not Islands (Dravite)

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Not found on any map, Endrykas is a large migrating tent city wherein the horseclans of Cyphrus gather to trade and exchange information. [Lore]

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Men, Not Islands (Dravite)

Postby Arandia on June 29th, 2015, 2:12 am

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20 Summer 515
Evening


Kimba weed rash was simple enough to deal with. Usually the people who came to have kimba rash looked at were young children who got into the red-and-maroon blossoms, or picked them up, not knowing that the skin would break into rashes as red and maroon as the flowers themselves.

Nehrar made a salve for kimba rash out of the stalks of the plant itself; the salve was cool and made the maddening itch stop, and the swelling subside as long as the patient applied the salve every three to four bells in the day.

Kimba weed bloomed in the summer and grew near water, so the medicine tents of Endrykas were full of crying children and the chatter of their mothers. Arandia sat in one of the tents, hearing the noise filter in from the other tents and suffocating in the heat of her work.

Nehrar had shown her how to do it before the day began. To make the salve, Arandia had to mix animal fat with the crushed stalks of kimba weed. It smelled terrible, and the animal fat had to constantly be heated for it to not congeal. Arandia slaved away, sweating into her clothes and on to her upper lip, hair rolled into a bun to keep it from getting into her face and in her work.

Arandia had to be very careful. The blossoms were difficult to separate from the stalks, and Arandia had to wear gloves that she borrowed from The River Flower. The flowers came in bunches of twenty small pods, which shook out their pollen at the slightest disturbance. By the time the sun set, Arandia had made ten small jars of kimba salve, only ten because she worked slowly and carefully; her hands were still clumsy.

Nehrar didn’t look too impressed by the number. “Oh well,” he said good naturedly, as he dismissed her for the day. “You’ll learn.”

The wind was cool by the time Arandia stepped out of the sweltering tent. The wind was such a shock to her that it made her shiver a little, as the sweat dried on her bare arms and the clothes on her back.

Arandia’s mind wandered as she walked through the city streets. Endrykas was full of noise and activity, even at the end of the day, when all the work was done and all that was left was supper. The merriment that came with supper; the singing and the dancing and the telling of stories. The weaving and darning that they had left for the end of the day. The gossip circles around the fire.

Arandia gazed at her feet as she walked, shying away from eye contact with anyone. She thought about the salve and her hands and about Nehrar’s hand on her shoulder, friendly: “You’ll learn.” She thought about the little boy who cried on his mother’s lap, a bubble of snot at his right nostril. She thought about everything and nothing, and was so preoccupied with her silly little thoughts that she did not see Belkaia come up beside her and grab her hand.

Arandia startled. Belkaia laughed. “I startled you,” she said, looking pleased with herself.

Belkaia might have been more of a woman around Dravite, but Arandia and Belkaia were the same age. The little girls in the both of them called out to each other, smiled at each other half-suppressed through each other’s eyes.

Kyanite stood beside his mother, holding on to her hand, smiling big with his little frog mouth.

“Yes, you startled me,” Arandia said. “I was just thinking about you and going to see you. I was going to warn you about the kimba weeds.”

“Kimba weeds?”

“Yes, I’ll tell you all about them.”

“Over dinner,” Belkaia suggested. “You have to come to our camp and visit me like you promised, and I will feed you.”

“I did promise,” Arandia said. She thought about it for a moment. Serai would be all right without her help for the evening. They would be able to make dinner just fine at the Reddawn pavilion. Some of them, like Teke, might even be relieved to not see Arandia there. So Arandia said, “yes, all right, that sounds good,” and followed Belkaia to her family’s camp.

On the way, Arandia told Belkaia about the rashes and the little children. “It’s terrible,” Arandia said. “It’s nothing serious, but it’s such a pity to see them cry so much. The itches really are very bad. You have to be careful not to let Kyanite into the kimba weeds, otherwise he’ll be scratching for days.” She paused. Laughed. “It’s a little funny, too,” she admitted. “The way they fuss.”

