Mid-Day of the 38th of Winter 516
Taurina crouched down next to the water, her hand reaching down to break the surface with only her fingertips. The coolness of the water was something refreshing against all the heat Endrykas had been experiencing as of late. To walk in and submerge herself within the liquid was tempting. If swimming was something she knew how to do better, she likely would have given into that idea. Instead, however, she had come here with a goal in mind and a wish to become more useful to her new family. The more she thought about it though, the more she realized, she did not know what the petch she was doing…
Why the tent city had ended up here, the Eth was unsure. Because of the heat game seemed to have made itself scarce. Water was not always easy to come by either. A lake filled with fish had been a logical stop and the surrounding area had enough to sustain the herds for a little while. Taurina had noticed the extra care being taken to watch over the animals, but to make herself useful in that way was not much of an option. If it came down to a fight, she usually lost.
So fishing it was. She had tracked down a place to buy a rod and had then proceeded to come down to the lake shore to figure out what in the world she was going to do with it. The rod was very simple. A carved piece of wood that was heavier at the bottom than it was at the top. Much like the needles she used for tattooing, it was thicker where it was heavier and the top of it came to a thin point. A piece of line was attached to the top of it and a carved piece of bone hung at the end of the line in a hook shape. When the Ethaefal held the object she found it to feel very foreign and clumsy in her hands. She worried over potentially dropping it and loosing it to the lake or some fish pulling it out of her grasp. If she even got lucky enough to tempt one onto her line that was.
Taurina released a sigh before sitting down on the shore of the lake. She drew her knees up so they were bent, but her bare toes were close enough that the edge of the water lapped at them. Sync gazed down from the clear skies, bringing with her heat worse than the temperatures that had plagued fall. It seemed that it was either heat or storms nowadays and despite her distaste for the heat, Taurina preferred Syna’s rays to boil them all alive to the storms that frequently stole Leth away from her.
The fishing pole sat beside her on the shore, untouched aside from what it had taken to carry it to where it now was. Taurina felt foolish trying to use it. There were others out in a boat now that she watched. They seemed to be having fun and they also looked to know what they were doing. They had even caught some fish. Taurina watched as a silver thing was drawn from the water by one of them. The thing flopped and tossed for its life, but it was soon stolen from it. Taurina released another little sigh. Life had been lost, but its death would prolong the life of another for a little while longer. It was a give and take. The way of life. It reminded the Ethaefal of her dear fisherman. He was the one she needed right now. He could show her just how this was done.
‘Patience is key…’ he would say, he said that about everything, ‘you have to be quiet. Let your mind settle. Your muscles relax. The fish will come, the fish always come.’
Taurina smiled faintly to herself, drawing her thin body forward so that she could wrap her arms around her knees. The fisherman had never actually said that, it was just her imagination. He had never taken her fishing actually. Despite offering many times, Taurina had never taken him up on it. She regretted that decision now that she needed the skills. It was an opportunity lost and also, it was time lost as well. How foolish she had been to let so much time slip through her fingers.
“Alright, fishing,” Taurina murmured, looking down to the rod, she could not afford to loose anymore time, “where do I start?”
With hesitant fingers, the Ethaefal reached down with her scarred, Drykas fingers and ran fingertips over the wood of the object. Her fingers wrapped around the heavy end of it before she carefully picked it up. Muscles within her body shifted as she got used to the awkward weight and she tried not to panic as the tip of the object bended down a bit towards where the hook was. The rod was left in one hand while her other one reached down and assisted her in pushing her body up into a standing position. It was then that both hands found and steadied the somewhat wiggling rod.
“Time to catch a fish,” Taurina murmured to herself before mimicking what she had seen the pair on the boat do.
Without knowing enough to bait the hook, the Ethaefal swung the rod back and then carefully cast it forward. The line did not go far, but the hook made a satisfying plunking sound as it hit the water. Taurina smiled faintly. Maybe she could do this after all.
Ledger-1GM for Fishing Pole
Common | Pavi | 'Thought'
Boxcode credit goes to Azmere