1 Winter, 510 AV. Afternoon
Thunder Bay Seasonal Closing
The boat fell into its groove with a reverberating thunk, and a collective heaving of breaths followed on its heels. The group dropped the ropes and headed down the beach to bring in the next one. Sai lingered behind, resetting her leather gloves over her palms and eyeing the tall structure. It housed the fishing ships over the icy season, one boat per skeletal cubicle, all stacked atop one another. The ground level had already been filled with the largest of the fishing vessels; today all they had to do was store the smaller ones. It was a pretty simple system. Use the runners to help drag the boat up from the shore, use pulleys to lift the boat to the proper level, and then swing it into the slot.
A glance over her shoulder assured her that the group was still working to get the boat up the runners. They, just like her, were bundled up tightly in knee high boots, thick bryda, several shirts, katinus, caps, and heavy scarves. It was one of the rare times when there were no glimpses of red hair to give away their race. No matter how hot they got from the physical labor, the self generated heat wasn’t enough to beat out the icy mist from the ocean. Better hop to, then, she thought with a wry twisting of her lips, glancing up at the thick beams. Her eyes slid over to the recently released ropes. They were attached to a boat that was guaranteed to weigh a great deal more than she.
Still, one was subjected to a firm tug before she pulled at the fingers of each glove, tucking them into her pockets. Confident in the anchor, the short woman latched onto the rope with a spry hop. It was thick in her palms, rough and easily gripped. Hand over hand, she ascended steadily, face turned up toward her goal and legs dangling with rhythmic swaying depending on which hand was reaching up for the next pull. Beneath the bulky form progressing smoothly upward, the rope danced and the end twitched across the churned snow. Sai paused, feeling the strength in her arms holding her with no sign of fatigue, and eyed the distance between herself and the ship that had provided the warm up exercise for this climb. Only one way to go.
Abs contracting, the clothing-bulked figure started swinging toward the boat, legs thrusting out and then dropping back. The pulley that made all of this possible clanked alarmingly and squealed. Surprised, Sai released her hold and flung the rope out of her way so she could fly toward the boat with wind-milling arms. This is why they scurry up the beams and not the ropes. The hard planks of the ship met the flight leader with a hollow thunk and she scrambled to gain a hold on the railing as she fell. The available options dwindled as her momentum shifted from forward to down, the railing was gone and the planks offered no help. Something caught under her armpit with a jolt and rubbed noisily along the material of her coat, guiding her fall backwards even as it cleared her arm and left her to free fall again. Glancing up, almost belatedly, it registered that the thing was a rope on the boat side of the pulley. Both hands scrabbled for it and one caught it by the fingertips.
Clutching it in a fist, her weight pulled more slack through the pulley and slammed her against the vessel again. She softened the collision with an outstretched leg. “Whew, that was close,” the Endal muttered, thanking her lucky stars and taking several moments to breathe. Rotating around, she peeked toward the shore, wondering if anyone had caught that blunder.
Shaking from the excitement of the miniature ordeal, Sai pulled herself over the railing of the boat and set about unhooking the ropes from it. Eventually, they were all dropped down to be used for the next ship that would rest in this column. Okay, moving on. Perching momentarily on the bow of the ship, the next storage spot was examined. Just gotta… Sai uncoiled and sprang over to the beam separating the two cubicles. And then… Hands held up next to her ears for balance, she walked toe-to-heel along the round wooden beam toward the front of the structure. Now… Hugging the corner support , she skirted around it to the front beam and carefully walked along it just as she had the first. The other corner support had the ropes coiled up and stored on. With little ado, they were pulled off and tossed down to be used on the boat her team was pulling into place at the moment. Tada!