5th of Winter 514AV
OOCAt the time of writing a reverse personality curse lingers over Riverfall. This is why Timothy behaves much unlike the kind, honest character he usually is and instead acts bitterly and thief-like.
Timothy peered into the horizon, that faint blue line separating heaven and earth. Even so far up the cliff, he could hear the seagulls squawk below as they circled the galleons docked there, white sails lit up by the harsh sunlight. His belly produced a low growl, like an angry dog. It had been two days since his release and his single miza had been reduced to mere coppers. Six silver mizas had gone into paying for a small room, four to pay for the last two nights, and two he had foolishly spent on a simple meal. Having already paid Nystir for yet another night, that had left him with only two silvers, most of which had gone into buying bread. With only eight coppers remaining and a mouth dry as cork, there was nothing else for it.
Sauntering down the meandering alleys, he made his way to the bazaar he’d discovered a day earlier. Nestled between low stone walls and somewhat hidden from sight, Timothy had almost walked past it if it hadn’t been for the warm smell of freshly baked bread wafting up the streets. Even with the sun on its descent, there still were many people about, their warm breaths mingling with the fumes that lingered like a heavy fog.
The slightly undersized overcoat handed to him by a young Kuvan did little to protect against the stinging cold, and Timothy hugged himself tightly as he went by the stands. It was a good thing, he considered, that his hair hadn’t been cut since two months past, blonde strands reached just short of his brows and covered his glowing red ears. He’d layered two tunics on top of each other but the salty wind still gnawed at his ribs and bit at his exposed ankles. In Kenash, his woolen three-quarters’ had often been too hot, and now they were just as useless.
Remembering where the baker had his stand, Timothy weaved through the sea of legs and torsos. With a little luck he could just walk by, grab a bottle of milk and blend back into the crowd like so many boys his age did back in Sunberth. If they can do it, I can too, he tried to persuade himself. But as he approached the stand his heart dropped below his worn-out shoes and he quickly averted his eyes from the gruff Akalak that guarded it, heat flushing his cheeks. I can’t just walk up there and take it… his better side pleaded as he stepped back into the crowd. But I can’t drink from the sea either, and I don’t want to beg. The Akalaks had already given him his freedom, to ask more of them would be downright ungrateful, and to steal would be even worse! Yet he couldn’t think of another way to quench his thirst. The sailors hadn’t wanted him, not even as a swabber boy, they probably thought him some frail little twig that’d be blown over starboard when the winds would swell the sea. After their rejection, Timothy hadn’t yet mustered the courage to seek employment elsewhere. Adults weren’t to be trusted after all, they only ever sought to use him and fill their own pockets. No more, Timothy gritted his teeth, I’ll hold my own now. I’ve survived Sunberth and I’ve survived Jed Radacke, I’ll survive this city too!
Circling back around, the baker’s stand came into view yet again. A dozen bottles of milk stood shelved on a pair of barrels with a board over it. It’s easy. I just need to walk by, keep my head down, and reach out…. He broke free from the slowly moving crowd and joined an elderly man with a walking stick.
“I’ll have three of those warm buns…” he could hear the man say. Timothy shot a glance at the baker, he was busy with the greybeard’s order. Now…
"...and a fruitcake please."
"For the lady?" the baker's belly shook with laughter.
Just grab it... He stepped forward and looked the other way, his hand reaching blindly for one of the bottles…
“I only buy her the best," the old man replied. He grinned a near toothless grin, "Let's see, I’ll have your sourdough as well-“
“-Hey! Boy!”
Timothy froze on the spot. A lump blocked his throat. Turning around, his eyes met with the blue-skinned baker. “Aren’t you forgetting something?” the man spoke, his voice as coarse as his outstretched hand.
“H- How much?” Tim clutched the cold bottle to his chest.
The baker pointed towards the shelf, “Fresh Buffalo Milk, only 1SM”
Buffalo Milk… He groaned at his own stupidity.
“Well…?”
Timothy looked back up. He was a good three paces removed from the baker who, couldn’t easily escape his self-built prison of barrels, crates and breads, not in the least because the man had a circumference that would make it hard to turn without knocking half his wares over.
“I don’t have that much,” Timothy said in a last-ditch effort to escape in the inescapable.
“Then give it back. Come on boy, I don’t like dishonesty.”
The words pierced his heart and he very nearly obeyed. I am sorry…
Holding on to the priced bottle for dear life, Timothy spun around on his heels and made a run for it.
“Boy! Hey, come back here! Thief!” The shouts whipped at his back, but he paid the baker’s roars no heed. Heads turned, he heard a woman shriek as he bumped past her. If anything, the toe-curling shrillness of her voice made him run faster. Just keep on running…
But the crowd was like a wall, impenetrable and hell-bent on stopping him. A young Akalak reached out to stop him, his bony blue fingers grazing Tim’s shoulder, sending him off balance. His heart drummed in his ears as he felt the bottle slip.
Splash!
The costly white fluid stained the clothes of those near him, but Timothy didn’t look back. Panting, he bit through the sting in his chest. The bazaar’s entrance drew closer, but so did the voices of those chasing him and he thought he heard the heavy boot of a soldier behind him. Ducking underneath the intertwined fingers of a couple in love, Timothy leapt up the small steps and dashed out into the open street.
Left would lead him back up and slow him down, right would go down but he didn’t know those parts well.
“Hold it!” the soldier shouted. Timothy dashed to the left and sprinted down the street, making a sharp turn to his right as he went past Kulkukan’s. He couldn’t return there now, they would turn him in. Horrified and on his last legs, Timothy kept on running, hoping dearly that he would be able to shake his pursuers in the docks.