- Messages
- 47
- Character Biography
- Link
Imagine he would have to, for Learien gave him no hints on the matter. He lead Afanas along the docks heading east where the dept of the port grew deeper and the larger fishing and whaling vessels often parked to offload their latest bounty. Lining the inland portion of the dockyard were storage and processing facilities as well as larger warehouses.
Toward the end of the dockyard, a slew of smaller trade ships marked by a horned mermaid gently rocked alongside the docks. People milled about, and somewhere among them was the same komodo from the evening Afanas first met the redheaded Lady. Zeviir coordinated the movement of large crates and goods both on and off of his ships. Among those being lifted via nets from the ships and to the landing area before the warehouses were a slew of large, burnished barrels big enough that Afanas could have fit in them with room to spare.
On the warehouses themselves were carpenters shoring up the roof and structure of each. The chorus of saws and hammers putting timber to play echoed beyond the whistles and calls of the ships.
It was as busy as an anthill. Lear paused as several men pushed a cart past, loaded with wooden cases whose contents clinked and clattered.
Into the first warehouse they stepped, Lear's gaze panning through the area he'd left the Lady to her work and finding her vibrant red hair suspiciously missing. A whistle sounded from above, drawing his gaze up and that is where he spotted her standing on one of the many catwalks that ran the full length of the building.
"Good day, Mr. Afanas. Look what we found," she called down to him and gestured with a gloved hand toward the back where the workers had uncovered a nearly complete skeleton of a massive whale.
"And what are you going to do with that?" Lear asked.
"Make it into a chandelier, of course," Lorelei chuckled amusedly, "be a good Lad and help the men rig up the skull so I can pull it into place."
Toward the end of the dockyard, a slew of smaller trade ships marked by a horned mermaid gently rocked alongside the docks. People milled about, and somewhere among them was the same komodo from the evening Afanas first met the redheaded Lady. Zeviir coordinated the movement of large crates and goods both on and off of his ships. Among those being lifted via nets from the ships and to the landing area before the warehouses were a slew of large, burnished barrels big enough that Afanas could have fit in them with room to spare.
On the warehouses themselves were carpenters shoring up the roof and structure of each. The chorus of saws and hammers putting timber to play echoed beyond the whistles and calls of the ships.
It was as busy as an anthill. Lear paused as several men pushed a cart past, loaded with wooden cases whose contents clinked and clattered.
Into the first warehouse they stepped, Lear's gaze panning through the area he'd left the Lady to her work and finding her vibrant red hair suspiciously missing. A whistle sounded from above, drawing his gaze up and that is where he spotted her standing on one of the many catwalks that ran the full length of the building.
"Good day, Mr. Afanas. Look what we found," she called down to him and gestured with a gloved hand toward the back where the workers had uncovered a nearly complete skeleton of a massive whale.
"And what are you going to do with that?" Lear asked.
"Make it into a chandelier, of course," Lorelei chuckled amusedly, "be a good Lad and help the men rig up the skull so I can pull it into place."