Frost 20, 119
As excited as he'd been to board the train that would ferry him and hundreds of others off to East End, the novelty had simmered down from fascination into common expectation: the massive metal beast moved the world around them, but they remained as they might have upon any cobbled street of stone. There had been shifts and jitters, but Foma had soon realized that while the contraption itself was well worthy of the time and sweat and blood that was the cost of its creation, once applied, it was little more than phenomena.
Such realizations, however, didn't curb his careful investigation of anything within that wasn't directly refused to him.
By the time the train stilled in Gothenburg's station, Foma had scoured every inch of the passenger's cabins he'd been allowed into. He'd studied the manner in which the hundreds of chairs had been bolted to the floor, the frames and clasps of the hundreds of windows, the careful construction of wood and metal and even stone that made up the carriages themselves. He'd examined the coupling links that kept the cars together, stared down at the spark-spewing tracks upon which the train carried itself, and even tried to climb atop the carriages themselves, only to be shouted down by a particularly irate mail guard who then confined him to his seat for the remainder of the journey.
That same mail guard eyed him suspiciously, even as Foma exited the train, eyes brightly searching the cold and bitter wonder East End's Gothenburg. "Have a pleasant stay, sir," the man muttered far less enthusiastically than he'd done for most everyone else.
But Foma didn't hear him. He was far too wrapped up in the odd contrast of the familiarity of Rien architecture hand in hand with a far different atmosphere. It was like being in Nivenhain only... not. To explain it to himself or others, he couldn't find the words nor, really, the feelings either. It was strange. Not unpleasant, but strange.
While Mister Wagner had sent him as his representative to procure a shipment of especially exquisite Dragonshards, it had been Kriemhilde who had made certain Foma would be prepared to receive them. She'd "borrowed" her brothers' clothes, insisting he dress like a lustrian to avoid the trouble of having to explain why Lambrecht Wagner would send a slovenly Nameless to collect something so precious. She'd also given him a neatly scrawled list that contained the expected contents of the shipment itself, along with an address, and a personal note that reminded him he was there to represent the Master and to act accordingly.
She'd also provided him a sealed writ of identification explaining the situation should there be need of it, but had told him it shouldn't be needed, as they'd already confirmed one Mister Foma Kozlov would arriving to transport the package within the next handful of days.
Always better to be prepared though, just in case.
So, dressed in an appropriately sumptuous collection of furs, embroidered silks, and warming layers, Foma slipped a gloved hand into vest's pocket and double checked the address for what was certainly the hundredth time. Perhaps more.
The Baringers, or more correctly, House Baringer, had long since been one of Mister Wagner's steady, though limited, suppliers. Most of what his business required was bought in Nivenhain's markets and through their private traders, but there were certain things he simply wouldn't settle for anything less than directly from the hands of the nobles themselves. So he paid the extra fees, hired the extra set of hands, and procured for himself the precious metals and gems needed for his more exquisite contraptions.
This, however, was the first time he'd sent Foma. Usually, Mister Wagner hired out help. It was more expensive, but lustrians and manual labor had always been more trouble than it was worth. Foma, however, held no such reservations. When Mister Wagner had asked him to arrange a meeting with one of the Argent guards to go and fetch something for him from Gothenburg, Foma had volunteered himself: both to save money and in a bid to see more than the very small slice of Lorien he'd been raised in.
While not hard pressed for coins, Mister Wagner preferred to keep them in his pockets rather than doling them out like candy. So he'd agreed, and Foma had been sent off.
He'd heard of the wild lands to the east of Nivenhain, where the people were bears and beasts of men, roaming through the wilds, running beneath the shadows of the Kindred, more creature than character to their barbaric natures. But what he saw, much to his mild disappointment, was men and woman much the same as could be found back home. Some taller, some shorter, but, ultimately, Rien.
He knew he shouldn't have been surprised. As he tread over carefully cobbled streets and gazed at the grandiose architecture of the churches and buildings the stretched out into the east, he felt, more or less, right at home. There was a sort of deeper chill in the air that made it impossible to feel truly comfortable; a sensation of eyes watching or silent whispers drifting just out of earshot. It was unnerving but only in the most subtle of senses, a sort of subliminal realization that here, especially here, the great, dark winged shadows of Lorien were ever present.
