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There was a saying that Vida had remembered about the Vaknelle swamplands. Well, there were two, actually. When they first told her, she simply believed them to be exaggerations told by drunks and travelers to pass the time; not an uncommon thing to find in taverns.
"Where there is land, there is mud."
"The richest road with the poorest footing."
When she found herself on the road, she soon came to realize that there was plenty of truth in both sayings. The wetlands of the seemingly endless swamp that ran parallel to the forests of Falwood to their south boasted, by far, the worst roads she'd ever step foot upon. To a sellsword who spent nearly a decade travelling countless different, horrifyingly neglected routes? That was saying something.
There were months where her only companions were broken cobblestones and overgrown weeds; dirt paths and thoroughfares made only through the ruts of passing cart-wheels. And yet, never before had she encountered quite such an unpleasant, unrelenting source of frustration that made up the roads of the Vaknelle, and it just... never seemed to end. The horror beyond them would stretch on for days, still.
If not weeks, for every wheel that found its watery grave in a quagmire or hidden sinkhole took hours to replace.
Not that she could necessarily blame the wagon drivers when they lost their temper, and had silently commiserated every time their swears punctuated the humid air that was otherwise constantly abuzz with the unfaltering drone of a hundred different insects.
And there were all kinds of those; some that swam, some that flew on translucent wings, and more still that did both of these things with grotesque ease. But she couldn't put a single name to any of them, for she despised insects almost as much as she despised swamps. Now, more than ever.
Vida was watching one of them lose their temper now, as it happened.
There wasn't a great deal of entertainment to be found in a place like this, so she had to make do with watching the scene currently unfolding before her - a driver cursing while yet another wagon wheel was lost to the deceitful ground of a swamp that so cleverly hid its snares and tricks beneath broken paving stones and pitch-black layers of rotting sediment.
The man was an Allirian and she wasn't quite sure if he was weeping or not, for the humidity that stung her eyes did a fabulous job at preventing her from distinguishing whether one was crying or merely sweating. She wouldn't blame the man if he was.
In a few short days, she had long since surrendered trying to wipe away the salty beads of exertion from her forehead, instead opting for the much more sensible approach of simply enduring her suffering in miserable silence; only when it collected too heavily upon her brow for her to ignore did she finally force herself to smear the pooling perspiration from her flesh. And only then.
She did that now, so as to have a better view of someone else suffering for once.
Out of the six wagons winding their way through the Vaknelle, it just had to be the foremost carriage that had lost its wheel and axle both. Not to mention another oxen - who had rather admirably fallen to the wayside with little more than a noisy grunt of disapproval as it found itself entangled in both reins and the viscous morass of peaty earth on the land that flanked their pathetic little road on both sides. That meant that the carriage was nearly immovable; which meant that the rest of them were as hopelessly stranded as it was.
Why had it happened? Vida was genuinely curious, and as it was said, there were very few options for entertainment in this hell. Her first guess was a particularly awful pothole. The second? Possibly a pothole that had long since turned into a sinkhole, with the earth around the disused road gradually being swallowed up by the strangling fingers of the impossibly hungry marsh. Her third guess? The wrath of god, perhaps?
The list was extensive as it was inexhaustible, so she chose not to think too hard about it.
Oh, one of the drivers was actually pointing at her? Well, that was not going to fucking happen.
There was another bout of swearing behind her newly turned back as she promptly wandered away to discover something more interesting than the dismal prospect of idle, dirty busywork. The cry of her name was barely audible, and grew more distant still from beneath the groaning of the stricken wagon as it settled into the ooze of the treacherously soft terrain; with wheel and ox both forever lost. Another casualty of the war against the avarice of mother nature, Vida mused.
"How much will that cost us?"
The voice of one of the caravan masters shook her out of her self-indulgent reverie, and there was already a scowl formed on her face for the man atop the nearby driver's platform by the time she'd met his gaze. This was, of course, immediately met by the dour and placid expression of a cart driver who'd seen it all before - his greying hair was as slick with sweat as hers was, and he didn't bother wiping it from the brow of a reddish, frowning countenance.
Averek was his name, and he was an Allirian in the same way that most of the party was.
He was also patient, and so waited patiently for the sellsword to give up on her glaring and posturing with nothing more than an idle flick of his pipe to break up the monotony of the encounter. Vida quickly found how his easy, casual nature did little to improve her mood. Like, at all.
