Date: 56th of Summer
Time: Late-Morning
Continued From
HereTrevor's sore and somewhat skint up hands slipped across and undid the knots of the ropes that held the lumber pile together. First, he untied the timer hitch; being the knot that had allowed he and Randal to drag the timber, but not being the one that held the pile together, the logs were relatively unaffected when Trevor loosed the utilitarian knot.
Moving on from the front of the pile and the undone timber hitch, Trevor approached the middle of the fastened together and somewhat-thin trees. The knot that held the pile together was a double fisherman's -- a mostly simple knot that was actually
two knots that were tied with a single rope, with each knot on the rope serving to pull against and provide tension and strength to the other. Each of the knots of the double fisherman required Trevor's separate attention in unfastening; the knot that he had to untie first was, of course, the last knot that he'd tied -- this gave the inexperienced young man a bit of trouble at first, but after a few moments of fiddling with the wrong knot he caught on to his beginner's mistake and was soon well along into undoing both of the double fisherman's knots.
The lumber pile came apart with a series of rustling and rolling thuds. The ten or so trees within the pile were all somewhat tall, but still relatively light and thin when compared to most of Falyndar's massive and gigantic flora; thus, being as lacking in weight as they were, the individual pieces of lumber bounced, fell apart from one another, and flexed a bit as the rope that had been holding them tightly for some time finally released its tension.
"What do you want to do with the rope?" Trevor asked Randal, as the trees of the lumber pile settled onto the sand of the beach and on top of each other.
The carpenter that the young man spoke to had finished ruffling through his backpack, which he had left sitting in the sand, and had unrolled a large, leather bundle of tools over the ground in front of himself. As his companion spoke to him, Randal withdrew two small, handheld, and portable saws from atop the unfurled tool-kit.
"We can just leave it for now," Randal said, as he rose to his feet, leaving his tool kit on the sand where he'd unrolled it. "We can roll them up once we get through with the wood that they're sitting under."
The carpenter and wildsman approached Trevor and offered him on of the saws. The young man took the older man's tool readily enough; Randal had already introduced him to an axe earlier in the day and now it seemed that he would be learning the working of another tool's proper usage. Trevor could see the value and use in pratical skills -- a value that he was coming to respect more and more for each day that he lived in the small and undeveloped settlement of Syka -- and thus he didn't mind receiving Randal's expert tutelage.
"Thank you," Trevor replied in response to taking the borrowed saw.
Randal reached for one of the felled trees of the timber pile that Trevor has recently unbound. Seeing the carpenter grasping for one of the trees, Trevor grabbed the log along with the man, helping him to hoist and to carry the wood a few feet away. Together the two men hefted up and sat the tree that Randal had selected onto the sand, a noticeable distance away from the pile that it had been sitting atop.
Seasonal Wordcount: 601 + 27,790 = 28,391