Tazrae stripped down, unashamed of her body in front of the other woman. Once devoid of her clothing, which she stuffed into her backpack. At the same time she removed two thin mesh bags, setting them aside, before she tied the backpack securely, handed Kamilla one of the mesh bags, and waded into the water with only the mesh bag looped over her wrist. It didn’t have more than a drawstring closure that she could loop over her wrist leaving both hands free. Taz wanted to be able to shift into her Ixam form in a heartbeat if anything threatened them, and with all her things in her backpack, she had the contingency of snatching it up with her snout and running for safety if they needed it. But her senses told her things were fine, the jungle was safe, and there were no immediate threats in the water.
It was a great time to teach.
Like everything else in Syka, the water was warm, yet refreshing… cooler than the outside air temperatures, but not by much. It felt deliciously good, with almost no current. There was a pull, but it was slight, as if someone could drop a leaf onto the water and it might lazily, in a few chimes, sail past the observer. “The Syka River is what we call low gradient. It doesn’t travel down elevations much, so it winds and is a slow sluggish beast.” Taz told Kamilla. The woman had asked her a lot of questions, but she refrained from answering until they got into the water properly.
Taz was careful and attentive, but not hovering… noting that Kamilla was probably far more content in the water – and more importantly safe – in her Konti form than Tazrae was in her human body. It was nice, not having to make sure Kam didn’t drown when they waded to the far bank, finding themselves shoulder deep in water. “This is almost the perfect location.” Taz commented, then showed Kamilla her hands. “Make claws like this… and face the far bank. See how in time of flood the water washes this bank clean, making it almost a cut-bank? That’s what you need for finding freshwater clams in a river like this. Face the wall… in the deepest part… which should be easy for you. Luckily our water is down and I don’t have to try and make it work underwater with holding my breath… but this level.. its great.” She said, reining in her words. She was almost babbling now.
“The clams like to burrow into the bank, which helps further undermine it, making the river bigger over time. More clams mean a wider ever-changing river bed, in the course of things, and so they do the water a favor by keeping its banks unstable and soft enough that high water events open the river up.” Taz said, looking at the water thoughtfully. She’d learned this after being magically kidnapped by a goddess and dumped into an environment where she’d been naked, afraid, and forced to survive. “Finding them is easy…. Just make claws with your hands…” Taz lifted hers out of the water and arched her fingers into what could be considered a claw like motion, and mimicked digging into the bank, raking her fingers down the dirt. She demonstrated out of the water above the waterline where Kam could see. “You’ll feel them with your fingers. Just grab anything that feels like a rock or clam.. and after you rake a few in, you’ll be feeling the difference… toss them in the mesh bag, and I’ll have something for supper tonight or tomorrow night at the Inn.” She grinned.
Kam was in for a surprise.
Taz moved closer, almost laying against the high far bank, and began raking her fingers through the mud. She had to dunk under a few times, holding her breath, but she indeed found clams. They weren’t the small buttery clams of the coast either. They were huge freshwater clams the size of her fists. She found two on her first pass and literally decided they’d found a treasure trove of the bivalves the moment she dropped them into her mesh bag.
“See what I mean?” She asked feeling other debris lodged up in the solid wall of the bank too. But after just moments, Taz could tell the difference between a stone, a piece of river debris, and a clam. “If you get lost somewhere with nothing, pray it's in the jungle. There is literally food everywhere.” Taz commented as she used this opportunity to harvest for the next meals she’d need to make at The Inn. She fed a lot of people there, and she wasn’t ashamed to admit knowing things like this was what kept her business successful.
“You asked me some things earlier… about my people.” Taz started out. “The land doesn’t remain the same… and in a lot of ways, it's still reacting and adjusting for the Valterrian. In the way of the world, five hundred years isn’t that long. The desert isn’t going to be what it is now forever. It’s going to get a lot hotter and food is not going to be easy to find. I was told this by a Priest of Xyna in The Outpost. He said I was… separated from my people because I was meant to come here and see if a Benshira could thrive. I suspect we know the answer to that now… and that by being here, I’d be a gatekeeper and pave the way for others to come.” She said softly. “It’s a big responsibility, but if it means the Kois will survive, then they will be the first to make the move… what’s left of them anyhow.” She said softly.