Belkaia laughed and shook her head. “You say that,” she said, “but wait until you’re a mother with a sick child. You won’t think it’s so funny then.”

Arandia only smiled. BelkaiaBelkaia and Kyanite are Dravite's NPCs and written with his permission., whose arms were tired, handed Kyanite to Arandia. She carried him the rest of the way, Arandia and Belkaia taking turns making Kyanite laugh. First with a funny voice, and then with a funny story. That evening Kyanite was spoiled with a wealth of woman-kisses on his forehead and his arms.

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Men, Not Islands (Dravite)

Postby Dravite on August 7th, 2015, 11:19 pm

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Dravite had been so preoccupied by the thought of his uncle joining them for a meal that he looked surprised when Arandia arrived with Kyanite in her arms and Belkaia at her side. The horse lord was sat in front of the fire and didn't realise he was staring at the blue-eyed storyteller until they her eyes found him and he quickly looked aside. He returned to his work, slaving over the hot pan and using his dagger to dice up the carrots he had on hand. The pan was full of water and goat's meat, simmering away on a low heat. Dravite had reduced the fat, filling the campsite with an enticing smell that was making him very hungry. He added the carrots to the mix before sprinkling a pinch of salt over top of them. "Smells delicious," Belkaia beamed and signed the words for Kyanite who was still learning.

When the boy was set down and found his feet he ran into Dravite's arms and was lifted into the air as the man spilled backwards against the grass, growling at his little lion-cub. A sharp pain reminded the man of his broken rib and he squeezed his eyes shut, gritting his teeth until the pain passed. Belkaia, ever vigilant, went to the man's side and lifted Kyanite from his arms, "I keep telling you to be careful," she scolded, "get dressed; Arandia didn't stop by to watch you roll around in your skins."

Dravite, forced to laugh, struggled to his feet and greeted Arandia with a nod before disappearing into the tent. He was very quiet and snuck past the sleeping fawn who lay curled up on his bed roll. Carefully he took his pants from the saddlebag of his belongings and squeezed into the pair of black leather pants, disappointed that his creeping about hadn't been successful. "Shh," he told the fawn, "it's time to sleep." He patted her gently, stroking the back of her head and neck. She shook and slapped him with one of her ears before lowering her head again to nestle it against her too-long legs. Dravite topped up the bucket of water for the fawn and watched her for a while.

Satisfied, he crept out of the tent and picked up a bunch of tanned hides for people to sit on. He positioned them around the fire pit, offering up his favourite to Arandia before returning to his spot. "You look like you've had a hard day," Dravite observed, noting the way Arandia had fashioned her hair diffidently, up in a messy bun rather than down in the usual braid she wore.
"She was working," Belkaia interrupted, returning to join them having slipped away to wash Kyanite's hands and feet.
Before Arandia could speak Dravite had something to admit to his wife and quickly blurted it out as not to hold the conversation up too long, "My uncle Raven will be joining us with his family tonight."
"I wondered what the extra mats were for," Belkaia smiled; Dravite seldom spoke about his family, and she knew Raven was the last of the man's living relatives, "I'm looking forward to meeting him."
He's looking forward to meeting you too, Dravite signed before offering Arandia a piece of smoked goat's meat to try that he had been cooking in one of the tents since lunchtime.
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Men, Not Islands (Dravite)

Postby Arandia on August 8th, 2015, 2:28 am

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The campsite was full of different clean smells and the sound of crackling fire. The perfume of cooking made the air thick with animal fat, animal fat that smelled good cooking, instead of the terrible ointment smell that Arandia had left behind in the medicine tents. Arandia looked and breathed, senses greedy for the sighs and sounds of a kind of home that was alien to Arandia; small but full of good things, of a man's rumbling laughter and a little boy's feet.

She watched Dravite grunt and favor his side, listened to Belkaia's affectionate scolding. Dravite and Arandia nodded at each other as he walked past her, Arandia looking more at the tip of his nose than into his eyes, still wary about meeting anyone's gaze full on.

