Marino was at a loss. His mind had wandered, and wandered until he suddenly found himself here. He sensed something significant had passed by him. Remembered the awkward pause earlier that he’d almost forgot as he got caught up in the current of things. The thought grounded him, drawing his thoughts from the sea. He felt a pressing need to pay close attention now as he picked up on Tazrae’s mood. His grasp of common was tenuous and he was wary of missing something else if he let himself become semi distracted again. It was just a shame he waited until her story to fasten his focus on her. The back of his mind crawled over their conversation earlier, looking for some inkling as to this change before he realized he was getting distracted again.
She had such colorful stories, and he realized that this would have been better asked earlier. It was much easier to listen to a tale than form a deeper discussion when his mind was at odds with itself. He felt torn in several different directions at once, his thoughts touching on Tazrae, Twist, the sea, sailing, the mark on his wrist, and a multitude of other things. Of late he found himself constantly taking stock of himself, reevaluating his position here in Syka. Meeting a goddess had been a defining moment, only it made him uncertain about just about everything now. She was giving him something to hold onto, and he’d let his mind carry him past an important moment. A thoughtful sigh escaped him as he studied her features.
Ionu. It was a unfamiliar name to him, but the story was easy enough to follow even with his understanding of common. A curious figure, it was surprising how it all ended up with the family, and he wondered if the tale was a history of sorts. Tales were funny like that, especially told from the mouth of a Svefra. Sometimes the truth was small, others large. This one seemed like the latter or the story was just really good. Maybe it was both.
“What a holiday. I don’t know if there is any I can recall with such a rich back story.” Marino said, smiling hesitantly as he tapped his fingers together. “That miser was given quite the gift. Few are ever given such an opportunity to change their path before things become irreparable.” It was pleasant to think that he kept to that path, even if it was only to avoid the ire of Ionu in the end. From the sound of the story, it felt like he’d made an honest change in his heart which was warming in a way. When he met her eyes, a thought pulled at him, reminding him he still didn’t know why the pieces fell like they did. His heart beat a little faster.
As he went to retrieve the fishing equipment he remembered there had been a significant pause between her speaking about past lives and telling that story about her mother. Had he missed something there? A conversational que that he should have picked up on. It was hard to tell with the words jumbled up in his mind, especially as it had been lost in his own musings about the cycle of life. That was his fault really, his mind was prone to tangents while his hands were busy. She could have asked him anything and he would have missed it. An perhaps he was still feeling some of the sadness from before, recalling those darker periods of his life that seemed to leach the color out of things. What it all boiled down to though his he’d experienced a lapse in attention which was probably the reason for this change in mood.
Marino was still puzzling over just what he should do about that when he came up with the equipment. “I do have a pole and a net, along with some bait. If you want, you can use the pole while I give the net a try. I’ve been getting a little help with my toss and would like to work on it further. I’m not sure what sort of bait might attract our fish though.” Mario said, and frowned slightly as he thought about it.
“Stu did say this wouldn’t be as simple as casting a line in the water. Perhaps it prefers deep water since he mentioned to use of my casinor.” Marino said as he handed off the pole to Tazrae, and set the bait between them. Suddenly, his net idea didn’t seem all that useful. Instead, he was getting the inkling to try something else, though he wanted to resolve a few things first before he plunged forward with that idea.
“I dreamed a lived on a sea of sand but I was not thirsty. I had animals that traveled alongside me and a family almost as large as the one I have now. I knew those sands as if I had swam in them all of my life, though I could not tell you how I knew that. Only that it was true. True as Syna coming over the horizon to kiss Leth in the twilight gloom.” He said, his voice tentative as he spoke as if he hoped it would usher in a flood of memories so that he might remember what had been said before it had passed him by. Perhaps it was too late for any of that but he felt the need to chance it. To wade deep in the waters of life.
“A past me I’d like to think it was, one that was as satisfied with a life on land as I am with the sea. A strangeness I might struggle to understand if there were not so many emotions familiar to me in that moment. Do you think such lives can come to us in our dreams? Or are they tied to something far more ephemeral that I cannot hope to touch? Did you ever dream of what that man said to your mother? Before he said it I mean as I know full well the weight words might have on the progress of ones dreams.” Marino shuddered unintentionally. “I’m sorry I haven’t been myself lately. The totems changed a lot of things for me, and I haven’t quite settled back into a sense of normalcy just yet.”
He sat gently against the railing as he looked at her, and scratched along the ridge of his jaw. “I suppose my more exciting dreams could have been past me as well. Theres a thought” He chuckled softly, if only to ease the tension stirring in his breast. “I guess what I’ve been trying to get at is I don’t know if I can protect Syka. Not if it means hurting someone, potentially killing them. These hands.. I never thought about using them in that way. Do you think you could do it?” His net felt from his hand to drop into a pile beside his feet as the thoughts took him. It was almost a relief to admit that out loud, and a great weight slid off of his chest. An in the space was filled a curious cocktail of feelings, none lingering for particularly long save for anxiety as he looked to see how she would respond.
