“Thank you…” and then she was gone, and Tobias was alone in the cabin.
Tobias might have slept - the exhaustion certainly was there - if not for the increasingly angry sea that set Lacerta’s boat oscillating. And then there were his thoughts floating around him like so many flies, angry and hopeful and sad all at the same time. He didn’t know what to think about his bag, his rescue, his fate – all of it. On the one hand, even if he lost the bag, Tobias was already extremely lucky. The Suvan Sea was so wide that one could lose sight of the shore and see nothing but sea for many miles, and yet somehow this child of Syna had come across him and the wreckage.
But on the other hand, he wasn’t forgetting that he had killed the one he loved anytime soon-
Suddenly, there was an exclamation, shattering his reflection like glass. “I found it!” was what Lacerta said.
Tobias looked up. He saw the horned woman standing there, his bag in one hand, and felt relief pour down his throat. He smiled as she approached. In a second the worry and the stress had fled from the lines of his face.
“Thank you,” Tobias murmured, picking up the bag from where Lacerta had placed it. “I, just…thank you so much. For everything.”
He clutched the bag close to his chest. It was wetter than he remembered, but the sharp outlines of the objects within, nearly cutting through the bag – now that was familiar. Tobias sighed in relief.
“Now,” he said softly, turning and sitting down on the bunk beside his rescuer. “Ask me your questions, friend.”
Tobias might have slept - the exhaustion certainly was there - if not for the increasingly angry sea that set Lacerta’s boat oscillating. And then there were his thoughts floating around him like so many flies, angry and hopeful and sad all at the same time. He didn’t know what to think about his bag, his rescue, his fate – all of it. On the one hand, even if he lost the bag, Tobias was already extremely lucky. The Suvan Sea was so wide that one could lose sight of the shore and see nothing but sea for many miles, and yet somehow this child of Syna had come across him and the wreckage.
But on the other hand, he wasn’t forgetting that he had killed the one he loved anytime soon-
Suddenly, there was an exclamation, shattering his reflection like glass. “I found it!” was what Lacerta said.
Tobias looked up. He saw the horned woman standing there, his bag in one hand, and felt relief pour down his throat. He smiled as she approached. In a second the worry and the stress had fled from the lines of his face.
“Thank you,” Tobias murmured, picking up the bag from where Lacerta had placed it. “I, just…thank you so much. For everything.”
He clutched the bag close to his chest. It was wetter than he remembered, but the sharp outlines of the objects within, nearly cutting through the bag – now that was familiar. Tobias sighed in relief.
“Now,” he said softly, turning and sitting down on the bunk beside his rescuer. “Ask me your questions, friend.”