Arandia sat and waited as Belkaia walked away to wash Kyanite's hands. The water made a dull wet sound on the ground beside Belkaia, and Kyanite squeaked high, almost animal noises and tried to run away from her in favor of playing with whatever he could find around the camp, including the new person, Arandia, who was an acceptable distraction for Kyanite. A kind of new toy, like the fawn and the goats.

Dravite's voice came from behind Arandia's shoulder. "You look like you've had a hard day," he said. She smiled, a little sheepish, and opened her mouth to answer, but Belkaia beat her to the punch.
"She was working," Belkaia said.
"I--" Arandia tried again, but this time Dravite interrupted.
"My uncle Raven will be joining us with his family tonight."
"I wondered what the extra mats were for," Belkaia said. At this point, Arandia gave up speaking altogether. Kyanite came up to her and showed her his hands, clean and white from Belkaia's scrubbing. Arandia put the tips of her fingers on Kyanite's fingers and they played like that, poking fingertip to fingertip until Dravite held out a piece of meat with a pungent smell. Arandia stopped playing with Kyanite for a moment to take the offered food. She signed her thanks, put some of the meat in her mouth, and chewed. After a day of sitting around in a hot tent and accosted by the smell of animal fat, Arandia wasn't much in the mood for meat. But it would be rude to say no. So she braved the muscle rolling around in her mouth, and gratefully.

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Men, Not Islands (Dravite)

Postby Dravite on August 8th, 2015, 5:16 am

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Dravite watched Kyanite show off for a while in front of their guest, making a right pest of himself as usual. Soon his little games and hand gestures had graduated into wild howls and running or rolling around the campsite. "Come here, little lion," the horse lord summoned his son when he had finally seen enough. Kyanite sidled over to his father and sat down in his lap. Dravite fixed the boy's hair into neat little curls and made him go and wash his hands again. When Kyanite returned he seemed a lot more settled and sat down at Arandia's feet.

Moments later, Raven walked into camp with his wife Yuki and their daughter Sparrow. Yuki gasped and crouched down to pick up Kyanite, who smiled and put his arms around the stranger's neck; fearless. "He is so big and strong, look at him!" Yuki beamed, peppering Kyanite's face with kisses.
"Cousin!" Dravite called and jumped to his feet quickly to hug Sparrow, who threw her arms around the man and tucked her head against his shoulder to hug him tightly. Dravite grimaced; the hug was worth the pain.

Belkaia stood up behind her husband and smiled.
"And you must be Belkaia," Raven grinned, "it's lovely to finally meet you!"
The two embraced before Yuki and Sparrow also gave the woman a hug. "And you as well," Belkaia managed.
"Sit down," Dravite encouraged.
Yuki sat beside Belkaia and Sparrow sat down near Arandia before introducing herself.

"And who is this lovely lady?" Raven asked, giving Arandia one of his signature smiles.
"Arandia, a family friend," Dravite told him as Raven moved to hug the blue eyed girl.
"Well Arandia it's a pleasure, this is my wife Yuki and our daughter Sparrow. Unfortunately River couldn't join us tonight but she has promised to stop by during the summer. Before I forget, come with me," he said to Dravite and helped the man to his feet, the two leaving camp for a spell.

"Do you work, Belkaia?" Sparrow asked.
"I hope not!" Yuki interjected, "you must have your hands full already with this young man."
Belkaia just smiled, "Kyanite is a very good boy. My friend Arandia works at The River Flower."
"Wonderful!" Yuki smiled, "how are you enjoying that? My Little Sparrow works for The Watch; this is her first season with them."
Sparrow, who was just a little older than Arandia and Belkaia, did not like her mother referring to her as 'little' anymore and sighed, "Mother."