Still raking, still moving along the bank, away from where she’d ravished it into new fresh wet clay, she began digging again. “I don’t know my grandfather… not my real one. His soul is trapped in an Hourglass and a monster lives in his body. He’s systematically killed off most of my people, leaving only the really useful alive. Coming here, for them, would be a fresh start and a way to leave the desert early before their children and their children’s children suffer from drought and famine.” Taz said softly, offering Kam a smile and nodding encouragement when she saw she found clams as well.
“I don’t think the issue is as bad for non-humans like Chaktawe who have … adaptations like you’ve said… to survive drought. Humans have nothing but their mind and their ingenuity. If you go to the desert, be careful there. There are things… well there are things everywhere really, but there… the struggle is closer to the surface and things are more dangerous. But you should learn, either way, because it sounds like it is your right by blood.” Taz added.
“I would think you can learn about your Konti form anywhere there are Konti… even here. One of the orphans is Konti. She might know more about her people.” Taz said, remembering that fact, but not which orphan was which.
“It was … as you said… very hard leaving Kaysen. I will see him again someday though. My sister said to trust his father. I have to believe I can and that he will be protected and loved until we can be together.” Taz said softly, then turned to grin at Kamilla.
Then she glanced over at Khari. She was keeping a watchful eye on her daughter, but her senses were wide open. “I’m a bard, she will be fine,” Taz said with confidence. “Most people think bards are folks that sing in Inn’s and at parties or celebrations, and that’s true to some extent. We love music and performing it, but it's so much more than that. Rhaus is the heartbeat of the world. Everyone has a musical signature, a sound that is all their own. It’s present in how they move, how they think, and what they feel. Rhaus’ marked understand this… and we take sound to a whole new level. I’m twice marked by him… perhaps because of my Benshira blood or perhaps because of my mission here to pave a pathway… but I can hear for miles. I can communicate with other bards long distances as well. And to us, sound is a weapon. You can shatter someone’s eardrums with the right note sung the right way… you can also cause their brain to hemorrhage and kill them. Bards can see with sound… its called Ultrasound… we can feel the sound pressure waves in the atmosphere and if we send them out they bounce back with a sound wave image that can reveal things like enemies. It’s not a good picture, but it gives us some idea of what is out there. Bats can see in the complete dark with sound… but they have faces to interpret what they hear. Humans do not. If I learned morphing more and could shapeshift my face into that of a bat, it would come in ever so handy with Audius.” Taz said, giving it some thought.
“We have infrasound which travels long distances. It‘s low frequency, but it allows us to see things not visible to the naked eye… even things like ghosts. It travels right through walls, so it allows us to communicate really far distances.” Taz grinned.
“We can mimic sounds too… tone and pitch of voices, replicate birdsong as long as it's in our normal range of hearing. We can also dampen the sound by creating a sound that cancels it. It’s handy to have when you want to have a secret meeting and one of you is a bard.” She added, not mentioning if a bard was dampening, they actually couldn’t be doing anything else, like talking. It made one-on-one meetings vulnerable… but in a group it was golden.
“I can sing silently and tell you the range to an enemy accurately. And I can make music a weapon… since we can sense the vibrations of things… we can twist those vibrations and do damage to a person’s body on the physical level or even do things like making a stone wall made of brick collapse. Rhaus is a super weapon, and his bards are an army unto themselves.” She said with a grin and glanced back at Khari. “She’s pretty safe with me. And I know you with your scales and your Konti nature can probably feel the water yourself… tell if anything big is lurking In it…you should be really sensitive to motions in the water on your skin. Konti are, you know…. Riverfall was full of them. But if your form is new to you, you might not know how much you can sense in the water. You aren’t toothed fearsome creatures, so I suspect you have built-in options for being safe and escaping.” Taz said, her voice speculative.
“So while you might be impressed, it's all borrowed magic from the Gods… a lot of it at least. Strip all that off, I’m not that interesting.” Taz added, with a grin. “Unless you like cooking… I’m a good cook. There’s no borrowed divine magic there... just hard work and practice.” Taz said.
She added another two big clams to her bag, which was getting quite full now. “Seen enough? You are wet, muddy, and tired. And I have my food for the Inn tomorrow if you let me have whatever clams you don’t want to eat. I’ll mix up a big pot of chowder and everyone will be quite happy… .that is if there’s milk. Mathias tried to tell me my cow was dry, but he’d been milking her all along.” She said, grinning.
Tazrae was more than willing to lead her out of the water, give her a towel from her backpack to dry off with – and one for herself – and be ready to head back.
