An unexpected visitor.
It was a strange feeling to be standing on land again. After countless days spent aboard the Stormbreaker he still felt the undulating motion of the sea in his legs and the mainland seemed to gently shift under his feet. He’d never learned the true name of the gruff, large man that had protected him along the way and he wasn’t sure if Graymane even remembered it himself. The exiled knight turned hired-blade hadn’t said much on the long journey from Ravok, not in the way of the common tongue, but he’d sang a few songs with his old reliable, dangling from his leather belt in its sheath.
“Any place I could find lodgings?” Milo asked when Graymane came up beside him. The old man brushed some long strands out of his face and tucked them behind his ears. He looked around, squinted against the sun, then pointed a thick finger dead ahead. “Just down west street there should be a place called the world’s end grotto.”
Milo wasn’t sure he wanted to go to the world’s end, it didn’t sound very comforting, but since Graymane listed no alternatives he didn’t have much of a choice. The old man must've sensed his hesitation, his reluctance to leave the relative familiarity of the ship and his travel companions behind. Not that he'd taken a particular liking to any of them, but it was better than being alone in a large city teeming with strangers and sinners.
"Don't worry boy, Zeltiva is a safe place so long as you stay clear of the east street and that sewage water they call kelp beer," Graymane said, his voice rough from lack of use. "If you find yourself thinking it doesn't taste so bad, it's time to go somewhere else."
Milo thought he spotted a faint smile on the old man's weathered, wrinkled face before it vanished behind his impressive grey beard. "Right then, I best be on my way," the old mercenary said. He hoisted a great big rucksack onto his shoulder, gave a firm handshake and a quick pat on Milo's shoulder, before turning on his heel and disappearing into the bustling crowd of new arrivals and dockworkers.
Milo puffed his cheeks and tried to ignore the sudden, crushing weight that pressed down on him. Zeltiva had looked impressive from afar, but it was even more overwhelming up close. A soft breeze carried the briny smell of the sea, played with his hair and gave him a gentle nudge forward. No point standing around. Back in Ravok he had sometimes played a game trying to spot outsiders new to the city. It wasn't hard, they often just looked like lost fools and he imagined he looked much the same now.
He walked in the general direction Graymane had pointed out to him, took in the many dazzling sights and followed the general flow of the crowd until his neck hurt from gawking up at all the tall buildings in the city. All those days spent at sea must've messed with his sense of time because when he came up to the sign of The World's End Grotto, it felt like he'd sleepwalked the entire way.
The structure looked out of place to its surroundings, even to the untrained eye, like someone had hastily put it together out of whatever rocks they'd been able to find nearby. Still, the promise of a fresh, hot meal was more than enough to dismiss the odd appearance without much thought. Milo remembered his last few meals all too well, hard tack with more hard tack on top, sprinkled with crushed hard tack. As soon as he pushed the door open and stepped inside he was hit with the smell of smoked fish, the sound of breaded fish-skin sizzling to a crisp in hot, bubbling butter, the smell of pipe weed, and the murmuring of dockworkers and learned men enjoying a few drinks at the end of a long day's work.
To his relief, no one seemed to pay him any mind when he made his way over to an empty table in the far corner of the inn and nestled into a chair He didn't carry much with him, but what he had he carefully put to the side, close enough so he could keep a good eye on it. Just as he remembered he'd come to find lodgings, not food, a woman armed with a bright smile and an apron tied around her waist came up to him.
"Welcome to the world's end," she said with a the kind of trained smile that made Milo suspect she'd gotten slightly tired of any jokes to do with the place's name. "What can I get you?"
"Something to eat," Milo said, tumbling over the words. Back in Ravok his mother had always done the cooking, sometimes with his help, but she'd never asked him what he had wanted to eat. On the journey to Zeltiva it hadn't been any different, he'd just gotten a portion of whatever was available and occasionally had helped peeling potatoes or skinning what others had hunted. "What- what do you have?"
The woman looked him over, her smile never faltered but Milo suddenly became very aware how travel-worn he must have looked to her and for perhaps the first time in his life wished he could wash up.
"We have a variety of fish on the menu, all freshly caught from Matthew's bay, with mashed potatoes and green beans on the side. We've got sturgeon, cod, salmon, bass, shrimps, and if I'm not mistaken there was a batch of crab too this morning."
Milo blinked helplessly at the woman.
"I can recommend breaded cod for newcomers," she said. "It's less of an acquired taste and won't cost you as much as crab or salmon might."
Milo gave a curt nod and the woman turned around to fill his order, but returned hardly a second later, a hint of worry etched on to her face. "I'm sorry, but are you alone?"
Milo bobbed his shoulders but said nothing. The woman's frown deepened and she seemed on the verge of saying something, then reconsidered.
"I can pay," Milo blurted. He got a few gold pieces out of his pocket and put them on the table for her to see. "You have lodgings too, right?"
"We do," she said, never quite taking her eyes off him. It was starting to get on his nerves. "Two silver a night, you won't find better anywhere else."
By the time the woman left his table again he was a gold-rimmed miza and two silvers lighter but gained a room for the next five days and a hot meal to look forward to. He wasn't sure he liked Serra (as she'd introduced herself) much, she was far too nosy and looked at him funny. Still, he forgave her the moment she returned with his meal and left him to his devices. He muttered a quick prayer of thanks to Rhysol just like he'd learned at home, to give thanks for the food, even though he'd paid for it. His mother would surely have reprimanded him for the sloppy gesture he made over his steaming plate at the end of his prayer but she wasn't around to see. No sooner than he'd taken his first bite, relief washed over Milo. He'd made it. Already the wheels in his head started to turn, trying to figure out if five days would be enough to find someone in the large city with just a name to go on. Shiress .
