Date: Spring 22, 505 AV
Anticipation tasted salty in his mouth, baptized sea-air filling his lungs with that intangible feeling. The Otani crested waves with eager energy, rising along the temporary spines of waves and falling along the dips in their sensuous bodies. The land loomed like a distant promise, the kiss of firm space beneath tired feet. Wrenmae had sailed to Denval with Tannus at his request, kept confined to his room till the call for land and port had gone up among the men. Perhaps the fallen Etaeful did it to spare the boy the reminder of his handiwork, men with listless gazes and hollow stomachs. Sickness carved a presence on their rigid bones and sun-taut skin, and Tannus had once seemed worried the ship would not make its destination.
Arms dangling from the side of the ship like appetizing bait, Wrenmae nearly jumped as nail caressed the back of his neck.
"When we make port," the airy tone of his captor and companion breathed, "You will have your freedom for two days time...after which I expect you at the docks."
Wrenmae shivered as that finger was followed by a hand, eerily pale and clutched possessively on his shoulder, "Don't make me come for you, boy. You have nowhere to go, marked as you are."
He swallowed back a response, the bite of sea taking his irritation from him. Denval loomed and with it, a brief reprieve from the fallen Tannus. As the ship swept into port, men seemed carved of wood as they leaped from the ship to secure the ropes and riggings. Three had died on the passage over to unexpected illness. The captain had called Tannus bad luck and would not admit him passage back to Alvadas. The ethaeful had only paid his passage and disembarked, leaving Wrenmae to take his own meager belongings and to step into the streets.
Denval towered above him, but nowhere near the hub of population Alvadas had been. Unfamiliar roads, routes, faces, and words crowded his young mind as the storyteller dashed from corner to corner. He sniffed out his lair, like a beast might, marking the passages and alleys as he passed them.
His stomach growled, a reminder Tannus had not left him with coin for the stay...meaning he'd have to rely on his usual methods of creating wealth to get much of anywhere.
Steeling himself, he made his way into an alley to drop his belongings behind a pile of refuse. It wasn't the best of hiding places, but he hadn't the time to find a better one and hunger gnawed at his innards like the scrabbling of a small animal trying to escape.
With practiced eyes he watched and waited...
Marks always revealed themselves in the first few moments of observation.
He'd just need to be careful.
Two days in Denval, a place as alien to him as the moon might have been...
Perhaps Tannus was testing him again.
Anticipation tasted salty in his mouth, baptized sea-air filling his lungs with that intangible feeling. The Otani crested waves with eager energy, rising along the temporary spines of waves and falling along the dips in their sensuous bodies. The land loomed like a distant promise, the kiss of firm space beneath tired feet. Wrenmae had sailed to Denval with Tannus at his request, kept confined to his room till the call for land and port had gone up among the men. Perhaps the fallen Etaeful did it to spare the boy the reminder of his handiwork, men with listless gazes and hollow stomachs. Sickness carved a presence on their rigid bones and sun-taut skin, and Tannus had once seemed worried the ship would not make its destination.
Arms dangling from the side of the ship like appetizing bait, Wrenmae nearly jumped as nail caressed the back of his neck.
"When we make port," the airy tone of his captor and companion breathed, "You will have your freedom for two days time...after which I expect you at the docks."
Wrenmae shivered as that finger was followed by a hand, eerily pale and clutched possessively on his shoulder, "Don't make me come for you, boy. You have nowhere to go, marked as you are."
He swallowed back a response, the bite of sea taking his irritation from him. Denval loomed and with it, a brief reprieve from the fallen Tannus. As the ship swept into port, men seemed carved of wood as they leaped from the ship to secure the ropes and riggings. Three had died on the passage over to unexpected illness. The captain had called Tannus bad luck and would not admit him passage back to Alvadas. The ethaeful had only paid his passage and disembarked, leaving Wrenmae to take his own meager belongings and to step into the streets.
Denval towered above him, but nowhere near the hub of population Alvadas had been. Unfamiliar roads, routes, faces, and words crowded his young mind as the storyteller dashed from corner to corner. He sniffed out his lair, like a beast might, marking the passages and alleys as he passed them.
His stomach growled, a reminder Tannus had not left him with coin for the stay...meaning he'd have to rely on his usual methods of creating wealth to get much of anywhere.
Steeling himself, he made his way into an alley to drop his belongings behind a pile of refuse. It wasn't the best of hiding places, but he hadn't the time to find a better one and hunger gnawed at his innards like the scrabbling of a small animal trying to escape.
With practiced eyes he watched and waited...
Marks always revealed themselves in the first few moments of observation.
He'd just need to be careful.
Two days in Denval, a place as alien to him as the moon might have been...
Perhaps Tannus was testing him again.