10th Day
Fall 523
Fall 523
Shiress stood still, watching the crowd ahead a bit hesitantly despite the small hand in hers attempting to tug her gently but persistently forward. It was early evening, with the sun dipping toward the ocean and painting the skies with hues of orange and red. Teki torches dotted the edges of the ample open space, casting dancing shadows into the crowd. Music filled the warm, salt-scented air somewhere off the side of a large bonfire that hosted a dancing circle.
There were many more faces, stranger's faces, in this Tenday crowd than in the last gathering, and the majority of them had something very in common with the doctor: they were ex-slaves. This wasn't what gave Shiress pause, though. What caused Shiress to stop and study the new faces was the rumor that many of them belonged to those who had enslaved the newly freed newcomers. Slavers. Masters. Those who had once chained and bound these people now hid amongst them, claiming to be one of them.
In the days following the Iron Tiger's unfortunate crash landing along the Sykan shores, the catastrophic event solely responsible for the spontaneous freeing of these slaves, Shiress had treated many of the survivors and, though they were quick to divulge the fact that many of their captors had survived the shipwreck also, they were not willing, or, rather, too scared, to point these captors out, despite Shiress's passionate cajoling.
The thought of mingling with these...slavers, being kind to them, speaking to them as if they were one of their own, unbeknownst of the monster hidden within, made Shiress's stomach hurt. She'd happily pluck each and every one of the petchers from Syka and personally hand-deliver them to Dira if she knew who they were.
Somehow, Ian had managed to start Shiress walking again and was doggedly leading her straight to the food table. Or, more specifically, the table of all things sweet, his wide green eyes fixed on a bowl of candied figs. Shiress firmly diverted the four-year-old to a table with chicken kabobs and fried potatoes instead. After filling up a plate for Ian and one for herself, Shiress found a nearby tree and lowered herself down, resting her back against its trunk, her son plopping down beside her with a kabob in each hand. Shiress smiled, determined to enjoy herself despite her uneasiness.