“Kamilla. I think we can be great friends. Will you tell me more about yourself? I’m really curious about what you like to do for fun and what maybe some of your hobbies are. Maybe we could start doing some more things together?” She asked, wondering if it was too soon to extend the flag of friendship. But it never hurt to hope, did it?
Words: 2060
It was a great time to teach.
Like everything else in Syka, the water was warm, yet refreshing… cooler than the outside air temperatures, but not by much. It felt deliciously good, with almost no current. There was a pull, but it was slight, as if someone could drop a leaf onto the water and it might lazily, in a few chimes, sail past the observer. “The Syka River is what we call low gradient. It doesn’t travel down elevations much, so it winds and is a slow sluggish beast.” Taz told Kamilla. The woman had asked her a lot of questions, but she refrained from answering until they got into the water properly.
Taz was careful and attentive, but not hovering… noting that Kamilla was probably far more content in the water – and more importantly safe – in her Konti form than Tazrae was in her human body. It was nice, not having to make sure Kam didn’t drown when they waded to the far bank, finding themselves shoulder deep in water. “This is almost the perfect location.” Taz commented, then showed Kamilla her hands. “Make claws like this… and face the far bank. See how in time of flood the water washes this bank clean, making it almost a cut-bank? That’s what you need for finding freshwater clams in a river like this. Face the wall… in the deepest part… which should be easy for you. Luckily our water is down and I don’t have to try and make it work underwater with holding my breath… but this level.. its great.” She said, reining in her words. She was almost babbling now.
“The clams like to burrow into the bank, which helps further undermine it, making the river bigger over time. More clams mean a wider ever-changing river bed, in the course of things, and so they do the water a favor by keeping its banks unstable and soft enough that high water events open the river up.” Taz said, looking at the water thoughtfully. She’d learned this after being magically kidnapped by a goddess and dumped into an environment where she’d been naked, afraid, and forced to survive. “Finding them is easy…. Just make claws with your hands…” Taz lifted hers out of the water and arched her fingers into what could be considered a claw like motion, and mimicked digging into the bank, raking her fingers down the dirt. She demonstrated out of the water above the waterline where Kam could see. “You’ll feel them with your fingers. Just grab anything that feels like a rock or clam.. and after you rake a few in, you’ll be feeling the difference… toss them in the mesh bag, and I’ll have something for supper tonight or tomorrow night at the Inn.” She grinned.
Kam was in for a surprise.
Taz moved closer, almost laying against the high far bank, and began raking her fingers through the mud. She had to dunk under a few times, holding her breath, but she indeed found clams. They weren’t the small buttery clams of the coast either. They were huge freshwater clams the size of her fists. She found two on her first pass and literally decided they’d found a treasure trove of the bivalves the moment she dropped them into her mesh bag.
“See what I mean?” She asked feeling other debris lodged up in the solid wall of the bank too. But after just moments, Taz could tell the difference between a stone, a piece of river debris, and a clam. “If you get lost somewhere with nothing, pray it's in the jungle. There is literally food everywhere.” Taz commented as she used this opportunity to harvest for the next meals she’d need to make at The Inn. She fed a lot of people there, and she wasn’t ashamed to admit knowing things like this was what kept her business successful.
“You asked me some things earlier… about my people.” Taz started out. “The land doesn’t remain the same… and in a lot of ways, it's still reacting and adjusting for the Valterrian. In the way of the world, five hundred years isn’t that long. The desert isn’t going to be what it is now forever. It’s going to get a lot hotter and food is not going to be easy to find. I was told this by a Priest of Xyna in The Outpost. He said I was… separated from my people because I was meant to come here and see if a Benshira could thrive. I suspect we know the answer to that now… and that by being here, I’d be a gatekeeper and pave the way for others to come.” She said softly. “It’s a big responsibility, but if it means the Kois will survive, then they will be the first to make the move… what’s left of them anyhow.” She said softly.
Still raking, still moving along the bank, away from where she’d ravished it into new fresh wet clay, she began digging again. “I don’t know my grandfather… not my real one. His soul is trapped in an Hourglass and a monster lives in his body. He’s systematically killed off most of my people, leaving only the really useful alive. Coming here, for them, would be a fresh start and a way to leave the desert early before their children and their children’s children suffer from drought and famine.” Taz said softly, offering Kam a smile and nodding encouragement when she saw she found clams as well.