Soon the men returned with a pair of desert hunting dogs that both seemed very well behaved and sat down in the entrance way where Raven signed for them to stop, "a good hunter needs some good hunting dogs."
"You shouldn't have," Dravite smiled, "they are too much."
"Nonsense!" Raven scoffed, "it's the least I could do if we're going to be staying with you."
Dravite bit his lower lip, he hadn't spoken to Belkaia yet, but from the look on her face she seemed more than happy to have them around. "You're staying?" Belkaia asked.
"If it's all right with you," Yuki beamed.
"Of course! I would love to have you around!"
"Fantastic!" Raven smiled, "then it's all settled; let's eat!"
Dravite looked at Arandia and smiled apologetically, "would you like to help me serve up?"


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Men, Not Islands (Dravite)

Postby Arandia on August 10th, 2015, 12:46 am

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She was hesitant to touch Kyanite around all the people that had suddenly gathered around Dravite and Belkaia. Arandia, fearful that they might sniff out her foreignness, sat small, with her knees near her chest and her wrists against her ankles. She watched them embrace, all of them looking quite like the other: thick, handsome brows and hearty complexions, their features tending to the fine and noble-looking.

"And who is this lovely lady?"
Arandia smiled and stood, accepting the embrace from Raven and returning the gesture in kind as if it were the most natural thing in the world to do so. (It wasn't; Arandia could count on her fingers how many hugs she had received since her mother and Ioanis passed away. This was a novelty.)
"Arandia," Dravite, who along with his wife had developed a propensity for answering for Arandia, said. "A family friend."
"Well, Arandia, it's a pleasure. This is my wife Yuki and our daughter sparrow. Unfortunately River couldn't join us tonight but she has promised to stop by during the summer. Before I forget, come with me." And with that Raven was gone.

Arandia kept smiling, feeling a little foolish for smiling so much but smiling anyway. "Good to meet you," she said to Yuki and Sparrow. They smiled back, nodded, murmured something or other, and then rounded on Belkaia. They talked about working for a while, and then asked Arandia how it was to work in the medicine tents.
"It's good work," she said. "I enjoy it. You learn a lot from--"
"My Little Sparrow works for The Watch; this is her first season with them."
Sparrow exhaled a long-suffering sigh. "Mother."

Soon two dogs came sniffing around the perimeter of the camp. One of them sniffed Arandia's ankle, lost interest, and started sniffing around a patch of grass instead. Arandia watched them, remembering that she had seen that kind of dog in her childhood, which now seemed very far and almost dreamlike. So much so that Arandia could never be sure that she hadn't dreamed it after all. Presently she became aware of eyes on her, and looked up. Dravite was smiling at her, almost as if he were embarrassed. "Would you like to help me serve up?"
"Yes," Arandia said, getting at once to her feet. She brushed her hands on her trousers, batting away the dirt on her hands.

She took the pots of food and startled ladling the goat meat into their bowls and plates, following Dravite's lead on portions and who to serve first, who to serve last. When it was all finished and everyone had been served, she settled down with her own plate of food somewhere near Belkaia, but not quite beside, to listen to the conversation that went on around her. Now and then she and Kyanite made playful little faces at each other, or tugged at the ends of each other's hair, fast friends.

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Men, Not Islands (Dravite)

Postby Dravite on August 10th, 2015, 8:34 am

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Raven was a very talkative man, a man who was hard not to like. He had so many stories about his adventures further north, just beyond Syliras and in the walled city itself. His wife Yuki was also quite social, always fussing over this or that; she was a hard woman to get a word in around with a keen eye and a good sense of humour. She did, however, have this annoying little habit of trying to finish people’s sentences for them and more often than not it was almost as if she were some kind of mind-reader, stumbling upon the right words the majority of the time.

Sparrow on the other hand was as quiet as a mouse and unlike her big sister River, did not seem to be interested in men. She had once brought home a girlfriend, and ‘oh how her mother had shirked’; Raven sat going over it again and everyone could tell it was not the first time, nor would he be the last that he told this story.
“And you should have seen the look on Yuki’s face,” he laughed while Sparrow sank into the background, pretending she wasn't here. Dravite smiled at the girl who managed a grin, shaking her head, ashamed; her neck, checks and the tips of her ears burning bright red, “Dad!”
Of course that didn't work, Raven was all consumed by his mission to make everyone laugh, even if it was at poor Sparrow’s expense, “Dad, tell them about the time you found the skeleton of a two headed Strider.” She that one always worked because no one ever believed him and Raven wouldn’t cease until they all swore on their grandmother's’ graves that they did.

