![Image](http://www.mizahar.com/forums/gallery/pic.php?mode=large&pic_id=58195)
Kelski paid attention to everyone that came off the boat and what their names were, as they gave them, when they stated them. Neras she knew. The Kelvic wasn’t sure he’d spotted her yet, though he probably had spotted Darvin who was big and unmistakable in his visage. Plus he’d immediately went over, made nice with some of the sailors, and had been quietly discussing gods knew what with them as they made the short trip. Had the trip been longer he’d probably have been peddling them drugs or dicing with those that weren’t immediately needed to sail the boat.
Departing reluctantly, Kelski studied the woman who called herself Meriann and mulled over her accent. It wasn’t one she recognized. But then again the Kelvic was not well traveled. She’d lived only here, Alvadas, and Lhavit. The words were strange and it took the Kelvic a moment to understand what the woman was actually saying. Here to see what was happening? Yea… Kelski could relate. She was here to get out of The Barracks and be Darvin’s eyes. Whatever else there was, be it dangerous or not, was worth the time away on the sea and the half-wild island.
The Kelvic stuck close to her escort, having no delusions that he was her guard. She was his tool, nothing more, and sticking by him made her safer. The other man, Erik, looked older. He seemed grizzled, hardened, but there was nothing about him that particularly intimidated her. She wanted to walk up to him in the way certain people drew little kids, and the Kelvic had long followed her instinct. She felt safer around him, even though he’d not spared her a glance. Sunberth was filled with people that had hard outer shells. She’d learned that quickly and the lesson had stuck.
A hand clamped on her shoulder as she started to step towards the stranger named Erik, and Darvin dragged her back planting her next to him firmly. “No flying away, little bird.” She used to hate him calling her that, but her big companion honestly had no idea what kind of bird she was. Jaren never ever let her fly. And that lack of freedom, of connection to her wings, was grating on her in a seriously hard way. But she let him draw her back without a fight, bowing her head forward so her cloak hood slid off and revealed the mass of her ombre hair caught up in a thick plait down her back.
Kelski half jumped out of her skin when Thorne recognized her and said her name. She flinched knowing she was revealed to Neras now, a boy she still was recovering from knowing this season. Things had happened between the two of them, things that resulted in her multiple piercings across her face that would preclude her from shifting even if she weren’t collared… and Kelski was still trying to decide about the whole thing, even though she was drugged for the majority of it. The Kelvic glanced at her keeper, angry all over again. She lifted her hands, making a stopping gesture at Thorne. With the way Darvin had been lately, it was best the woman didn’t hang out tonight. He was here for a profit, and wouldn’t be letting her socialize.
She opened her mouth to answer Thorne, offering her a smile, when Darvin snorted and gripped her shoulder harder. The Kelvic might as well have had a leash on. “Thorne… my pretty.” He started out, smiling brightly but in a mean way. “Kelski and I are working tonight. This is serious business, not a social hour. Please excuse us. I can arrange a play date for you two later.” He said coldly, causing the Kelvic to flinch. Kelski started to say something, to answer, when her eyes fell on another figure.
He’d come after, not from their ship at all, unless she’d missed him standing quietly somewhere. It was quite possible. The Svefra was uncanny on the sea and quiet in a dark and solitary way. He was used to his own company and not social by nature unless they had taken to a port briefly or had gathered with others of his kind. Kelski reached for her hood, self-conscious of what Jaren had ordered done for her, but it was too late to pull it across her face and conceal her features. She heard him and looked up at him to where he studied her. Kelski had dropped weight, a lot of it, and her features were full of piercings. The ruin of her face – the piercings Jaren had ordered in her ears, nose, and even chest - gleamed in the dim light as heavy to her as the thick ornate slave collar around her neck. A red flush washed across her features as she studied the Svefra who had once owned her and sold her.