“I don’t think the issue is as bad for non-humans like Chaktawe who have … adaptations like you’ve said… to survive drought. Humans have nothing but their mind and their ingenuity. If you go to the desert, be careful there. There are things… well there are things everywhere really, but there… the struggle is closer to the surface and things are more dangerous. But you should learn, either way, because it sounds like it is your right by blood.” Taz added.
“I would think you can learn about your Konti form anywhere there are Konti… even here. One of the orphans is Konti. She might know more about her people.” Taz said, remembering that fact, but not which orphan was which.
“It was … as you said… very hard leaving Kaysen. I will see him again someday though. My sister said to trust his father. I have to believe I can and that he will be protected and loved until we can be together.” Taz said softly, then turned to grin at Kamilla.
Then she glanced over at Khari. She was keeping a watchful eye on her daughter, but her senses were wide open. “I’m a bard, she will be fine,” Taz said with confidence. “Most people think bards are folks that sing in Inn’s and at parties or celebrations, and that’s true to some extent. We love music and performing it, but it's so much more than that. Rhaus is the heartbeat of the world. Everyone has a musical signature, a sound that is all their own. It’s present in how they move, how they think, and what they feel. Rhaus’ marked understand this… and we take sound to a whole new level. I’m twice marked by him… perhaps because of my Benshira blood or perhaps because of my mission here to pave a pathway… but I can hear for miles. I can communicate with other bards long distances as well. And to us, sound is a weapon. You can shatter someone’s eardrums with the right note sung the right way… you can also cause their brain to hemorrhage and kill them. Bards can see with sound… its called Ultrasound… we can feel the sound pressure waves in the atmosphere and if we send them out they bounce back with a sound wave image that can reveal things like enemies. It’s not a good picture, but it gives us some idea of what is out there. Bats can see in the complete dark with sound… but they have faces to interpret what they hear. Humans do not. If I learned morphing more and could shapeshift my face into that of a bat, it would come in ever so handy with Audius.” Taz said, giving it some thought.
“We have infrasound which travels long distances. It‘s low frequency, but it allows us to see things not visible to the naked eye… even things like ghosts. It travels right through walls, so it allows us to communicate really far distances.” Taz grinned.
“We can mimic sounds too… tone and pitch of voices, replicate birdsong as long as it's in our normal range of hearing. We can also dampen the sound by creating a sound that cancels it. It’s handy to have when you want to have a secret meeting and one of you is a bard.” She added, not mentioning if a bard was dampening, they actually couldn’t be doing anything else, like talking. It made one-on-one meetings vulnerable… but in a group it was golden.
“I can sing silently and tell you the range to an enemy accurately. And I can make music a weapon… since we can sense the vibrations of things… we can twist those vibrations and do damage to a person’s body on the physical level or even do things like making a stone wall made of brick collapse. Rhaus is a super weapon, and his bards are an army unto themselves.” She said with a grin and glanced back at Khari. “She’s pretty safe with me. And I know you with your scales and your Konti nature can probably feel the water yourself… tell if anything big is lurking In it…you should be really sensitive to motions in the water on your skin. Konti are, you know…. Riverfall was full of them. But if your form is new to you, you might not know how much you can sense in the water. You aren’t toothed fearsome creatures, so I suspect you have built-in options for being safe and escaping.” Taz said, her voice speculative.
“So while you might be impressed, it's all borrowed magic from the Gods… a lot of it at least. Strip all that off, I’m not that interesting.” Taz added, with a grin. “Unless you like cooking… I’m a good cook. There’s no borrowed divine magic there... just hard work and practice.” Taz said.
She added another two big clams to her bag, which was getting quite full now. “Seen enough? You are wet, muddy, and tired. And I have my food for the Inn tomorrow if you let me have whatever clams you don’t want to eat. I’ll mix up a big pot of chowder and everyone will be quite happy… .that is if there’s milk. Mathias tried to tell me my cow was dry, but he’d been milking her all along.” She said, grinning.
Tazrae was more than willing to lead her out of the water, give her a towel from her backpack to dry off with – and one for herself – and be ready to head back.
“Kamilla. I think we can be great friends. Will you tell me more about yourself? I’m really curious about what you like to do for fun and what maybe some of your hobbies are. Maybe we could start doing some more things together?” She asked, wondering if it was too soon to extend the flag of friendship. But it never hurt to hope, did it?
Words: 2060