Private Affairs Timestamp: 54th Day of Spring, 516 AV Location: The Bronze Woods Intarus Molora was used to waiting. He remembered waiting for hours as a hunter, crouched and quiet and listening for his prey. He remembered waiting for his prize to cook, the twin smells of fire and success wafting lazily beneath his nose. And he remembered waiting to die. He was still waiting to die. Except now, he was down one arm and a job. His coin purse was lighter, his eyes were darker, and his patience was thinner. These days, he waited only for drink, for sleep, and for death. Intarus released a noisy belch and wiped his mouth heavily with the back of his right hand. The smell of stale beer permeated the air and oozed through the heavyset man’s sweat and clothes. It was two bells before noon, and he was half-sober. His therapist, if he had a therapist, would have called that progress. Intarus called it a damn shame. If it weren’t for the promise of coin, he wouldn’t have been standing outside the main gates of Syliras and squinting in the sunlight. But coin had been promised, and coin meant drink. So there he was, waiting on his two students to begin the hike out to the Bronze Woods. He had met one of his students in the Rearing Stallion two nights earlier. She was scaled like a fish, and pale as a ghost. She also had an annoying need to convince everyone of the merits of meditation - even for a one-armed failure of a man like himself (his words, not hers). The two had gotten into a lively debate, which ended when Intarus had promised to learn her stupid breathing exercise if she promised to attend a class of his own. He grinned a grin as lopsided as his limbs. The ale may have dulled his senses, but it hadn't dulled his wits. Thanks to his quick thinking, he now had two students. Two more than the zero he had yesterday, and the zero he had the day before. Smart was what he was. He had to, what? Spend a few bells in the woods digging for roots or teaching them to make a fire - or some other dinky skill the city-folk had never had the sense to learn? Then, he would be free to return to his favourite stool in his favourite tavern and order his favourite drink, or three. He patted his the brown tunic that covered his stomach. All that remained was for his students to arrive. . . . Ianthe never broke a promise. Not even an ill-conceived promise made in a darkened Syliran tavern. And especially not an ill-conceived promise that had the potential to bring in another meditation student. Still, she wasn’t without doubts - the primary doubt being whether or not the man would even remember their appointment. Ianthe’s clothes rippled in the breeze as she stepped outside the main gates and nodded to the pair of knights on duty. The konti wore classic Muran attire: all white, from cloak to blouse to pants. Leather sandals clad her feet - a luxury that suited the uncharacteristically warm spring morning. Sylirans pushed past her as she paused to search for her soon-to-be teacher, praying that she would recognize him without the haze of wine clouding her vision. Within moments, however, it became clear that luck was on her side. Few Sylirans lingered outside the walls. Of the ones that did, only one was older, male, one-armed, and belching. Yep, that’s the one. Ianthe hesitated, and steeled herself for the impending encounter: hours alone in the woods with a human whose name she couldn’t even remember. "Luck” was really not the right word for it. Ianthe swallowed and pressed on, making her way carefully over to the man’s side. “Hello,” she began in slow, stiff Common. “I am Ianthe. You were to teach me forest skills?” The man - Taurus? Totoro? - grunted in affirmation. “Aye. We’ll head out once the other one gets here.” …the other one? |