“K’irr” She said softly, meeting his gaze fiercely. “You look well.” The smaller woman said, shifting restlessly under Darvin’s grip on her shoulder. There was no place to hide from his gaze, to not feel the anger that bubbled up at his actions. She’d behaved for him, been a hard worker and a good hunter. But it hadn’t been enough. Humans had taught her hard lessons and continued to teach her harder ones. In that moment, home sickness for Lhavit coursed through her. Sunberth wasn’t her home because there was no one here that made her feel the need to roost. And even though she was born on the sea among the Svefra, her steel grey eyes precluded her from belonging to or among them. Alvadas had been just a stopover, a place to be sold and owned. In Lhavit she’d been free. Here, she was just a tool, a decoration, and nothing more. Yesterday, Jarens tool. Tonight, Darvin’s. The Sea Eagle in her wanted to scream her outrage. The person Kelski was just tried to remain calm.
Kelski looked like she wanted to say something more, ask him perhaps if his boat got fixed or if he was doing well, but she could see for herself he seemed fine and was here, perhaps to make some coin. So instead she just lowered her eyelashes over her wide eyes and said nothing more. His half-smirk told her all she needed to know. He was no shelter in life’s storm. None of them was.
And by that time the Daggerhand was speaking and caught the crowd’s attention. Then the priest took over. She froze when he pointed at her, and started to back away. Darvin’s firm hand on her shoulder prevented her from taking a step backwards. She felt the weight of the bird land on her opposite shoulder and Kelski turned to meet its gaze through the curious skull it wore. Unlike others in the crowd, she wasn’t creeped out or scared or unnerved by the crows. She actually liked them. To the one on her shoulder she trilled quietly too, switching out to a language only birds could understand. It was not an eagle like she was, but it was something small and fierce and highly intelligent anyhow. And she greeted it as kin, reaching up to finger the copper skull hanging from her neck. It was perhaps heavier than the bone one the bird wore, but by the end of the night she would try and convince it to take the skull with it, perhaps gift it to one of theirs that had no skull to wear. She didn’t want the memories she thought the skull contained lost because none of the crows were now wearing it because Darvin had killed its previous owner.
Her thoughts were distracted from memories and the skull crow on her shoulder as Thorne was tossed unceremoniously overboard. Distracted, she didn’t know why the woman was ejected nor was she surprised that it was Erik that rescued her. Darvin grinned at Raynor and saluted him with…. a flask he was quietly taking a pull from. Kelski wanted to rush to the side of the ship, but between Darvin and the Crow and the fact that Thorne was being fished out, there was nothing she could do.
Her keeper turned her, following Raynor, obviously going with him to the Courtyard. Kelski didn’t know what Darvin’s plans were from there. And she could not help but dragging her heels until she knew Thorne was safely rescued. She avoided looking at K’irr. Though he was responsible for her being where she was, at least in part, it embarrassed her to be there with him, for him to see her full of holes and every aspect of her life controlled by the large older guard who seemed he was getting quietly drunk. Liquid courage.
The Kelvic paused at Erik’s question, thinking that was something she wanted to know as well. Darvin, however, took another pull on his flask and looked at the hedge maze and then at Kelski’s crow. He wasn’t a particularly outdoorsy person, but If someone wanted to hide something, a maze was a good place to start. Besides, that’s where the most powerful seeming person in the group was going. He didn’t want to be left behind.
He’d wait for someone to answer Erik’s question, then he’d turn to Kelski. “Kelski. See if the crow can lead us to the center of the maze from the air.” The Kelvic nodded and reached up quietly to stroke the Crow’s breast. She wasn’t sure the bird would understand spoken commands, and her in the language of birds asking a bird something as complicated as being a guide was probably not going to be happening. But she tried. If the bird would not, the shadows in the maze probably could if they could be persuaded or seduced. “He wants to go to the center of the maze… to walk it. I want to go where he goes. Can you lead us through it?” She asked carefully in common, then tried again in the language of birds… the concept of center was difficult. So instead she asked to follow it into the hedge, the place of twists and turns, to its core… to the good parts of it. Relating task to food was always a boon when dealing with something as smart as a crow.
She only hoped it understood.