Dravite made sure that all the women had been served before he then served Raven and took the scraps for himself, cleaning the bottom of the pan with his fingers while no one was looking. He laughed at Raven’s impressive talent of shovelling food in and managing to lead the conversation all at the same time. It was easy to love certain things about their culture, the large hand gestures and overly animated discussions with loud back-and-forth debates that usually ended in someone suffering from a ringing ear the following day.

While everyone else laughed and tucked into their goat stew Dravite watched Arandia; she was different, sure she laughed and said the odd thing every now and then, but most of the time she was quiet, seemingly content just to sit and be a part of it all, almost as if she were an outsider looking in who had never quite worked out the power of her own voice and presence. “Is it good?” Dravite asked, it looked as if the girl had barely touched her stew, “You should tell us one of your stories,” the horse lord encouraged.
“A storyteller?” Raven beamed, “Do promise you’ll share with us one of your adventures before the night is through, young lady.”

Belkaia and Dravite looked at each other then as if to say, ‘as long as the poor girl can get a word in’. They laughed then and Kyanite looked up from his dinner bowl, pleased to finally hear the sound of a voice he recognised.
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Men, Not Islands (Dravite)

Postby Arandia on August 12th, 2015, 5:46 am

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It was easy to get lost in the conversation. Everyone was laughing, in bright spirits; it wasn't much different from dinnertime at the Reddawn pavilion, except at the Reddawn pavilion the women were thornier at dinner time, comparing children and carpet patterns. Here there wasn't that feeling of competition, maybe because this pavilion was so small and close, and Arandia was comfortable to sit, mostly silent, and soak up the glee.

"Is it good?" Dravite asked her.
"Yes, very," Arandia said, assuming that he was asking about his family. When she noticed that he was looking at her bowl, she lifted it with a big smile. "This is very good," she ammended. "You cook very well." She didn't tell him that the meat bothered her tonight, that she was mostly eating around it for now, picking the carrots and drinking the broth.
Dravite seemed satisfied by this and said, "You should tell us one of your stories."
"A storyteller?" Raven sounded excited. "Do promise you'll share with us one of your adventures before the night is through, young lady."

Something about Raven reminded Arandia of Ioanis. Maybe it was in his big, booming voice, or the way he smiled at Arandia; welcoming, friendly. They all smiled at her like that, even the little one, and it made Arandia feel terrible that she had been hesitant with them at all.

"I will," Arandia said. "I haven't had many adventures, but I could tell you about the time my mother and I passed through Ahnatep, in Ekytol."
"Ahnatep! I've heard of Ahnatep," Yuki said. Sparrow moved in a little closer.
Arandia wasn't used to telling stories to adults. It made her shy again, so she looked instead at Kyanite and pretended she was telling him the story:

"In the burning lands of Ekytol, nestled in the hot sand, there is a jewel of a city called Ahnatep. When I was very young my mother and I traveled there from Yahebah before we came to the Sea of Grass. We didn't stay there for very long, but we stayed long enough to see the festivals. They were rich and magnificent and there was all this music from their strange wind instruments; you could hear it being carried down the river in the golden afternoon, from the boats of the Presorrah, who is the Queen."

Arandia put her bowl of food to the side and stretched her legs, bending so that she could tuck her arms under her knees. Raven chewed his food, listening attentively. His ears moved as he chewed, and his eyebrows were furrowed together in concentration.