As Kriemhilde's letter directed him, Foma kept away from the western end of the city. The longer and farther he delved into the east, the more splendid everything became. Shops and storefronts, fountains and public statues, even the churches themselves were elevated from elegant to sublime. The people too seemed to change, their clothes becoming more and more garish with embroideries of real gold and silver, long sweeping furs, and voices growing louder, more confident, daring even. It was as if, at some point unbeknownst to him, he'd stepped over the threshold from Gothenburg into Gothenburg.
Delectable scents drifted through the crisp, frosty air with every refined restaurant he passed. Tailors and outfitters dotted the blocks, windows filled with gorgeous dresses and handsome suits. There was laughter and chatter, music and song, and soon? There was the Baringer's estate.
It was a massive castle, towers and walls and the house's crest of gold and blue and purple all regally reaching towards the sky, a gem that shone bright and indelibly beautiful even among such exquisite neighbors. But the castle proper wasn't his destination. He was neither lord nor to call upon one, and so rather than waltzing through the front gate as a small trickle of those both entering and leaving could be seen doing in various states of conversation and silence, Foma came to a halt beside one of the servants' doors, as indicated in Kriemhilda's letter.
He knocked three times in quick succession before giving his name and reason for arrival. After a minute or two, the door opened, and he was allowed entrance.
The room itself was warm, almost uncomfortably so, and filled with plants of all different shapes and sizes and colors; a nursery for the castle's main garden. His eyes roamed the curious, verdant sight, but Kriemhilde's reminder that he was not there on pleasure but as a representative kept his hands hanging loosely at his side rather than thumbing each and every specimen he crossed. For now, anyway.
"You'll need to pass through the bailey anyhow," the middle aged woman who'd allowed him inside in the first place nodded towards a heavy door on the opposite side of the stuffy, life-filled room. "Straight down that corridor, no detours, and wait by the wisteria."
"The-" Clearly the expression of uncertainty on his face was more than enough.
"Wisteria. It's a large flowered tree. Like purple snowfall." The woman raised a brow and shook her head, not offering any further botanical instruction. "You'll know it when you see it."
"Very well. Thank you, miss."
"Not finished, sir," the woman called out as Foma paused just before opening the door. "You'll be waiting for a good while. They've not yet gotten everything your master requested. Take your time and enjoy the garden, but don't wander off too far."
"I see," he nodded, a polite smile on his lips. "I will do as you say, miss."
"Mhm," the woman replied, returning to her work as Foma exited out into the corridor.
There were several doors to his left, all which he ignored even if his curiosity tugged at his focus. Instead he made his way into the castle's impressive bailey, though the word hardly did it justice. It was a garden, but a garden unlike anything he'd seen before. The temperature was almost sweltering beneath his many layers, and he felt small trickles of sweat already trailing down the sides of his face.
There were trees and bushes and hedges and flowers for as far as he could see. For a time, he wandered through the labyrinthine garden, eyeing the many colors, enjoying the many scents, and, on occasion, curiously testing out the more fascinating looking textures with a poke or prod. Eventually, he found the tree the woman had directed him towards.
It was elegant, beautiful, and more so a soft lavender than true purple. There were a pair of stone benches neatly around about a small, still pond at the wisteria's base, a wonderful little pocket of reflection and peace and-
A man.
Not just a man but a man.
He was almost twice Foma's size in both height and width, muscular enough he might have eaten Foma for a midday snack if there were nothing else. It gave him pause, both out of an instinctual sense of self-preservation and a more proper desire not to interrupt. But, after a lingering minute of uncertainty, Foma decided to press forward. There were two benches, after all, and he had been specifically directed to wait there.
So, with confidence that didn't quite reach his wary eyes, he stepped off of the path and into the little garden within a garden, a soft smile on his lips and gentle sheen of sweat upon his brow. "Good day, sir. I hope I'm not interrupting?"
