27th Winter 521 AV – Riverside The morning found Alric pacing up and down the side of the river, partially musing upon recent events and their impact upon him but largely chancing his luck to see if Ovek would grant him a boon as he had in previous seasons. As with all disasters in Sunberth flooding brought with it its won opportunities. In seasons passed storms had shaken for the precious stones from cliff faces, fires had exposed old cellars filled with treasures and flooding had exposed various trinkets that had later been shown to be worth more than first thought. And so, after the storms had passed and a few days had passed to ease away the raging waters, Alric had taken to spending some time each day trudging up and down the banks of the river. Mostly he had simply managed to get muddy boots so far, though a few silvers and coppers had been a welcome addition to his pouches. The only things he had to do other than work that was not trudging were brooding over his new gifts – divine and personally acquired – and he needed breaks from the constant reminder of his new magical abilities. “Though Arcadius doesn’t take breaks,” he noted to himself sourly as he bent down to flick off a few stones from a pouch that he opened, silvers within, and put into his own pouch, “bloody obsessed mages” he finished with a resigned tone. It was strange, as if he were so conflicted, about how he felt, what he thought, that it seemed to change by the day. Every time he was at the Outpost it seemed so logical, so necessary and it made sense. He had a gift, apparently, and he was hunted. Why not use it? But then he’d return to his home, or what had been chosen to be his home, and his thoughts would turn dark once more, condemning and criticising. Even the gift given to him by Eyris, which by all rights he should be thankful for given his own feelings about what she represented, seemed a sour boon. He paused in his trudging and, not for the first time, thought about it – it was an odd thing. He was not given to madness, as much as he was aware of, and so this conflict seemed strange. Still, perhaps it was down to Taz’s presence, he reasoned, she had a way of making him see thing differently. Shrugging it off he continued with his trudging, his eyes scanning this way and that, noticing refuse and detritus here, flotsam and stones there, until at one point, in a junction where the river split, he spied something interesting. There was what looked like an old stone pipe, of chamber, as if it had one been clogged but ran under the city for that section of it. Curious now rather than brooding he made his way towards it, picking his steps and hopping here or there so as not to fall into the deeper parts of the mud quagmire. For a time there were even stone slabs, or shattered ones, that he jumped from one to the other, until he was standing before the uncovered stone protrusion. Peering into the dingy tube, his eyes taking some time to adjust to the darkness, he saw the outline of something rectangular and reached in. Fingers slipping upon algae and grime at first after a while he scraped enough off with his fingertips to get a solid grip before hauling the thingy out into the light. He almost crowed when he saw that it was a chest, wood stained from the time underwater and a thick crust seemingly formed across the joints. He hoped it would mean the inside was well reserved. Looking at the lock he saw, instead a bell, which seemed to tinkle and was shining despite the covering to grime elsewhere. “What in the…” he said, suddenly overcome with the need to touch the bell. Flicking it, it shattered, vanished and his instincts took hold, shielding the tiny display and looking around to see if anyone had seen. Once it was established he wasn’t going to be set upon by a mob, he heaved the chest up into his arms, the weight not inconsiderable, and began the trudge back to his little shack of a home. Despite having the Outpost now to spend his time he wasn’t going to bring anything back to the shared space that might be a danger and he had no idea what this obviously magical display would bring. |