"I was playing by the river one day when I saw one of her boats go down the water. It looked like it was made of gold, and it may have been, glimmering as it was as it glided down the water like a swan. I looked and I looked, quite transfixed by the sight of the musicians on the boat and the noble looking men with their dark skin and their sloe eyes, their many arms fanning. And I saw her, I think. A beautiful woman dressed in gold, her eyes gilded with gold flakes, dark hair. Even her lips seemed golden. Her fingernails. She looked at me, and I looked at her, and I being a child made no obeisance. I stared at her, and stared, and I swear she smiled at me, if only with her eyes, before she turned away and looked back to her kingdom.

"I don't know if that was actually the Pressorah, but if it were then I have the distinct honor of a queen having smiled at me as a child. I like to think about that sometimes."

Arandia laughed, then, shaking her head. "It's a silly story. It's not even an adventure. It might not have been the Pressorah at all but one of the noblewomen. I don't know. That was a silly story. I'm sorry. I could tell you about the Tsana instead."

"It wasn't a silly story!" Yuki admonished. "It was a lovely story. I liked it very much."

Arandia colored around the ears and the back of her neck. "This food is very good, isn't it? Dravite did very well."

"Yes, well, no one's been poisoned yet!" Raven cracked, and the laughter started again. Arandia, relieved that their eyes weren't on her anymore, laughed too.

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Men, Not Islands (Dravite)

Postby Dravite on August 13th, 2015, 9:58 pm

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Belkaia finished her meal and washed up before returning to her husband's side. She sat behind the man on her knees, toying with the long locks of matted hair that covered Dravite's head. Each stretched, wheat coloured dread was a braid that had been allowed to tangle over time, that every now and then needed tightening and tidying up. The woman worked quietly, twisting the long strands of hair until they were tight, and sometimes combining two thin strands to make them stronger.

Yuki started talking about royalty after Arandia finished her story and bombarded the young woman with lots of questions about the golden woman's clothes and makeup, right down to what her hair looked like on the day, if Arandia could remember.
"I wish I had something made of gold," Belkaia smiled without looking at any of them, content with her work.
Dravite looked up at his wife and mouthed something along the lines of, "you have a heart of gold," but no one could be sure that they heard him right.
Belkaia smiled down at her husband and kissed his brow before speaking up again, "tell Raven about Earth Shaker."
Raven perked a brow, "who is Earth Shaker?"

"She came in the night," Dravite began his story, not overly fond of the venture; he liked listening to tales of course, but he had never been good at putting his own together, nor creative enough. This time, however, the events he spoke of were true and he found it much easier to draw from factual manifestations than he did dreaming up anything make-believe.
"With the stroke of her paw she took a man's life. I remember waking to screams, the shriek of a woman; the dead man’s wife. I took my spear and ran through the camp where I found her, guarding one of her fallen young while trying to get back the second."
"A night lion?" Raven asked.
"A Grass Bear," Dravite admitted, "half my height again."
"Standing?" Sparrow gasped.
Dravite nodded, "the pavilion fired arrows and threw rocks but none that seemed to discourage her."
"What did you do?" Yuki asked, concerned like always.
Dravite pointed over his shoulder at his tent where the bear pelt was hung just beyond the doorway, "made her into a winter blanket of course."

Raven laughed so hard that it was hard not to laugh with him; that kind of laughter was infectious. "Just like your father," he smiled and Dravite smiled too.
"Go on," Yuki encouraged, "tell him about Cyprine, he barely knew the man."

Raven fell quiet for a time; he was good at setting the mood, even when he wasn't trying to. Dravite looked across at his uncle; it was true he knew little to nothing about his father other than the warm, worn hands and long beard he remembered.
"He was a leader," Raven began, "I knew it the moment Lazuli introduced us. He never really said much, so when he spoke everyone listened. At first I wanted to hate him, the man that was taking my little sister away from me, but when I saw how good he was to her, how fair and strong, and genuine he was; well you can understand why Yuki and I decided to follow him out into the grasslands."
Yuki nodded, "he never put us wrong."
"Not everyone agrees with that," Belkaia scolded, "he is the reason those children died."

