Zi'da 27, 717
Sometime in the late afternoon
Pash hadn't expected to still be on Scalvoris Island this far into the season of Zi'da, but the Immortals, it seemed, had other plans. Uncomfortable, cold, snowy plans that stole his breath and promised to make the evening one that required staying warm and comfortable in bed. Not that such an idea was a bad one at all, but the weather was foul and it was impossible to know when it would be clearing up enough to make it out of the harbor and head toward Rynmere. If the snow and bitter cold here was any indication, the seafaring musician knew that sailing past Viden would be worse.Doubt thou the stars are fire,
Doubt that the sun doth move,
Doubt truth to be a liar,
But never doubt I love.
William Shakespeare
Hamlet, Scene 2, Act 2
Still, the urge to move tugged at not only his heart, but the heart of his dark-haired huntress, the whispers from her familiar calling to her in her dreams. It was time, for all of it they'd already spent here had been a crucible of sorts, and a beautiful, strange one at that. The tall Biqaj had met the Sevir huntress in the Square, they'd adventured, they'd made friends, they'd been favored by Immortals, sharing U'Frek's and learning their abilities granted through such curious gifts. They'd thought they'd said their goodbyes, and yet here they lingered, snow and ice making travel dangerous, Pash now waiting on a spare set of sails and some better quality rigging just for the bitter cold.
"Tomorrow," Friell persisted to the tall Biqaj leaning against his warm wood counter inside of The Spirit of Adventure, "Tomorrow everything should be delivered from Almund and Egilrun. You've seen the snow, right?"
"Ze, I've seen 't." Pash sighed, restless and disappointed, his Empathy-stained fingers sliding from the counter, "A'ight, then, I'll be back t'morrow. Thanks again, Friell."
"Come later in the day, eh? Are you still playing at Cally's?"
"I'm no'. If th' snow'd give me jus' a bit 'r two o' room, I'd be in th' Square. We'll see. I miss 't." The seafaring musician rolled his sea-built shoulders in a shrug, readjusting the ever-warm cloak over the yellow dragon wood lute the man reminded him he was wearing, so comfortable had the masterwork instrument become that he hardly thought about it until it was in his hands, "Might get a bit o' playin' in b'fore th' sun sets yet."
He grinned and waved, knotting away the threads of disappointment and annoyance that wove their way uninvited into his tangle, cutting away the frustration before he really felt it. Opening the door to the Spirit of Adventure and back onto Scalvoris Town's busy streets slapped him in the bearded face with cold and he hissed but didn't bother with his hood. The snow had stopped, thank the Immortals, but everything was freshly coated in a few inches of fresh, chilled powder.
Still, the Square would be busy regardless of the weather and so Pash headed that way just because he wasn't quite ready to head home, especially not empty handed for the third trial in a row. Eager for his sails, the hull of his chest felt heavy, taking on the bilge water of doubt. They should have left in Vhalar, but they didn't. So much had happened, and here they were, stranded. Blaming himself, Pash did his best not to frown, but as the view of the frozen, ice-coated fountain of Scalvoris Center Square came into view, Pash smiled wistfully, exhaling in the cloud of his breath all of the negativity that had crowded his thoughts for just a handful of bits.
There were a few vendors and their wares, even a few food carts. The square had been carefully cleared of snow by city slaves with shovels, though a fresh dusting clung to where people rarely walked. The square wasn't too crowded. Given the late afternoon, the sun setting already and casting long shadows, there were enough townsfolk around that surely needed a song or two. So Pash made his way to the fountain as was his usual habit, a biting breeze catching stray strands of his sea-bleached hair that was pulled back and tugging at the edges of his always warm cloak. Rubbing his calloused palms together and pausing to huff a cloud of hot breath against them to warm them, he slid his lute off his shoulder, taking hold of the instrument with a very comfortable familiarity.
As he did so, a few of the food vendors and two of the merchants smiled. One waved. They knew him by now, visibly surprised to see the tall Biqaj out in the freezing weather. The cold gnawed at his bare hands and stung his face, but it was bearable under his cloak and warm wool shirt, bearable despite the cramped discomfort of boots he only wore in town. It was nothing, really, compared to sailing, and so he simply let the cold thrill his tanned, inked skin and keep him feeling alive. His eyes fluttered shut for but a trill, finding his focus in the weight of his lute and the depths of his feelings for a particular dark-haired huntress, letting the warmth of his heartfelt existence favored by Zanik and U'Frek fill him against the Zi'da chill.
Then, he played.
The tune was a liquid one, like a swift current followed by trade ships deep in the Orm'del sea. Those that heard it would half expect the snow around the salty bard to melt, so heated was the tune like the hot springs on Faldrass, but his music didn't change the weather so much as fill the hearts of all who listened with a surreal and palpable feeling of calm and warmth. His tide pool gaze swept the Square, lingering on familiar faces, curiously exploring the new ones braving the cold, and he strummed the courses of his lute in hopes of bringing some seasonal cheer to all who could hear as they passed by or lingered.
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SURPRISE, Scalvfriends! Mwuahahaha.