Date Summer 13, 510
Location Northern Suvan somewhere between Ryker's Point and Neemi Isle
He'd might as well have had his finger up his nose and beer in his eyes—or beer up his nose and someone else's finger in his eyes, for that matter—staring at the petching map for the upteenth time that evening.
Sprawled on the deck of his casinor, the young Svefra groaned frustratedly, resisting the urge to toss the parchment flapping in the breeze into the Suvan in a final fit of absolute helplessness. Rolling onto his back and raking calloused fingers over his face, Finian stared up through the rigging of his ship, lagoon-blue eyes searching the swiftly fading sky for any astrological assistance in his navigational crisis.
He was sure that just a glimpse of Neemi Isle simply had to be waiting to be seen over the undulating, watery horizon. He'd been mostly on course, he was sure of it. Well, mostly sure. Maybe sure. Somewhat sure. At least sure enough that he was headed toward the western side of the northern Suvan. Maps weren't really his strong point, much to the itinerant shipwright's Svefra-born chagrin. The heat of summer washed over his tanned skin in the form of a sunset breeze and Finian sighed heavily along with it.
Maybe he was lost.
Again.
What Svefra gets lost in the Suvan, anyway?
Only him, apparently.
He made boats, not maps, after all. He read the grain of wood, not someone else's chicken scratch on parchment. He should learn, sure, but he'd never really had to pay attention to maps on the Anchorage Flotilla ...
It was in moments like this that he contemplated returning to the Flotilla. Crawling back home like a sea slug or some otter with his tail between his legs.
"Petch that!" He hissed out loud to no one but Laviku, rolling to his feet with the help of the rough knots in his rigging, free hand crumpling the map into a rough rectangle, shoving it back into the inner pocket of his vest. Bare feet striding across his deck, he slid over the smooth, worn wood toward the starboard side, squinting against Syna's glittering, fading glare on the waves.
Nothing.
Not a single break in that line where the sea touched the sky.
Chewing the inside of his cheek to gnaw away at worry that began to swim to the surface underneath his churning frustration, Finian returned to his rudder, trailing fingers along the taut, familiar lines of rope keeping his sails in the wind and his casinor cutting sharply through the water at a decent enough speed.
But towards what?
The island was a useful landmark, a way of keeping the young man on course toward the Cavindau Fishing Grounds where he could most likely run into a pod or two of other Svefra. He could probably spend the first half of the summer there, bartering his skills for some food and friendship.
But he had to get there first!
One more bell, he decided, he'd stay this course for one more bell before attempting to reevaluate his meager navigational skills against the sunset. Maybe a few stars would show up against the darkening sky and he'd finally have something he considered remotely reliable to navigate by.
Something a little less opinionated than someone else's hand drawn map.
Just how many mizas had he wasted on that thing, anyway?
Settling against stern railing of his casinor and resting his left hand against the rudder, Finian resolved himself to keeping his sails taut in the fantastic breeze. With one last sigh, he let the last of the day's heat sink into his skin, soothing tense muscles, keeping his gaze hopeful against the horizon for even the faintest peek of something, anything, to help him confirm the trueness of his current direction.
Location Northern Suvan somewhere between Ryker's Point and Neemi Isle
He'd might as well have had his finger up his nose and beer in his eyes—or beer up his nose and someone else's finger in his eyes, for that matter—staring at the petching map for the upteenth time that evening.
Sprawled on the deck of his casinor, the young Svefra groaned frustratedly, resisting the urge to toss the parchment flapping in the breeze into the Suvan in a final fit of absolute helplessness. Rolling onto his back and raking calloused fingers over his face, Finian stared up through the rigging of his ship, lagoon-blue eyes searching the swiftly fading sky for any astrological assistance in his navigational crisis.
He was sure that just a glimpse of Neemi Isle simply had to be waiting to be seen over the undulating, watery horizon. He'd been mostly on course, he was sure of it. Well, mostly sure. Maybe sure. Somewhat sure. At least sure enough that he was headed toward the western side of the northern Suvan. Maps weren't really his strong point, much to the itinerant shipwright's Svefra-born chagrin. The heat of summer washed over his tanned skin in the form of a sunset breeze and Finian sighed heavily along with it.
Maybe he was lost.
Again.
What Svefra gets lost in the Suvan, anyway?
Only him, apparently.
He made boats, not maps, after all. He read the grain of wood, not someone else's chicken scratch on parchment. He should learn, sure, but he'd never really had to pay attention to maps on the Anchorage Flotilla ...
It was in moments like this that he contemplated returning to the Flotilla. Crawling back home like a sea slug or some otter with his tail between his legs.
"Petch that!" He hissed out loud to no one but Laviku, rolling to his feet with the help of the rough knots in his rigging, free hand crumpling the map into a rough rectangle, shoving it back into the inner pocket of his vest. Bare feet striding across his deck, he slid over the smooth, worn wood toward the starboard side, squinting against Syna's glittering, fading glare on the waves.
Nothing.
Not a single break in that line where the sea touched the sky.
Chewing the inside of his cheek to gnaw away at worry that began to swim to the surface underneath his churning frustration, Finian returned to his rudder, trailing fingers along the taut, familiar lines of rope keeping his sails in the wind and his casinor cutting sharply through the water at a decent enough speed.
But towards what?
The island was a useful landmark, a way of keeping the young man on course toward the Cavindau Fishing Grounds where he could most likely run into a pod or two of other Svefra. He could probably spend the first half of the summer there, bartering his skills for some food and friendship.
But he had to get there first!
One more bell, he decided, he'd stay this course for one more bell before attempting to reevaluate his meager navigational skills against the sunset. Maybe a few stars would show up against the darkening sky and he'd finally have something he considered remotely reliable to navigate by.
Something a little less opinionated than someone else's hand drawn map.
Just how many mizas had he wasted on that thing, anyway?
Settling against stern railing of his casinor and resting his left hand against the rudder, Finian resolved himself to keeping his sails taut in the fantastic breeze. With one last sigh, he let the last of the day's heat sink into his skin, soothing tense muscles, keeping his gaze hopeful against the horizon for even the faintest peek of something, anything, to help him confirm the trueness of his current direction.