2, Summer 519 AV
There should be hot springs everywhere. Really. Everywhere. Stuck in a city? You get a hot spring. Live in the desert? Have a hot spring. Frozen icecap? Oh you definitely needed a hot spring. Baelin was absolutely convinced: Everywhere. Needed. Hot springs. The best part about leaving Black Rock―hands down―has been the discovery of the amazing, magnificent, glorious hot springs in almost every other place he’s lived in.
Baelin groaned and sank deeper under the warm water, luxuriating as it soaked into too-tense muscle, slowing settling into the many aches from his long trek. He didn’t even care that there were other shifty Sunberth natives around him. Let them stab him for all he cared; dying in a hot spring had to be the best way to go.
But even with the supposedly stab-happy anarchists around… It was weird. He felt relatively safe. Safer than he’d felt anywhere else since…well, as far back as Syliras, probably. Maybe it was the water. Or maybe it was the charming older couple that ran the place; they had some kind of quality about them that took a bit of the edge out of him. Whatever the case, Baelin was fully appreciating the loose easiness of relaxing his guard and enjoying the heat.
He flexed his foot under the water, spreading and curling his toes as he rolled his foot up and down. There was a small splash off to his left where he knew the turtles were―accompanied by a child’s happy giggle―and Baelin could already feel his semi-permanent scowl soften.
Yeah, hot springs should definitely be everywhere. Somebody needed to get on that back in the isle of the dead.
Now that he’d been soaking for a while, he figured his skin was soft and yielding enough to let him work on a few soon-to-be scales. There were spots on his thigh, hip, and back that had the telltale itch of a growing scale and he’d be damned if he let them surface.
Baelin rubbed his finger against the spot on his thigh, feeling along the slightly raised ridge. He got an idea of where the edges were and pinched around it. Kneading the squeezed area, he worked it until he could feel the growing scale pushed close to the surface. Holding it there, he scratched with his free hand until a corner broke free. Baelin moved quickly, shifting to get that little bit of edge pinched between two fingers and then yanked.
The scale resisted for a moment. But the skin was soft and yielding after such a long, warm soak and the scale came loose without much effort. Baelin tugged it through the small slit and breathed a sigh of relief when it was finally free. The spot bled a little, but the water did just as good a job at carrying the tendril of dark fluid away as it did at easing his tension.
Baelin took only the briefest of moments to look at the small, translucent abomination before he flicked it away. One less foreign thing in his body to worry about. He was just about to begin working on the one in his hip when he realized someone had come close. He’d been so absorbed in the task of pulling the scale out that he hadn’t even noticed their approach. Squaring his shoulders and bracing for anything, Baelin turned to see who or what had come over.
There should be hot springs everywhere. Really. Everywhere. Stuck in a city? You get a hot spring. Live in the desert? Have a hot spring. Frozen icecap? Oh you definitely needed a hot spring. Baelin was absolutely convinced: Everywhere. Needed. Hot springs. The best part about leaving Black Rock―hands down―has been the discovery of the amazing, magnificent, glorious hot springs in almost every other place he’s lived in.
Baelin groaned and sank deeper under the warm water, luxuriating as it soaked into too-tense muscle, slowing settling into the many aches from his long trek. He didn’t even care that there were other shifty Sunberth natives around him. Let them stab him for all he cared; dying in a hot spring had to be the best way to go.
But even with the supposedly stab-happy anarchists around… It was weird. He felt relatively safe. Safer than he’d felt anywhere else since…well, as far back as Syliras, probably. Maybe it was the water. Or maybe it was the charming older couple that ran the place; they had some kind of quality about them that took a bit of the edge out of him. Whatever the case, Baelin was fully appreciating the loose easiness of relaxing his guard and enjoying the heat.
He flexed his foot under the water, spreading and curling his toes as he rolled his foot up and down. There was a small splash off to his left where he knew the turtles were―accompanied by a child’s happy giggle―and Baelin could already feel his semi-permanent scowl soften.
Yeah, hot springs should definitely be everywhere. Somebody needed to get on that back in the isle of the dead.
Now that he’d been soaking for a while, he figured his skin was soft and yielding enough to let him work on a few soon-to-be scales. There were spots on his thigh, hip, and back that had the telltale itch of a growing scale and he’d be damned if he let them surface.
Baelin rubbed his finger against the spot on his thigh, feeling along the slightly raised ridge. He got an idea of where the edges were and pinched around it. Kneading the squeezed area, he worked it until he could feel the growing scale pushed close to the surface. Holding it there, he scratched with his free hand until a corner broke free. Baelin moved quickly, shifting to get that little bit of edge pinched between two fingers and then yanked.
The scale resisted for a moment. But the skin was soft and yielding after such a long, warm soak and the scale came loose without much effort. Baelin tugged it through the small slit and breathed a sigh of relief when it was finally free. The spot bled a little, but the water did just as good a job at carrying the tendril of dark fluid away as it did at easing his tension.
Baelin took only the briefest of moments to look at the small, translucent abomination before he flicked it away. One less foreign thing in his body to worry about. He was just about to begin working on the one in his hip when he realized someone had come close. He’d been so absorbed in the task of pulling the scale out that he hadn’t even noticed their approach. Squaring his shoulders and bracing for anything, Baelin turned to see who or what had come over.