Timestamp: 50th of Fall, 522 A.V.
Tazrae got her guests up, fed, and sent off to do their tourism thing as quickly as she could. Out of practice, the Innkeeper wasn’t even sure she could go through the motions of doing the things she normally did since her arrival to Syka. Looking at her, no one would know she’d been gone a full year. Most of the residents of Syka had no idea anything was amiss about Tazrae. The only clue was the infant she carried with her and the new baby items placed around the kitchen and living area of The Protea. Truthfully, she’d told no one but Kamrae, Gracelin, and Shiress. They wouldn’t be spilling her secrets any time soon either. Unless someone outright asked, Taz wasn’t volunteering. The work around the Inn had to go on as normal. Meals had to be planned and cooked, hunting had to be carried out, and foraging had to be performed. If such things weren’t done, the guests weren’t going to eat. So, Tazrae carried on like normal. What else was there for her to do? Taz sang to her daughter as she cooked breakfast that morning, making faces and entertaining the little one who had spent most of her night up and crying with colic. They’d taken a quick trip to the Protea where a worried aunt had mixed up a colic remedy and gotten the baby through the painful condition.
Taz hadn’t slept a wink, and her appearance was starting to reflect this sleeplessness. Her blue eyes were shot through with red, there were hollow dark splotches under her eyes. She had a tiredness about her that was almost tangible. Before Khari, Taz hadn’t been much of a sleeper anyhow, but with the baby here, there was no opportunity for her to even catch afternoon naps. Her rest came when her eyes drifted closed as she was stirring a soup or stew… or when she ‘sat down for a chime’ after clearing the dishes, before she started washing them. Often that was when she was standing or leaning on one of her coutners. And it wouldn’t have mattered if she had time for sleep anyhow… she wouldn’t have gotten any. The twice-cursed chest still had to be dealt with.
It stood on the deck of The Protea wrapped in chains. The Innkeeper thought it was representative how she felt for the last year, bound up and confined. Tazrae herself had rocked the thing first up on one side and then up on the other, retrofitting it with the chains she had picked up at the mercantile. She’d wrapped it multiple times, making sure its lid could not be raised. A big old unwieldy padlock secured the chains around it. Taz was loathe to touch the thing, but she was also unwilling to leave it sit there where it could potentially hurt others or spit out something completely unsavory onto the deck.
Something needed to be done with it. As it was, sitting on the deck looking completely innocuous, the chest was actually bleeding her dry emotionally. It made itself known, in Tazrae’s mind, as being there, like a tangible threat that could erupt at any moment of any given day. With it there… nothing was fully over. With it gone, maybe she could sleep again. Taz wasn’t sure. But she wanted to try and get it disposed of. There was only one person she’d trust to know what to do with it… and another person she’d trust to run backup to that first person.
So, she sat down carefully and wrote out notes to each, then bribed a pair of white cockatoos with a carefully concocted treat, to go find both Ialari and Alric and deliver the message. She described Ialari as the woman with the special arm and snakes. She described Alric to them as the man with the broadsword and tall invisible creature with him. She hoped Ialari had at least one of her snakes about and that Alric did indeed have one of the invisible creatures near.
Ialari –
If you have free time this afternoon, can you meet me on the deck of The Protea? I have a small problem I am hoping you can help me with.
Tazrae.
Alric –
If you have free time this afternoon, can you meet me on the deck of The Protea? I have a small problem I am hoping you can help me with.
Tazrae.
And if she could get the chest disposed of, she could indeed maybe even hire some cleaning help at the Inn to free up more of her time so she could get some rest. She really needed to do that and there were several children that were fairly interested in joining her in and around The Inn. Sighing, and hopeful they’d both get the message, Tazrae went about her chores, starting in the kitchen where the stone tiles needed a good scrubbing on her hands and knees. She kept Khari close, in her little bassinet, where she could sing to her and keep it rocking as she was down on her hands and knees scrubbing the tile.
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