Timestamp: 11th of Fall, 523 A.V.
The day had dawned bright and moist. Dampness clung to everything, causing steam to rise as Syna’s light heated the cool jungle and liberated the night dew from the surface of everything where it clung and glittered like diamonds. Those diamonds shrank and vanished before her very eyes, turning to the actual breath of the wild. Taz could see it as she made her way to the Dovecote. The world breathed around her. The jungle was alive with sound, even as mist drifted around her feet and the mud everything grew into steamed, drying out in the fresh heat of the morning.
She was dressed casually. Her twins were with their aunt and their father. She had the Inn covered for a few days so she could spend some time at The Outpost trying to find what she was seeking. It was hard for her to put to words what that search was about. Taz was a Benshira raised apart from her culture, isolated, and not truly part of the bloodline she was born to. She had decided to make the trip to The Outpost to find a… teacher, a tutor… someone who was willing to not only teach her Shiber but about the culture. She had a good portion of her family in Syka now. Her twin sister was there, as too was her twin’s husband… but she was unwilling to ask them for help. She wanted her own lack somewhat concealed from them. She didn’t want their pity help or to even break up their reunion after so long apart.
Besides, things were awkward between Taz and her sister. She had, after all, given birth to her sister’s husband’s children. The twins weren’t her idea and certainly weren’t her fault. They were the result of a terrible situation where Nyle and Taz had been the victims of an ancient monster’s machinations. Despite all that, Taz was glad to have the babes. But she hadn’t quite figured out how Kami was reacting to the whole situation. Kami had welcomed the twins as her own when Taz would give them up. And Nyle was a good father. Kami couldn’t have children due to the actions of their grandfather who had lost his free will and his humanity to that same ancient monster that dwelled inside of him. Kami had been born with the gift of healing, something their grandfather frowned upon. He’d wanted a magic user. That was why he’d valued Taz so highly, and why her mother and father had hidden her away letting him believe Taz had died. Kami, raised and trained as a healer, was safe from his plotting and planning and had remained behind to grow up within their culture. Taz had been spirited away to Riverfall to be raised as an Innkeeper’s daughter. Thus separated, each hadn’t known about the other, until the day they’d met.
Syka had become something of an important destination to the Benshira. Taz had been told, by Xyna herself, that the desert was played out, its already limited resources all but gone. The tribes of Benshira in Eyktol fought over them like starving dogs fought over scraps. The tribes needed a new place to live, one that had room for all of them and the food and land they needed. Taz was needed, exactly where she was, to be a gatekeeper and a greeter of the lost and shattered people that were going to slowly come her way. But even as the Goddess had told her that, she knew she was woefully ill prepared for such a job. She couldn’t speak the language. She knew nothing of the culture. Her golden brown skin and her caramel curls spoke of her heritage, but she knew nothing of the Benshira. She’d have to learn and learn fast. The Outpost seemed like the only option.
Tazrae passed through the Dovecote, came out into the dry desert air, and took a breath that caused her to dry cough. She liked the wet of the jungle, with its moist air and its unique combination of green and growing meeting the salt of the sea. Here, there was nothing like that. Dry, empty, and taking its scent from the people that filled it… to Tazrae the outpost felt artificial.
She’d once passed through this gateway with Ialari, a Domineer. The woman had done something with a rune painted in Ialari’s blood on her forehead. For the time she wore that blood in that position, her third eye had opened and she’d seen The Outpost in the same way the Domineer Mage had seen it. The walls were not real. The stone was not real. The sky and the water and the booths all around them had not been real. They’d been scrolling spell work, glyphs even, of some sort of magic that painted everything with djed to seem real. The only real things in The Outpost had been the people, the goods, and the services they sold. The entire setting was artificial, a huge Divine Dominion that was subject to the Goddess’ whim. Time could move here however she wanted it too. She could collapse it at any time. She could expand it as well. Taz didn’t like being a bug in a Goddesses’ insect jar, clambering over a piece of cut grass like it was a real blade of vegetation.
Even now her skin crawled.
There were good things in The Outpost though. There were real trade goods, real people, and the exchange of knowledge. There were new experiences and places to go to get away from the reality of one’s life. Food was exquisite here, so too was the baths and the company that could be found or purchased. Tazrae hadn’t sampled everything The Outpost had to offer, but she tried to see new places and learn new things each time she visited.
If it was later in the day, Taz would have headed straight to the Wayward Minstrel. Razinor would probably be playing and she’d get to relax among her own kind. However, that venue tended to run late into the night and well into the wee morning hours. So right now, the patrons and employees would be sleeping off whatever the last nights activities had been. She’d head that way after sundown.
Until then, Taz decided to head to the spa for a long bath, maybe a trim for her hair and perhaps something could be done about her nails. Tazrae was lucky when she arrived at The Tranquility Spa. Luccia was available and didn’t mind giving her a trim, working on her nails, and then giving her a massage before she was sent to the baths. Taz needed it… especially the massage. There was only so much Luccia could do about her worker nails, but they were at least filed and looking less feral by the time the Sykian had gotten her hair trimmed and her unruly curls braided into one heavy weave plaited down the crown of her head to fall over one shoulder. The massage was well earned, and the Innkeeper was well able to relax in the deep warm waters of the spa.
Others had started trickling in as she soaked, wondering where first to look on her mission. Taz had sold her apartment here, so if her search lengthened, she’d have to grab some place to stay overnight. The young mage had no idea how long her search would take or even if The Outpost would hold what she searched for.
Benshira. She’d need to find them somewhere among the crowd. Sighing softly, Taz leaned back and closed her eyes. She was perched on the edge of one of the big communal tubs, resting on the seats that were carved beneath the waterline. The water felt divine.
Words: 1302