75th of Spring 521AV
It was a strange feeling to be standing on land again. After countless days spent aboard the Stormbreaker he still felt the undulating motion of the sea in his legs and the mainland seemed to gently shift under his feet. He’d never learned the true name of the gruff, large man that had protected him along the way and he wasn’t sure if Graymane even remembered it himself. The exiled knight turned hired-blade hadn’t said much on the long journey from Ravok, not in the way of the common tongue, but he’d sang a few songs with his old reliable, dangling from his leather belt in its sheath.
“Any place I could find lodgings?” Milo asked when Graymane came up beside him. The old man brushed some long strands out of his face and tucked them behind his ears. He looked around, squinted against the sun, then pointed a thick finger dead ahead. “Just down west street there should be a place called the world’s end grotto.”
Milo wasn’t sure he wanted to go to the world’s end, it didn’t sound very comforting, but since Graymane listed no alternatives he didn’t have much of a choice. The old man must've sensed his hesitation, his reluctance to leave the relative familiarity of the ship and his travel companions behind. Not that he'd taken a particular liking to any of them, but it was better than being alone in a large city teeming with strangers and sinners.
"Don't worry boy, Zeltiva is a safe place so long as you stay clear of the east street and that sewage water they call kelp beer," Graymane said, his voice rough from lack of use. "If you find yourself thinking it doesn't taste so bad, it's time to go somewhere else."
Milo thought he spotted a faint smile on the old man's weathered, wrinkled face before it vanished behind his impressive grey beard. "Right then, I best be on my way," the old mercenary said. He hoisted a great big rucksack onto his shoulder, gave a firm handshake and a quick pat on Milo's shoulder, before turning on his heel and disappearing into the bustling crowd of new arrivals and dockworkers.
Milo puffed his cheeks and tried to ignore the sudden, crushing weight that pressed down on him. Zeltiva had looked impressive from afar, but it was even more overwhelming up close. A soft breeze carried the briny smell of the sea, played with his hair and gave him a gentle nudge forward. No point standing around. Back in Ravok he had sometimes played a game trying to spot outsiders new to the city. It wasn't hard, they often just looked like lost fools and he imagined he looked much the same now.
He walked in the general direction Graymane had pointed out to him, took in the many dazzling sights and followed the general flow of the crowd until his neck hurt from gawking up at all the tall buildings in the city. All those days spent at sea must've messed with his sense of time because when he came up to the sign of The World's End Grotto, it felt like he'd sleepwalked the entire way.
The structure looked out of place to its surroundings, even to the untrained eye, like someone had hastily put it together out of whatever rocks they'd been able to find nearby. Still, the promise of a fresh, hot meal was more than enough to dismiss the odd appearance without much thought. Milo remembered his last few meals all too well, hard tack with more hard tack on top, sprinkled with crushed hard tack. As soon as he pushed the door open and stepped inside he was hit with the smell of smoked fish, the sound of breaded fish-skin sizzling to a crisp in hot, bubbling butter, the smell of pipe weed, and the murmuring of dockworkers and learned men enjoying a few drinks at the end of a long day's work.
To his relief, no one seemed to pay him any mind when he made his way over to an empty table in the far corner of the inn and nestled into a chair He didn't carry much with him, but what he had he carefully put to the side, close enough so he could keep a good eye on it. Just as he remembered he'd come to find lodgings, not food, a woman armed with a bright smile and an apron tied around her waist came up to him.
"Welcome to the world's end," she said with a the kind of trained smile that made Milo suspect she'd gotten slightly tired of any jokes to do with the place's name. "What can I get you?"
"Something to eat," Milo said, tumbling over the words. Back in Ravok his mother had always done the cooking, sometimes with his help, but she'd never asked him what he had wanted to eat. On the journey to Zeltiva it hadn't been any different, he'd just gotten a portion of whatever was available and occasionally had helped peeling potatoes or skinning what others had hunted. "What- what do you have?"
The woman looked him over, her smile never faltered but Milo suddenly became very aware how travel-worn he must have looked to her and for perhaps the first time in his life wished he could wash up.
"We have a variety of fish on the menu, all freshly caught from Matthew's bay, with mashed potatoes and green beans on the side. We've got sturgeon, cod, salmon, bass, shrimps, and if I'm not mistaken there was a batch of crab too this morning."
Milo blinked helplessly at the woman.
"I can recommend breaded cod for newcomers," she said. "It's less of an acquired taste and won't cost you as much as crab or salmon might."
Milo gave a curt nod and the woman turned around to fill his order, but returned hardly a second later, a hint of worry etched on to her face. "I'm sorry, but are you alone?"
Milo bobbed his shoulders but said nothing. The woman's frown deepened and she seemed on the verge of saying something, then reconsidered.
"I can pay," Milo blurted. He got a few gold pieces out of his pocket and put them on the table for her to see. "You have lodgings too, right?"
"We do," she said, never quite taking her eyes off him. It was starting to get on his nerves. "Two silver a night, you won't find better anywhere else."
By the time the woman left his table again he was a gold-rimmed miza and two silvers lighter but gained a room for the next five days and a hot meal to look forward to. He wasn't sure he liked Serra (as she'd introduced herself) much, she was far too nosy and looked at him funny. Still, he forgave her the moment she returned with his meal and left him to his devices. He muttered a quick prayer of thanks to Rhysol just like he'd learned at home, to give thanks for the food, even though he'd paid for it. His mother would surely have reprimanded him for the sloppy gesture he made over his steaming plate at the end of his prayer but she wasn't around to see. No sooner than he'd taken his first bite, relief washed over Milo. He'd made it. Already the wheels in his head started to turn, trying to figure out if five days would be enough to find someone in the large city with just a name to go on. Shiress .