Since coming to Zeltiva, Edreina had gazed upon the towering white Temple of Laviku with barely contained wonder. Long, freckled fingers trembled gently as she lay them upon one of the enormous raw coral pillars that lined the entrance of the temple. Simply standing there, fingers tracing over the lines in the coral stone left by creatures long dead, she felt at home...
The scent of the ocean danced through her hair, fingertips of air raising fine goosebumps across her honeyed skin. Gulls and Avikki cried in high, harsh voices, heralding her approach. Each time she crested a wave, her boat leapt before crashing back down onto the rolling surface of the Suvan, sending a salty spray into the whirling air that was quickly intoxicating Edreina. She could hear her people, their laughs and their voices like music. White sails more grand than the walls of any fortress were awaiting her. They flapped and billowed like arms waving her forward, urging her closer.
How long had it been since she had seen her home? Had set foot upon the smooth boarded decks of the Anchorage Flotilla? The chunk of coral in her hand carried more weight, a memento of her adventures she would soon be giving to her father. The sight of him grinning and pouring over a stone, proclaiming what had made its home and lived its life upon the porous surface was always a treat to Edreina. It was from him that she had inherited her love of caves and of the stones of the sea. Together they would gush about the beauty of a Suvan-worn coastline, while Surai... Surai would just sit and watch them, as would their mother were she around.
The life of a Svefra was liquid in every sense. People came and went, days passed, the ocean turned. But, her father and her brother were always figures she could rely upon, like the great pillars left untouched while their kin fell to time and to pounding waves...
Until now...
The thought snapped Edreina from her reverie. The stone in her hand had not been pried from an old reef; the salt in the air did not belong to the Suvan; the chattering of Fratavan wafting up from the docks did not belong to her people. Svefra they may have been but they were so different from those that inhabited the Anchorage. Had it truly been two seasons since she was last home?
The woman, so far from home and all that she knew, sighed and stepped into the Temple.
Immediately, she was overcome by a sense of awe. It was nearly impossible for her to refrain from dropping to her knees at the sheer strength that pervaded each and every surface. It was hard not to gaze up at the Temple's high ceiling and be anything but reminded of how small and insignificant one was when compared to the Sea Father. And this was all before she was fully able to take in the murals.
Color assaulted her senses, transcending sight until she heard the motion of the waves depicted, the thunder in the clouds, until she smelled the breeze dancing across the depicted surfaces, and until the electricity in the deep gray masses caused the finest haired on her dappled skin to rise like thousands of tiny zealots paying homage to their chief deity.
And then, finally, her eyes fell upon the portrait of Laviku himself. Unlike many of her brethren, Edreina had never been blessed with a visit from the Father and the gift of his second mark. And so, this was likely as close to the face of Laviku she was ever to come. His eyes held a humbling energy, like that of a looming hurricane, but the gentle crinkling around his eyes reminded her that, despite his fierce power, he was still Father to the Svefra. At this point, Edreina did fall to her knees, hands moving in a quick Fratavan gesture that touched her forehead and then her chest.
"By your glory and your might, Father Laviku..." she whispered in lilting Fratavan. "May my journeys yet to come be blessed. By the fury of your storms and the strength of your tides," her voice caught, overwhelmed by the power emitted by the temple itself. In that simple building, she abruptly felt as if she had been granted an Avikki to the throne of Laviku himself. "May I have the strength to face all obstacles..." She trailed off finally, a small smile gracing her lips. Her journey was not yet over, she knew, nor were her troubles - a certain pierced, brown-skinned face came to mind. But, something about the prayer uttered gave her soul a sense of peace.