Timestamp:10th of Winter, 521 A.V.
With her arms full of baked goods in a basket and Bree wandering alongside her, Taz found herself headed into the Syka Commons, hoping to catch up with everyone in the Settlement. Taz had been spending a great deal of time in the Outpost and had missed the last Tenday because of it. With winter here, her Inn wasn’t as busy as it was during the spring and summer. Taz had started to accept the fact that the winter and fall would be her more free seasons. And that was okay because right now she had a lot of other things on her mind than just running the Inn. She had a new side job that took a lot of her time and involved someone who took up a lot of her thoughts. That meant there was less time for Syka and she’d missed that.
Here was her chosen home, one she intended to keep with a business she intended to grow. And that had to be one of her top priorities. Bree and spending time with her was another top priority, hence that’s why the Ixam was with her. Taz knew she wouldn’t stay for the human festivities, but there were Svefra on the beach and the Ixam often got along famously with some of the tavan that ran with the Svefra. Taz secretly had decided that the tavan were above average in their intelligence and that gave them equal footing to Bree, even though most of them couldn’t talk. The Ixam would frolic with gulls and dolphins, otters and eels alike, fully enjoying the complement of animals that the sea-faring race traveled with. At home, all she had was the talking birds and Creech who more than likely was just sleeping the afternoon away on the deck in the sun.
Taz had no illusions that the Imperial Watcher was a good guard dog. He’d likely show thieves to her fancy silver and assist them in removing it. But stealing wasn’t the way of people in Syka and they had a very little problem with it. Tazrae was glad about that. The people here needed each other badly and that was one of the reasons they held tenday events. Every ten days the Settlement would gather for food, music, and news which allowed the Founders to keep up with the population and note when someone was absent and might need a visit and an offer of help or even medical attention.
As predicted, once they reached the Commons, Bree peeled off for the beach while Taz turned to leave her large basket of baked rolls and cookies at the Communal Kitchens. She stopped to sniff the young boar on the spit, and smile in appreciation that the meal would be delicious. Other denizens were dropping off side dishes and desserts, laying down pitchers and carafes of beverages, and leaving bowls of fruits all wild-harvested throughout the jungle. It would be a good feast with good company causing Tazrae to smile.
She’d brought her mandolin to play, slung over her back in a case. So she climbed the steps to the deck, joined the other musicians already gathering there, and unslung her instrument to begin tuning it. Stu was passing around a tray that held huge mugs of some sort of fermented and chilled drink. He left one with Taz and all the rest of the musicians, for which Taz was grateful. She took a sniff then a sip and sighed in pleasure as the strawberry-mango flavor with the little afterbite kick hit her tongue. She raised the horn mug in salute to Stu and mouthed the words ‘thank you' to him as he continued passing out drinks.
Then, with a muttered song title passed around them, Taz nodded with the others and on a three-beat count, started to play. She loved playing her mandolin and while she was still learning, songs like this could hide the flaws of the weakest amidst the strongest in a mixed band like the Syka Tendays usually featured. She kept up, tapping her foot to the time, and smiled as they played. It was a lively tune, so she had to concentrate on her fingerings rather than on just making the chords dance. She made a few mistakes, wincing as she did so, but her neighboring musicians covered them neatly and she soldiered on. Once the song changed to something slower, she was able to split her concentration and raise her voice in song, joining several of the other musicians as they sang out a Svefra ballad. Taz had grown up learning Riverfalls classical music that entailed long complex scores where audiences simply sat and admired the musicians as they played. Their waltzes and two steps were played for pattern dances with strict rules about no touching or only contact through their palms when dancers were circling each other in intricate patterns.
Here in Syka, there were no patterns, just crowds dancing, and during slower music, couples breaking off and dancing cheek to cheek, enjoying each other’s company. Affection was as open here as nudity was. No one cared about such things… they had greater drives to keep them occupied – like surviving the jungle and the sea. Taz played her best, and added her voice when the song wasn’t so complicated that it needed all of her attention on her mandolin.
They had finished four or five songs before Randal stood up and wove among the crowd, clearing his voice to make an announcement. He carried a good-sized ornately carved chest in his hands roughly two feet by two feet in measure. It was tall, standing on four curved legs once the founder set it down and cleared his voice again.
“Can I have everyone’s attention?” Randal asked, standing above most of the crowd due to his height. Tazrae laid her mandolin down in its case and tucked it under the seat where she was sitting. She picked up her drink again, took a long pull from it, and remained quiet so she could hear what the youngest of the three founders wanted to say.
“As you know, we’ve declared Solitude Island off-limits because of its pre-Valterrian nature until we can fully explore it. There are lots of dangerous ruins over there and a few creatures we’ve never encountered anywhere else. We’ve been exploring the idea of learning and understanding the past in mind. And while searching its ruins, we’ve made a discovery. We found a treasure chest!” He said, indicating the box which he carefully unlatched the lid on and revealed what appeared to be trinkets, stones, and strings of pearls and other metal chains that were all obviously jewelry.
“We have no such need of this sort of wealth in and of itself. It’s magical in nature, that’s all we know, so we decided we’d spread it around to you folks as well. Feel free to come up one at a time and select a piece of jewelry from the chest. Just one though… so there’s enough to go around and we can hold some back in case someone joins the settlement later in the season. When we make discoveries like this, we hope all of you will realize it's meant to be shared and if you make your own such discoveries, the same rules apply.” Randal said, looking thoughtful for a moment. “Take a piece at your own risk though. We know they are magical, but we aren’t sure what they do. That will be up for you to discover and utilize at your own risk. Syka has a lot of this, and while it might have been every day to the people of the past, for us it’s a new scenario.” He added, then stepped back as people in their curiosity crowded up and began looking through the chest.
No one rushed, no one pushed or shoved. Everyone sort of formed a loose line which Taz found herself standing in. She smiled, greeted both those in front of her and behind, and wondered why Randal said they were magical in nature. Magical how? Taz watched curiously, to see if anyone selected jewelry that they then wore and said turned them into jungle toads. When nothing obvious like that happened, the Innkeeper moved forward with the line, waiting to select her own treasure from the chest.
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