I talk. I think. You talk.
“Hoydens! Bring back me jewels!” The good-natured shout followed a small group of tanned and half-naked children as they scampered from ship to ship, swiping whatever wasn’t nailed down only to pass it amongst themselves, redistributing or abandoning it moments later, grinning and laughing all the while. The latest "victim" was Anais' own mother, the tall blonde making a great show of shaking her fist and scowling until the children were out of sight, then replenishing the strings of beads and shells that Anais had snatched up as she ran past. It was good fun for plunderer and plundered, alike, and the independence the children found in the safety of family and friends would stand them in good stead as they grew older.
The Anchorage Flotilla was a colorful, disjointed construct; boats and ships moored together, connected by all manner of pathways. Rope bridges, swing lines, planks of wood - all served as paths from one deck to the next, from one pod to the next, and all were fair game for the mismatched gangs of Svefra children as they ran, feet flashing and hands reaching, leaving laughter and chaos in their wake. Unsupervised and unrestrained, they ran or swam as the mood took them, charmed food from whatever Pod was nearest at hand when hunger struck, and fancied themselves the finest sailors in all the seas.
It was freedom. It was opportunity. It was glorious.
Anais had already acquired several strings of beads and a small drum on her first day on the Flotilla; this latest batch from her own Pod she simply dropped off on the next boat they careened through. Beads and shells were common, the thrill was in the grab. The new drum, however, Anais wore tied securely to her hip in as complicated a knot as her little fingers had been able to create. She patted it frequently as she flitted from deck to deck, reassuring herself that it was still there. It was during just such a check, while she was looking down, distracted, that she nearly ran headlong into her latest boon companions who had stopped running and were now gathered around watching… Something.
Squirming her way into the crowd amidst cheers and jeers, the little blonde girl elbowed and shoved until she had a front-row view of the spectacle.
Gambling!
Anais’ eyes, blue like those of everyone around her, sparkled as she watched the gaming. Thimble-pig. It was one of her favorites. She crept closer, watching intently; she could only sometimes find the ‘pig’, and she was sure more time to watch would give her the game’s secret. It couldn’t be too difficult, it was played with 3 shells and a pebble. Even a child could find those, and Anais had – but it was harder to find someone to play the game with when your pod was small and mostly made of adults.
Tiny wrinkles formed as her brow tightened in concentration, and she frowned when she was jostled from behind.
“Annie! Let’s go,” the speaker stopped just short of a whine, and Anais turned around to glare at the boy. "This is boring!"
“Don’t call me 'Annie',” she hissed angrily at the gangly youth behind her. Carver was a year or two older than she was, and had made it a special point to use that hated nickname as often as possible from the first minute he’d met her. Which had been yesterday. “I wanna watch the game. I’ll catch up later!”
“She just wants to watch Enn-i-van,” came a snide comment. “She thinks he’s pretty.” Anais recognized the voice and tried to ignore it. It was her actual-honest-to-Laviku cousin, Jewel, of all people. A blush rode high in her cheeks – partly because Jewel was a little bit right, and partly because Jewel was Jewel. Older, taller, with a shark tavan, instead of Anais’ turtle, Jewel used every chance she got to try to embarrass the younger Svefra.
“Do not,” she said with a shove to the other girl’s shoulder. “I want to learn to play so I can go ashore and rook the city folks out of all their mizas. And besides,” she continued matter-of-factly, “boys aren’t pretty. They’re handsome. You sea cucumber.”
Carver snickered at the insult and Jewel’s face reddened in angry embarrassment at basically being called a brainless lump, but before she could think of a comeback, Anais spun around, her attention once again on the table in front of her, the three shells, and the man steadily chattering as he slid the shells around in a confusing pattern too fast for her eyes to follow.
54th Summer, 502AV
midday
midday
“Hoydens! Bring back me jewels!” The good-natured shout followed a small group of tanned and half-naked children as they scampered from ship to ship, swiping whatever wasn’t nailed down only to pass it amongst themselves, redistributing or abandoning it moments later, grinning and laughing all the while. The latest "victim" was Anais' own mother, the tall blonde making a great show of shaking her fist and scowling until the children were out of sight, then replenishing the strings of beads and shells that Anais had snatched up as she ran past. It was good fun for plunderer and plundered, alike, and the independence the children found in the safety of family and friends would stand them in good stead as they grew older.
The Anchorage Flotilla was a colorful, disjointed construct; boats and ships moored together, connected by all manner of pathways. Rope bridges, swing lines, planks of wood - all served as paths from one deck to the next, from one pod to the next, and all were fair game for the mismatched gangs of Svefra children as they ran, feet flashing and hands reaching, leaving laughter and chaos in their wake. Unsupervised and unrestrained, they ran or swam as the mood took them, charmed food from whatever Pod was nearest at hand when hunger struck, and fancied themselves the finest sailors in all the seas.
It was freedom. It was opportunity. It was glorious.
Anais had already acquired several strings of beads and a small drum on her first day on the Flotilla; this latest batch from her own Pod she simply dropped off on the next boat they careened through. Beads and shells were common, the thrill was in the grab. The new drum, however, Anais wore tied securely to her hip in as complicated a knot as her little fingers had been able to create. She patted it frequently as she flitted from deck to deck, reassuring herself that it was still there. It was during just such a check, while she was looking down, distracted, that she nearly ran headlong into her latest boon companions who had stopped running and were now gathered around watching… Something.
Squirming her way into the crowd amidst cheers and jeers, the little blonde girl elbowed and shoved until she had a front-row view of the spectacle.
Gambling!
Anais’ eyes, blue like those of everyone around her, sparkled as she watched the gaming. Thimble-pig. It was one of her favorites. She crept closer, watching intently; she could only sometimes find the ‘pig’, and she was sure more time to watch would give her the game’s secret. It couldn’t be too difficult, it was played with 3 shells and a pebble. Even a child could find those, and Anais had – but it was harder to find someone to play the game with when your pod was small and mostly made of adults.
Tiny wrinkles formed as her brow tightened in concentration, and she frowned when she was jostled from behind.
“Annie! Let’s go,” the speaker stopped just short of a whine, and Anais turned around to glare at the boy. "This is boring!"
“Don’t call me 'Annie',” she hissed angrily at the gangly youth behind her. Carver was a year or two older than she was, and had made it a special point to use that hated nickname as often as possible from the first minute he’d met her. Which had been yesterday. “I wanna watch the game. I’ll catch up later!”
“She just wants to watch Enn-i-van,” came a snide comment. “She thinks he’s pretty.” Anais recognized the voice and tried to ignore it. It was her actual-honest-to-Laviku cousin, Jewel, of all people. A blush rode high in her cheeks – partly because Jewel was a little bit right, and partly because Jewel was Jewel. Older, taller, with a shark tavan, instead of Anais’ turtle, Jewel used every chance she got to try to embarrass the younger Svefra.
“Do not,” she said with a shove to the other girl’s shoulder. “I want to learn to play so I can go ashore and rook the city folks out of all their mizas. And besides,” she continued matter-of-factly, “boys aren’t pretty. They’re handsome. You sea cucumber.”
Carver snickered at the insult and Jewel’s face reddened in angry embarrassment at basically being called a brainless lump, but before she could think of a comeback, Anais spun around, her attention once again on the table in front of her, the three shells, and the man steadily chattering as he slid the shells around in a confusing pattern too fast for her eyes to follow.