5th of Summer 511 AV Sound surrounded the young man. He could close his eyes and form a scene around him. Doing just this, the man started to turn in a semi-circle, his face raised to the sky, he let the music of every-day life consume him. A child's cries of glee as he ran from a squealing girl. A merchant's grunt as he paused in the middle of haggling with a woman over the price of... a horse. The wind rustling the sides of a massive tent. The dull thud of a faraway arrow finding its mark in a training dummy. A woman arguing with her man, letting the whole world know how dissatisfied she was with him as a man. If he was a man at all. A drunk brazenly telling anyone who would listen how he had single-handedly taken down three glassbeaks. If you listened even closer, a picture would form. A picture of a blue sky, a stiffling heat, and an active market place. The city of the famed Drykas was busy as the trade season between Endrykas and Syliras reached its peak. Foreigners where certainly not anything out of the ordinary as the Drykas went about their business. Yet, one traveller wasn't like the rest. Unlike the myriad of people around him, he.. had no business. Rescued by a Drykas hunter, Matthial found himself in the absolute last place he expected to be. Among the noble horseclans of the plains. He knew nothing of them or their culture. He wasn't sure what to do. Catch a caravan heading back? Try to glean some information on the inverted claw? Matthial brought a gloved hand to his cloak latch, and moved to a nearby bench. First business was to get his cloak off. It was unbearably hot. Taking off the cloak, the pack, and his shield, he started to re-adjust everything while sitting on the bench. He made for a striking figure. A young man dressed in chainmail with a white sur-coat, with a longsword at his side, and a shield strapped to his pack. The most striking feature was the face. Long black hair framed the sides like a veil, and a long scar covered the bridge of the nose. The temple was bloodied, and was starting to clot. The expression was dark, putting a tint of somberness to an otherwise happy day in the market. Reaching into his pack, Matthial withdrew an ornate flask, and unscrewed the top. Taking a long pull the man leaned back into the heavy material of the tent behind him, and let his mind wander. |