She had such colorful stories, and he realized that this would have been better asked earlier. It was much easier to listen to a tale than form a deeper discussion when his mind was at odds with itself. He felt torn in several different directions at once, his thoughts touching on Tazrae, Twist, the sea, sailing, the mark on his wrist, and a multitude of other things. Of late he found himself constantly taking stock of himself, reevaluating his position here in Syka. Meeting a goddess had been a defining moment, only it made him uncertain about just about everything now. She was giving him something to hold onto, and he’d let his mind carry him past an important moment. A thoughtful sigh escaped him as he studied her features.
Ionu. It was a unfamiliar name to him, but the story was easy enough to follow even with his understanding of common. A curious figure, it was surprising how it all ended up with the family, and he wondered if the tale was a history of sorts. Tales were funny like that, especially told from the mouth of a Svefra. Sometimes the truth was small, others large. This one seemed like the latter or the story was just really good. Maybe it was both.
“What a holiday. I don’t know if there is any I can recall with such a rich back story.” Marino said, smiling hesitantly as he tapped his fingers together. “That miser was given quite the gift. Few are ever given such an opportunity to change their path before things become irreparable.” It was pleasant to think that he kept to that path, even if it was only to avoid the ire of Ionu in the end. From the sound of the story, it felt like he’d made an honest change in his heart which was warming in a way. When he met her eyes, a thought pulled at him, reminding him he still didn’t know why the pieces fell like they did. His heart beat a little faster.
As he went to retrieve the fishing equipment he remembered there had been a significant pause between her speaking about past lives and telling that story about her mother. Had he missed something there? A conversational que that he should have picked up on. It was hard to tell with the words jumbled up in his mind, especially as it had been lost in his own musings about the cycle of life. That was his fault really, his mind was prone to tangents while his hands were busy. She could have asked him anything and he would have missed it. An perhaps he was still feeling some of the sadness from before, recalling those darker periods of his life that seemed to leach the color out of things. What it all boiled down to though his he’d experienced a lapse in attention which was probably the reason for this change in mood.
Marino was still puzzling over just what he should do about that when he came up with the equipment. “I do have a pole and a net, along with some bait. If you want, you can use the pole while I give the net a try. I’ve been getting a little help with my toss and would like to work on it further. I’m not sure what sort of bait might attract our fish though.” Mario said, and frowned slightly as he thought about it.
“Stu did say this wouldn’t be as simple as casting a line in the water. Perhaps it prefers deep water since he mentioned to use of my casinor.” Marino said as he handed off the pole to Tazrae, and set the bait between them. Suddenly, his net idea didn’t seem all that useful. Instead, he was getting the inkling to try something else, though he wanted to resolve a few things first before he plunged forward with that idea.
“I dreamed a lived on a sea of sand but I was not thirsty. I had animals that traveled alongside me and a family almost as large as the one I have now. I knew those sands as if I had swam in them all of my life, though I could not tell you how I knew that. Only that it was true. True as Syna coming over the horizon to kiss Leth in the twilight gloom.” He said, his voice tentative as he spoke as if he hoped it would usher in a flood of memories so that he might remember what had been said before it had passed him by. Perhaps it was too late for any of that but he felt the need to chance it. To wade deep in the waters of life.
“A past me I’d like to think it was, one that was as satisfied with a life on land as I am with the sea. A strangeness I might struggle to understand if there were not so many emotions familiar to me in that moment. Do you think such lives can come to us in our dreams? Or are they tied to something far more ephemeral that I cannot hope to touch? Did you ever dream of what that man said to your mother? Before he said it I mean as I know full well the weight words might have on the progress of ones dreams.” Marino shuddered unintentionally. “I’m sorry I haven’t been myself lately. The totems changed a lot of things for me, and I haven’t quite settled back into a sense of normalcy just yet.”
He sat gently against the railing as he looked at her, and scratched along the ridge of his jaw. “I suppose my more exciting dreams could have been past me as well. Theres a thought” He chuckled softly, if only to ease the tension stirring in his breast. “I guess what I’ve been trying to get at is I don’t know if I can protect Syka. Not if it means hurting someone, potentially killing them. These hands.. I never thought about using them in that way. Do you think you could do it?” His net felt from his hand to drop into a pile beside his feet as the thoughts took him. It was almost a relief to admit that out loud, and a great weight slid off of his chest. An in the space was filled a curious cocktail of feelings, none lingering for particularly long save for anxiety as he looked to see how she would respond.