Timestamp: 10th of Spring, 522 A.V.
Evening at The Outpost.
Evening at The Outpost.
It was late afternoon before Tazrae made it through the Dovecote to The Outpost. She normally would be burdened down by goodies, but she hadn’t had any time to do any baking this morning between Oralie waking them all up with her nightmare. Then there’d been the unloading of the ship, the lunch prep, and pretty much everything going wrong that could go wrong. Taz still didn’t know what exactly was happening, but her last straw had been when the fifth person she knew well enough to know their favorite foods had asked her if she was new to Syka and welcomed her to the Settlement. Even Bree… Bree whom she considered her best non-human friend had hissed at her and faked being feral when she’d tried to have a decent conversation with the Ixam. That part had furrowed Tazrae’s eyebrows and caused the jungle ixam to flash her teeth at Tazrae when Tazrae had stopped, planted her hands on her hips and simply said… “Oh stop it. I know you can talk.”
The Innkeeper had to get out of there. She had to talk to someone sane. Alric came to mind immediately, so she skipped baking and just grabbed fresh fruit in the form of a big bunch of bananas and a bag of mangos she’d gathered the previous day and headed for the Outpost. It had taken her almost no time to arrive at the T&T and slip inside. She laid the bunch of bananas on the table and added the bag of mangos to it. Alric could trade what he didn’t want, the extras, for any supplies he might have needed. The sight of the bunch made her smile. It was one of her first foraging lessons in the jungle. A single banana was called a finger. A cluster of bananas was called a hand, and the whole stem of them growing was the bunch. There were probably forty to fifty bananas in her bundle and that would definitely flush out the pantry if the groceries were getting thin here.
“Alric?” She called, then began the quick search of the apartment. It was spacious but not in a way that someone could easily hide. He wasn’t asleep in the bedroom and he wasn’t in the bathing chamber or privy. He wasn’t even studying in the philtering lab that did need a good cleaning. Taz sighed, fear rising in her. She’d stopped by the office and the manager there, Dell, had tried to sell her an apartment. The old man that watched over the Dovecote on the Outpost side hadn’t known her either and he’d been greeting her by name since she had started coming over regularly. She’d tried to leave him a hand of bananas from the bunch she had over her shoulder, but he’d only glared at her with suspicion.
Taz knew she was in trouble. That pit in her stomach was growing wider and darker. And she had to have a solution immediately. Used to thinking on her feet, Taz headed to the Open Sky Bazaar to see if she could perhaps come across Alric in his regular haunts. She knew he’d taken to checking the weapons traders regularly seeking a Voril blade, but so far had been unsuccessful. She walked among the crowds there, unhappy and wary, wondering if he’d come back from Sunberth tonight. Was he okay? And more importantly would he know her?
The crowds wove past the weapons and deeper into the market where fine furniture was made. Taz a lover of furniture, but most of what she had in Syka was stuff that was rough-hewn and made by hand. She’d had finer stuff in Riverfall, but those days and the days of her family’s Inn with its antique furniture – most of which was probably a lie anyhow – were long gone. She’d sourced the beds and dressers from The Outpost thankfully, but most of the rest of the stuff in Syka was made for comfort and durability in the jungle... and nothing more.
A dealer caught her eye. He sold Hope chests and other interesting things. Made by a skilled carpenter, the pieces shown. Most of them had ornate metal work on them that added to their value considerably. A smaller chest among the things caught her eye… something table sized with a slot in the top. She slipped into the booth of chests and studied the smaller one intently. A voice interrupted her thoughts.
“Open it. It’s a letterbox.” The craftsman said.
Taz glanced up at him and at the invitation, reached out and gently opened the lid. It was beautiful inside, lined with a fine material and smelling of the wood it was made from. She ran her hands across it lovingly, the box itself giving her an idea. She looked up, met the man’s eyes, and swallowed the panic inside her. “The Gods put things in our path for a reason, don’t they? How much do you want for it? It looks priceless.” She said softly, knowing she had the coin on her because she had her backpack.
“Miss.. it’s a sturdy lock, ornate letterbox with two keys. I can’t take less than fifty gold for it.” Taz nodded, not wanting to argue with him. It had craftsmanship aplenty and it would do for what she needed it for. She slipped her backpack off her shoulder, reached inside, and pulled out a hefty coin purse that she didn’t quite reveal from the inside of the backpack. She counted out the coins, handed them to him, and he reached under his counter and pulled two golden keys from a chest he kept under his front table. He read the tag on it, nodded, and handed the keys to her. She picked up the chest, tucking it under her arm, and reshouldered her backpack. Then she was off to get writing supplies.
At a stationer’s booth, Taz picked up a package of real paper, twenty sheets of it, ink, and a pair of glass nibbed quills. She handed the stationer another fifteen gold mizas for the items, and headed back through the food market to get some fresh baked goods. She swung by the wine seller and got a small keg to restock their supplies with then headed back towards the apartment. When she arrived, it was still empty, so she headed in to the spare bedroom where they’d moved the desk and sat down at it.
Taz thought back a moment, then started to recreate the first lettier she’d given him, noting at the top of it that it was a re-write of something she’d sent him on the 73rd of Winter. It had been so long since she’d seen Alric, Taz just felt the panic grow in her. It twisted her guts and made it hard for her to write. She’d stayed away too long. She’d acted selfishly, licking her wounds and roaming the jungle – picking people like Brosh for company – instead of the man who occupied so much of her heart. Taz didn’t blame him at all for her grandfather’s actions. But she blamed herself for her inability to be able to truly face him in the aftermath. She hadn’t been strong enough, then she’d been transformed into something she wasn’t sure he was going to like. And to top it all off, the full sleeve gnosis mark on her left arm was alive with the scenes of the jungle now because so much of it had awakened. Would he even recognize her if he even remembered her?
She knew he’d been here recently. Things were clean, the firewood was stocked, and the place looked lived in. A book had a place marked in it near his favorite seat and the fire had been burned recently. Once she finished writing out the reproduction of the first letter she’d sent him, she paused to set a fire in the fireplace and moved to the couch. She sat the letterbox up on what she’d been jokingly thinking of as their ‘library’ which was nothing more than a sturdy wooden bookcase. She placed the first letter in the letterbox then started on the second one. The second one took her longer. It was a just in case thing… in case he was like everyone else in Syka and had no idea of who she was.
Then she sat down to wait for his return, the letter in her hand, being neatly folded and slid into a second sheet of paper as an envelope neatly folded around it. She could stay awhile… most of the night in fact. But she might leave before he arrived if he didn’t plan on coming tonight. And if that was the case… she’d leave the letter inside the open letterbox as an explanation. She’d have to depart before sunrise tomorrow, that much was true, for she had guests to see too… two of which were half-starved children that wouldn’t even remember her name.
Words: 1508
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