Raven fell silent again, he wasn't about to argue with his host but he looked at Dravite and the man knew exactly what that look meant; your wife is wrong. Dravite glanced down at his son who had managed to fall asleep in his lap. He knew he should lighten up the conversation before things got out of hand, but he wasn't very good at politics. "When can we expect you to start setting up here?" Dravite asked; that was a safe enough question he decided.
"We can start moving things tomorrow and take down our camp to erect here the following day if that suits you," Raven smiled.
"Whatever works best for you, I will probably be working."
"With a broken rib, oh surely they don't expect you to work," Yuki frowned.
"Nothing too strenuous, mostly just webbing and helping Aris organise things for The Watch."
"Will we be seeing more of you around camp?" Raven asked, pointing his question at Arandia.

Dravite turned to look at the woman and smiled warmly as if to say she was welcome any time, though they weren't really the most appropriate words to speak aloud. He settled for, "if you haven't convinced her of avoiding us altogether, uncle."
Sparrow giggled, "if he hasn't he will soon."
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Men, Not Islands (Dravite)

Postby Arandia on August 16th, 2015, 10:08 am

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The tension that fell over the camp after Belkaia's words was palpable. It lingered even after Dravite asked, "When can we expect you to start setting up here?" Everyone seemed happy enough to let it be, but there it was. That tension. Arandia felt it keenly and it made her uncomfortable. It was just as well that it was getting dark and Arandia had an excuse to return to her own camp. She started making her excuses, muttering about how dark it was getting and how her pavilion might be looking for her.
"Will we be seeing more of you around the camp?" Raven asked her.
"If you haven't convinced her of avoiding us altogether, uncle," Dravite interjected.
"If he hasn't he will soon," Sparrow quipped.
Arandia laughed a little. "If I'm invited again," she said.
Belkaia squeezed her wrist and Arandia squeezed back. They shared a quick embrace before Arandia drew back again, feeling ill at ease all of a sudden in the camp, although never having felt too at ease in the first place. She couldn't put her finger on why.
"It looks like rain tonight," Arandia said, noting the breathless humidity in the valley. "Better put your tarps up."
Yuki hummed in agreement. "Yes, yes, the sky is a little red."
"Thank you so much for letting me come," Arandia said, gathering the folds of her clothes around herself. "Goodnight to all of you." She glanced at Dravite, then bent her head to say goodbye when he looked at her, too.
Arandia's ears rang with Raven's stories long after she left.
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Played by: M.D.
Character Model: Golshifteh Farahani
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Arandia
Girlchild
 
Posts: 41
Words: 27742
Joined roleplay: April 20th, 2015, 12:29 am
Location: Endrykas
Race: Human, Drykas
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Men, Not Islands (Dravite)

Postby Shakune on November 22nd, 2015, 10:28 am

Grades!

Arandia :
Please update your ledger to account for seasonal expenses for Spring 515AV (45GM for poor, 135GM for common living expenses). Once this is done, PM me and I'll release your grade.


Dravite :
Skills
Cooking +1
Childcare +2
Animal Husbandry +1
Hosting +3
Rhetoric +3
Storytelling +1
Politics +1

Lores
Arandia: Blue-eyed storyteller
Belkaia: Ever vigilant
Raven: The last living relative
Raven: Uncle
Yuki: Wife of Raven
Sparrow: Raven's child
Sparrow: Prefers women over men
Hosting: Serving women before the men
Arandia: A quiet woman
Arandia: Tells the story of the Pressorrah of Ahnatep
Storytelling: The story about Earth Shaker
Cyprine Blackwater: Was a leader, strong and genuine
Belakaia: Not always right
Politics: The right question can leave behind an awkward conversation

Other
+2 Desert hunting Dogs


If you have any question about your grade, please don't hesitate to PM me :)
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Shakune
I drive a hard bargain.
 
Posts: 352
Words: 281911
Joined roleplay: August 21st, 2014, 10:43 am
Race: Human, Mixed
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Medals: 2
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