But it still served to cast water over her irritation, if nothing else.
A moment passed, then two, and by the third Vida had blinked first; her eyes travelling away from Averek's face and to the hide-painted wagons that were now at a standstill, painted garishly with reds and yellows and blues that stood out as a harsh contrast to all the sickeningly ever present green of the foliage and weeping trees.
"Please, don't ask me questions like that." Vida still seemed intent on churlishness, if only for a little while longer. She couldn't help it. And it gave her time to manage her unkempt hair with prodding fingers, trying to tidy the mangy and unwashed cut of bangs in the face of so much sweltering humidity - in other words, it was pointless. She didn't know why she continued trying really, aside from out of habit. And when she was done, she looked up and noticed those same eyes on her, waiting for a response. "... the lead wagon has lost a wheel and another ox, I believe. An hour or two? Perhaps sooner. I don't really know."
All that admission earned was a grunt in the affirmative that he had heard her.
Vida was about to leave it at that, but Averek had another frustratingly common question. "I thought you'd be in more of a rush to be at Nateille with that lockbox. Or at least your master would, considering how much coin he paid to have it - and the sellswords protecting it - delivered swiftly."
The implications annoyed her, and there was always another person that wanted to ask questions. "Do you imagine that I'm not bothered by the delay? Because I am. I'm sick of swamps, I'm sick of sweating, and I'm sick of these silly little attempts at trying to play coy. So just say it, so we can be done with this conversation."
"Oh, don't act like that. I'm as curious as everyone else about what's in it."
"That's all you wanted to ask? Very well then. It's none of your business, Averek, so let's leave it at that."
She couldn't even bring herself to care about the pretense of niceties anymore, just as she couldn't bring herself to care about how her blouse and expensive riding breeches were long since damp to the touch. Or how absolutely foul she smelled. Or the fact that she desperately missed the taste of wine; having been resigned to water and the equally watery, tasteless ale they kept in waterproofed barrels of one of the wagons.
The staccato of her riding boots as they stalked across what little road there actually was between creeping vines and muddy patches of soil announced her departure.
Someone was clearly not in the greatest of moods.
But the pay was far too appealing for her to pass up, for what was supposed to be a journey of sixteen odd days between the townships of Nateille and Acencleour. To deliver a lockbox through the trade route that went straight across the swamplands of Vaknelle.
Not that she knew its contents, nor did any of the half-dozen other sellswords commissioned for the same task, and while everyone was undoubtedly curious about it - nobody had the key. And so the great mystery remained a mystery.
The fact they were hired in the first place was hardly a mystery, in comparison.
Despite how much commerce passed through the swamps and forests of Falwood, there was no escaping the banditry that seemed to multiply by the day. And every day they grew bolder and bolder, and more cunning. Vida wasn't deaf or blind to the situation; she had been told in detail as to how the newest gangs exceeded the brutality and methodology of those who came before.
That wasn't even mentioning how their intelligence only seemed to grow, since it appeared like they always knew when to strike and where to strike, to the detriment of everyone who decided to make a living in trade between the Allirian city states and the scattered provinces of Falwood. And it always seemed like they had knowledge of what to look for.
Someone was being paid to tell them, of course, but that wasn't what she was hired for.
Vida and the rest of the sellswords were hired to protect a lockbox; to make certain it reached where it was meant to go by decree of the Count de Alemburant. All those other details? They weren't important, nor was the rest of the caravan necessarily important, but the leading wagon had a damaged wheel and one less ox than it should.
So they stayed, and waited, and sat on their butts; for no amount of coin could hurry this disaster.
Ah. There was one of them now, as it happened. She hadn't shared many words with the others who were hired before - far more content in wallowing in her own misery - and so took the opportunity, now. Maybe she could find a way to take her mind off the way that her feet were soaked by the watery ground they trekked upon, both through her boots and the woolen socks she made sure to wear to avoid... well, exactly this situation.
Her voice carried the hints of an upbringing in Dornoch, but only hints; she seemed to hide it well beneath a carefully unaccented trade tongue. Every word and syllable was accounted for, and she spoke with a careful and clearly practiced eloquence. "Someone more superstitious might think the Vaknelle doesn't like visitors," her laugh carried absolutely zero mirth, as if it was only an exercise to appear friendly. Non-threatening.
Good lord, she was never very good at small talk.
"I don't believe we've been introduced."
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