As excited as he'd been to board the train that would ferry him and hundreds of others off to East End, the novelty had simmered down from fascination into common expectation: the massive metal beast moved the world around them, but they remained as they might have upon any cobbled street of stone. There had been shifts and jitters, but Foma had soon realized that while the contraption itself was well worthy of the time and sweat and blood that was the cost of its creation, once applied, it was little more than phenomena.
Such realizations, however, didn't curb his careful investigation of anything within that wasn't directly refused to him.
By the time the train stilled in Gothenburg's station, Foma had scoured every inch of the passenger's cabins he'd been allowed into. He'd studied the manner in which the hundreds of chairs had been bolted to the floor, the frames and clasps of the hundreds of windows, the careful construction of wood and metal and even stone that made up the carriages themselves. He'd examined the coupling links that kept the cars together, stared down at the spark-spewing tracks upon which the train carried itself, and even tried to climb atop the carriages themselves, only to be shouted down by a particularly irate mail guard who then confined him to his seat for the remainder of the journey.
That same mail guard eyed him suspiciously, even as Foma exited the train, eyes brightly searching the cold and bitter wonder East End's Gothenburg. "Have a pleasant stay, sir," the man muttered far less enthusiastically than he'd done for most everyone else.
But Foma didn't hear him. He was far too wrapped up in the odd contrast of the familiarity of Rien architecture hand in hand with a far different atmosphere. It was like being in Nivenhain only... not. To explain it to himself or others, he couldn't find the words nor, really, the feelings either. It was strange. Not unpleasant, but strange.
While Mister Wagner had sent him as his representative to procure a shipment of especially exquisite Dragonshards, it had been Kriemhilde who had made certain Foma would be prepared to receive them. She'd "borrowed" her brothers' clothes, insisting he dress like a lustrian to avoid the trouble of having to explain why Lambrecht Wagner would send a slovenly Nameless to collect something so precious. She'd also given him a neatly scrawled list that contained the expected contents of the shipment itself, along with an address, and a personal note that reminded him he was there to represent the Master and to act accordingly.
She'd also provided him a sealed writ of identification explaining the situation should there be need of it, but had told him it shouldn't be needed, as they'd already confirmed one Mister Foma Kozlov would arriving to transport the package within the next handful of days.
Always better to be prepared though, just in case.
So, dressed in an appropriately sumptuous collection of furs, embroidered silks, and warming layers, Foma slipped a gloved hand into vest's pocket and double checked the address for what was certainly the hundredth time. Perhaps more.
The Baringers, or more correctly, House Baringer, had long since been one of Mister Wagner's steady, though limited, suppliers. Most of what his business required was bought in Nivenhain's markets and through their private traders, but there were certain things he simply wouldn't settle for anything less than directly from the hands of the nobles themselves. So he paid the extra fees, hired the extra set of hands, and procured for himself the precious metals and gems needed for his more exquisite contraptions.
This, however, was the first time he'd sent Foma. Usually, Mister Wagner hired out help. It was more expensive, but lustrians and manual labor had always been more trouble than it was worth. Foma, however, held no such reservations. When Mister Wagner had asked him to arrange a meeting with one of the Argent guards to go and fetch something for him from Gothenburg, Foma had volunteered himself: both to save money and in a bid to see more than the very small slice of Lorien he'd been raised in.
While not hard pressed for coins, Mister Wagner preferred to keep them in his pockets rather than doling them out like candy. So he'd agreed, and Foma had been sent off.
He'd heard of the wild lands to the east of Nivenhain, where the people were bears and beasts of men, roaming through the wilds, running beneath the shadows of the Kindred, more creature than character to their barbaric natures. But what he saw, much to his mild disappointment, was men and woman much the same as could be found back home. Some taller, some shorter, but, ultimately, Rien.
