26th of Summer Tarn strained, muscles burning, against the tremendous weight on his shoulders. It felt like a mountain rested on his back, relentlessly pushing him down and threatening to crush him. Any moment he would run out of space to fall, and he would be pressed flat between the weight and the ground, his bones snapping and his blood spurting… Tarn snapped awake, his hands grasping the rough linen sheets at his sides. It was a dream, there was no weight, no crushing. But there was pain. It shot up through his arm, coming from his left hand. Tarn hissed through his teeth. A few days earlier he had had a nasty confrontation with a Daggerhand, and his hand hadn’t recovered yet. The punch he’d thrown had been hard, at least Tarn knew that much, but unfortunately the target it had found—a paving stone—was a little bit rougher on the knuckles than the average face. As his mind drifted to other things the dream faded out of memory, replaced by more worthwhile thoughts. With a low groan, Tarn sat up, rubbing his eyes with his good hand. He caught a waft of himself and balked. Sweat soaked through the armpits of his rough shirt, and all of his clothes were dirty and stank as much a midden heap at mid-day. Tarn had been going for a while now off of one set of clothes. Maybe it was time to change that. It would be a hit to his purse, but for their many, many failings, the Sun’s Birth paid better than shipwrights did. Tarn swung his legs off his cot. Judging from the dim light, it was probably fairly early in the morning. Glancing around, most of the cots in the long barracks were still filled with snoring occupants. A few were noticeably empty, probably from unfortunate Dragoons that had been tasked with early morning duties. Tarn stood up, wincing as he worked the stiffness out of his muscles. His hand was the only part of him seriously injured but taking a beating like he had didn’t exactly feel too good on the rest of your body either. The swift motion of his rise made Tarn’s head spin, his vision sliding out of focus for a few seconds. He steadied himself against the wall, delicately raising his pained hand to his temple, stopping just short of rubbing it. Well, his had had been messing with him too. The only thing that gave him some small comfort was knowing the Daggerhand was almost certainly worse off. Not that it would have been that way if Tarn had faced him alone. Tarn righted himself and set about gathering his things for the day. He buckled his sword to his belt and swung the leather pack he had retrieved from the Daggerhand over his shoulder. After a brief moment of thought, he tied his small purse to his belt as well, tucking it inside his trousers so quick-fingered thieves wouldn’t decide to relieve him of his coin. |
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