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The small boat from Vel Luin was one of the few that ever went to one of the archipelagos from the Cortosi Coast and sailed South along the shore of the Falwood. The Captain was from Asturias, the same island that couldn't boast more than two hundred inhabitants, and he had made his living from knowing the safest route to get to the island known for its dangerous high and low tide schedule. The locals seemed to be the only ones able to navigate it, with rumors about great sea mists overtaking intruders who tried to come to the island without a guide.
"My wife owns the only inn in town." Captain Carrera said. He was a quiet man who lived by doing less and speaking less to prolong one's life. His languid movements had made Everleigh suspicious of his skill at sea, but it seemed that Captain Carrera must have made a deal with the sea that granted him smooth waters. He had grown far more talkative as they neared their destination, and now, with Asturias in sight, it seemed he might say more than information about the wind or the time of day.
"Does she?" Everleigh stopped her nervous pawing at her forehead, trying to forget the tiny bumps that suited the Spine mountain range than an angry colony of zits that had appeared out of nowhere. She moved her blunt bangs over her forehead to hide the insecurity, but the sea breeze blew her hair back to reveal that Everleigh was dealing with a breakout that would shame most fifteen-year-olds. She knew stressing about it worsened, so she turned her head over her shoulder to the Captain, hoping for a distraction.
"Yes." He didn't even look back at Everleigh, keeping his gaze centered on his home. One of the three sailors aboard the ship cleared his throat as he came from the back to the front, checking the ropes around the mast. He paid the dreadlord and initiates no mind, although he kept glancing back out to the horizon. "I always come back home this time of year." The Captain said.
"Do you?"
"She'd change the locks on me if I didn't." For the first time in four days, she saw him grin, and this time, he looked down at her with some humor before his expression returned to its usual indifference. "The festival is in three days. My youngest always demands to stay up and watch the fireworks, but once it's over, she passes out. Someone's gotta carry her back." Everleigh smiled. More than a few times, she remembered her father carrying her in his strong, hairy arms and laying her down in bed.
"Isn't that why you ladies are here? For the festival?" The Sailor, Danca, asked.
"No," Everleigh answered honestly. "I didn't know there was a festival. Late Summer Solstice celebration?" Danca shook his head, coming over to the purple proctor. He leaned over, holding his hands behind his lower back in a simple clasp.
"We call it Espejo del Mundo. In three days, the sea and sky will become one. The horizon disappears-- you can't tell what is the sky and what is the ocean. It's one. People come from all over to experience it. The fireworks are the best part: If you look straight ahead or up or down, you see them everywhere." His hands helped paint the picture of the fantastical nature of the day. Everleigh couldn't remember hearing about such a thing or reading of it. She wondered if people came from all over to see it or if it was more local.
From a past lesson, Everleigh remembered that Asturias had been under a succession of many different rulers: from the tribal peoples of Aina O Ka La, the Cortosi zealots, some warlords of the Empire, Anirians, and even the elves in the Falwood. Asturians, as they liked to call themselves, were a vast melting pot of many different cultures (everything from their food to the language) that had effectively regained some of their freedom through a contract with Vel Anir that was more lucrative for the latter than the former.
"Viejito, your lady gonna bring out some of that golden pear wine, or am I gonna have to...." Everleigh turned her head to their destination, only partially listening to the banter between the sailor and the Captain. They hadn't asked why the Academy had sent out a proctor and two initiates to their quaint little island. Maybe she should have lied about them being there for the festival. However, she was confident that they would become aware of the real reason once the boat docked and the Captain and his crew returned to their families.
Everleigh Ebersol, Initiate Kristen Pirian, and Initiate Zinnia St. Kolbe were there for only one bloody reason. Under Academy orders, Asturias' peculiar parasite problem was to be handled by any means necessary. It was clear to the three women that if they deemed it essential for Vel Anir's safety, they had permission to annihilate anyone on the island. Natives or tourists didn't matter. Whoever stepped foot on Asturias was tainted, and this parasite must not return to Anirian soil.
"My wife owns the only inn in town." Captain Carrera said. He was a quiet man who lived by doing less and speaking less to prolong one's life. His languid movements had made Everleigh suspicious of his skill at sea, but it seemed that Captain Carrera must have made a deal with the sea that granted him smooth waters. He had grown far more talkative as they neared their destination, and now, with Asturias in sight, it seemed he might say more than information about the wind or the time of day.
"Does she?" Everleigh stopped her nervous pawing at her forehead, trying to forget the tiny bumps that suited the Spine mountain range than an angry colony of zits that had appeared out of nowhere. She moved her blunt bangs over her forehead to hide the insecurity, but the sea breeze blew her hair back to reveal that Everleigh was dealing with a breakout that would shame most fifteen-year-olds. She knew stressing about it worsened, so she turned her head over her shoulder to the Captain, hoping for a distraction.
"Yes." He didn't even look back at Everleigh, keeping his gaze centered on his home. One of the three sailors aboard the ship cleared his throat as he came from the back to the front, checking the ropes around the mast. He paid the dreadlord and initiates no mind, although he kept glancing back out to the horizon. "I always come back home this time of year." The Captain said.
"Do you?"
"She'd change the locks on me if I didn't." For the first time in four days, she saw him grin, and this time, he looked down at her with some humor before his expression returned to its usual indifference. "The festival is in three days. My youngest always demands to stay up and watch the fireworks, but once it's over, she passes out. Someone's gotta carry her back." Everleigh smiled. More than a few times, she remembered her father carrying her in his strong, hairy arms and laying her down in bed.
"Isn't that why you ladies are here? For the festival?" The Sailor, Danca, asked.
"No," Everleigh answered honestly. "I didn't know there was a festival. Late Summer Solstice celebration?" Danca shook his head, coming over to the purple proctor. He leaned over, holding his hands behind his lower back in a simple clasp.
"We call it Espejo del Mundo. In three days, the sea and sky will become one. The horizon disappears-- you can't tell what is the sky and what is the ocean. It's one. People come from all over to experience it. The fireworks are the best part: If you look straight ahead or up or down, you see them everywhere." His hands helped paint the picture of the fantastical nature of the day. Everleigh couldn't remember hearing about such a thing or reading of it. She wondered if people came from all over to see it or if it was more local.
From a past lesson, Everleigh remembered that Asturias had been under a succession of many different rulers: from the tribal peoples of Aina O Ka La, the Cortosi zealots, some warlords of the Empire, Anirians, and even the elves in the Falwood. Asturians, as they liked to call themselves, were a vast melting pot of many different cultures (everything from their food to the language) that had effectively regained some of their freedom through a contract with Vel Anir that was more lucrative for the latter than the former.
"Viejito, your lady gonna bring out some of that golden pear wine, or am I gonna have to...." Everleigh turned her head to their destination, only partially listening to the banter between the sailor and the Captain. They hadn't asked why the Academy had sent out a proctor and two initiates to their quaint little island. Maybe she should have lied about them being there for the festival. However, she was confident that they would become aware of the real reason once the boat docked and the Captain and his crew returned to their families.
Everleigh Ebersol, Initiate Kristen Pirian, and Initiate Zinnia St. Kolbe were there for only one bloody reason. Under Academy orders, Asturias' peculiar parasite problem was to be handled by any means necessary. It was clear to the three women that if they deemed it essential for Vel Anir's safety, they had permission to annihilate anyone on the island. Natives or tourists didn't matter. Whoever stepped foot on Asturias was tainted, and this parasite must not return to Anirian soil.
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