Mithryn Outpost - 40th Summer, 510 AV
"We get in there, we get him, we get out again," Linnette said, looking at her younger brother and sister. "And hope he hasn't spent everything already. Understand?" Twice Dove's age, she'd been the effective head of the family for as long as Dove could remember.
Ten year old Dove shoved her hands into the pockets of her hand-me-down pants and nodded. It wasn't as if they'd never done this before. The only question was whether he'd think she was the mother she'd never met, in which case she'd have to persuade him, or whether he'd recognise her for herself, in which case he'd come after her to beat her, and she could lead him by staying out of reach.
Raven shrugged gangly teenage shoulders. "We'll get by, we always do. Ma's birthday only comes round once a year." He sounded old for his sixteen years, almost resigned. He clapped Dove on the shoulder and steered her out of the bare cottage into the hot night. "Come on, pigeon. Soonest started, soonest done." Dove sighed and trotted along beside him. It was her fault their father drank. He'd told her often enough. If it hadn't been their mother's birthday, it would be some other memory he wanted to drown out...
"I hear there's a new cook at the inn," Raven went on as the trio wound their way out of the maze of cottages in the Commons and turned onto the main road, where the Fool's Errand stood. "She doesn't know me, so with any luck she won't throw me out at first glance." He wiggled his fingers and brushed off his patched clothes. "Maybe I'll be able to pick up some food to take home, along with Father."
Linnette rolled her eyes at him. "We get Father first."
Raven flapped a hand at her. "Of course we do. I'm just planning. You know me, always hoping, always after food."
At that moment, they reached the Inn and stopped opposite the door, thin, wiry, obviously poor from their worn clothes but clean and neat. Sound washed over them, rough music and loud chatter almost drowning out the sounds of eating and drinking. They looked at each other for a moment with hungry eyes in young faces, then Linnette led them across to the door. It swung open to let out a customer and the trio slipped in. Dove stepped to one side, set her back against the wall and looked around, trying to pick her father out of the crowd of other farmers.