The Docks
1st of Spring, 519 A.V.
1st of Spring, 519 A.V.
Ambiance :
Today the crowds were bustling. The murmurs of chatter and conversation buzzed and yipped throughout all of Ravok, the name of Rhysol escaped no citizen's lips. The sun was bright, standing above all, leaving no shade contested for luminance. Warmth filled the city like steamed fish, seasoned by a crisp breeze that grazed the air. The foundation of the city, the lake surface itself seemed to wave at those by the water was a glistening wet hand before settling down back into the body. No indication of winter was about as the Watchtowers glistened green.
Although celebration for the upcoming year had been observed the day before, an entirely new ceremony had begun to welcome in the year as it came and to thank Rhysol for the blessing over the fisherman's catch. Everyone devoted to the god took moments throughout their day to thank him in silent or audible recognition, some more audible than others.
As Itt wandered the docks no later than a bell after the announcements of the deity of the city, Itt came across the sound of laughter and music. The sound prompted a tilt of his head, his ears leading him towards the melody of hilarity and tune.
Upon the lakeside, in one of the larger plazas bordering the main docks to the south, a large conglomeration had formed of people and their families swaying and watching a group of five men fabricating a complex harmony with long instruments they hit with sticks. A woman among them as well pounded beige drums with her hands, a second dancing in the middle of the open stage that everyone had created, smacking her palm and thigh with a tambourine that rung to the beat.
Itt tried to see the musicians, though people were too tightly packed together for his comfort. To avoid the claustrophobia, the Kelvic remained on the outskirts of the crowd. He glanced around for spaces in which would give him extra inches on his small stature, finding a barrel standing beside a wall to the left of the nearly uniform mass, shifting on their feet left to right. Itt hopped onto the barrel's top, cupping his hands over his eyes to shade them from the sun's blaring beams.
The dancer wore bright colours of orange and yellow as well as a mask that resembled a fox. Jewelry dangled from the mask and her wrists, her neck which bore a thick collar-like necklace, and feet, her caper flowing with the rhythmic hammering of wood and metal pieces from the men and the woman behind her. The instruments were beaten by the sticks that the pieces jumped from the position, returning just in time to be pounded again. The effort resulted in vibrant, clear tones and cutting cadence enticing Itt's head to bob and sway.
A child was sitting upon a man's shoulders in the back of the crowd by Itt, the child swaying dramatically back and forth with his chubby fingers and hands in the air. A particularly rhythmic section of their song came by, the kid smacking his father's head in an attempt to join in. The father flinched at each hit, Itt snickering at his grimace. It didn't take long for the man to set the boy down on the ground, the child resorting to stomping his feet instead, his hands returning to waving back and forth to a beat much faster than the actual song.
Itt laughed, hopping down from the barrel, watching the young boy stomp in circles with a giggle that only children could replicate. Itt grinned with the full length of his mouth, stomping to the melody both as his own expression of the song moving inside him as well as to help show the kid where the beat actually stood. The boy looked him in the eyes as he faced him, giggling more and stomping in his direction, though still horribly out of sync.
The child held his arms out, his hands grasping the air in front of him towards Itt. Itt chuckled, extending his arms out as well, though making sure to keep enough distance between them as to not touch the boy, as his father was staring intently at human sloth. The child, nevertheless, enjoyed the new mimic and jumped, turning 90 degrees to his right. Itt beamed, jumping and turning to his right. The boy shook his hands vigorously, the shake snaking its way down his body, through his head, and his back and finally his hips, wagging his tush back and forth. Itt laughed, doing the same, letting the shaking of his hands dribble down all the way to his hips, shaking them unapologetically beside the boy.
The musicians cried out to the crowd before them, telling them to express their thanks and devotion to Rhysol in any way they thought best, many whooping and giving an excited shout, others lifted their hands, some danced more, and many more just smiled and watched, or continued walking. The dancer, although silent, unlike her counterparts, made her way around the crowd and beckoned those with elegant fingers to join the growing crowd if they were not already a part of it, dancing by one of the main canals that linked the city to the lake, the sun's reflections on the water dancing on her glistening skin much like she was.