Water. There was so much of it. It had been a staple of his childhood, never out of reach or out of stock, but in the recent past it had remained painfully elusive. For fifty days, he had collected and rationed and prayed to gods whose names he did not know. He had learned the hard way how to survive on occasional rains and stagnant pools. And here was a massive tub of it, steaming and clean, and not even for drinking. He did not realize he was staring until the Soothing Waters attendant took his trunk with a smile. “Hello there,” he said, “What can I help you with?”
Victor mumbled something even he did not recognize. He was confused. He thought he was walking into a place to buy a meal, or a room for sleeping.
He had approached a man at the start of the great stone road, who was standing around in armor and seemed to know his place. “I need... I’m looking for...” he stuttered, but could not find the words.
“At the end of the road, turn left. Big double doors. Can’t miss it.”
“At the end of the road, turn left. Big double doors. Can’t miss it.”
Now, the pleasant odor of warm water and soaps occupied his nose and his short attention. He probably should have been offended that he had been led to a bathhouse instead of a tavern or inn, but he was not any less grateful. His grip remained firm on the handle of his trunk as the man tried to take it away from him. He was unaware of the city’s honest reputation and it was his habit to distrust the service, but he knew enough to be civil. With the politest smile he could muster, Victor said, “It is water-proof. I would rather keep it.”
An obliging hand directed him elsewhere. He remembered pulling some coin from the bulky pouch at his side and the soft touch of a skinny young girl who helped him to the side of the pool. She tried to help him undress but he would not let her; his usually nimble fingers stumbled vainly over the buttons and the next thing he knew, the pleasant burn of the bath had enveloped him. There was nothing but the water in those moments, not the chatter of fellow bathers in his vicinity or the tinkle of a soap tray as it was set by his head. His eyelids were heavy but still he gazed forward, ignoring the churning hunger in his stomach, trying to appreciate the overwhelming comfort which he had not felt for so long.
To a mind outside his own, Victor was a short and scrawny thing. His skin did not seem accustomed with its proximity to his ribcage. He was pale for his race, except his face and hands, which were noticeably and unattractively sun-kissed. He briefly tainted the water with a layer of dark filth as he entered it. For a few chimes he stared, peculiarly unmoving, but finally he ducked under the water and allowed his aching pores their relief. When he emerged again, he rubbed the weariness from his face and shook the hair from his eyes. Then his hand found the soap. The next moments were filled with the vigorous scrubbing of his palms and fingers, his expression flat save for smallest trace weary resolve.