He knew he shouldn't have been surprised. As he tread over carefully cobbled streets and gazed at the grandiose architecture of the churches and buildings the stretched out into the east, he felt, more or less, right at home. There was a sort of deeper chill in the air that made it impossible to feel truly comfortable; a sensation of eyes watching or silent whispers drifting just out of earshot. It was unnerving but only in the most subtle of senses, a sort of subliminal realization that here, especially here, the great, dark winged shadows of Lorien were ever present.
As Kriemhilde's letter directed him, Foma kept away from the western end of the city. The longer and farther he delved into the east, the more splendid everything became. Shops and storefronts, fountains and public statues, even the churches themselves were elevated from elegant to sublime. The people too seemed to change, their clothes becoming more and more garish with embroideries of real gold and silver, long sweeping furs, and voices growing louder, more confident, daring even. It was as if, at some point unbeknownst to him, he'd stepped over the threshold from Gothenburg into Gothenburg.
Delectable scents drifted through the crisp, frosty air with every refined restaurant he passed. Tailors and outfitters dotted the blocks, windows filled with gorgeous dresses and handsome suits. There was laughter and chatter, music and song, and soon? There was the Baringer's estate.
It was a massive castle, towers and walls and the house's crest of gold and blue and purple all regally reaching towards the sky, a gem that shone bright and indelibly beautiful even among such exquisite neighbors. But the castle proper wasn't his destination. He was neither lord nor to call upon one, and so rather than waltzing through the front gate as a small trickle of those both entering and leaving could be seen doing in various states of conversation and silence, Foma came to a halt beside one of the servants' doors, as indicated in Kriemhilda's letter.
He knocked three times in quick succession before giving his name and reason for arrival. After a minute or two, the door opened, and he was allowed entrance.
The room itself was warm, almost uncomfortably so, and filled with plants of all different shapes and sizes and colors; a nursery for the castle's main garden. His eyes roamed the curious, verdant sight, but Kriemhilde's reminder that he was not there on pleasure but as a representative kept his hands hanging loosely at his side rather than thumbing each and every specimen he crossed. For now, anyway.
"You'll need to pass through the bailey anyhow," the middle aged woman who'd allowed him inside in the first place nodded towards a heavy door on the opposite side of the stuffy, life-filled room. "Straight down that corridor, no detours, and wait by the wisteria."
"The-" Clearly the expression of uncertainty on his face was more than enough.
"Wisteria. It's a large flowered tree. Like purple snowfall." The woman raised a brow and shook her head, not offering any further botanical instruction. "You'll know it when you see it."
"Very well. Thank you, miss."
"Not finished, sir," the woman called out as Foma paused just before opening the door. "You'll be waiting for a good while. They've not yet gotten everything your master requested. Take your time and enjoy the garden, but don't wander off too far."
"I see," he nodded, a polite smile on his lips. "I will do as you say, miss."
"Mhm," the woman replied, returning to her work as Foma exited out into the corridor.
There were several doors to his left, all which he ignored even if his curiosity tugged at his focus. Instead he made his way into the castle's impressive bailey, though the word hardly did it justice. It was a garden, but a garden unlike anything he'd seen before. The temperature was almost sweltering beneath his many layers, and he felt small trickles of sweat already trailing down the sides of his face.
There were trees and bushes and hedges and flowers for as far as he could see. For a time, he wandered through the labyrinthine garden, eyeing the many colors, enjoying the many scents, and, on occasion, curiously testing out the more fascinating looking textures with a poke or prod. Eventually, he found the tree the woman had directed him towards.
It was elegant, beautiful, and more so a soft lavender than true purple. There were a pair of stone benches neatly around about a small, still pond at the wisteria's base, a wonderful little pocket of reflection and peace and-
A man.
Not just a man but a man.
He was almost twice Foma's size in both height and width, muscular enough he might have eaten Foma for a midday snack if there were nothing else. It gave him pause, both out of an instinctual sense of self-preservation and a more proper desire not to interrupt. But, after a lingering minute of uncertainty, Foma decided to press forward. There were two benches, after all, and he had been specifically directed to wait there.
So, with confidence that didn't quite reach his wary eyes, he stepped off of the path and into the little garden within a garden, a soft smile on his lips and gentle sheen of sweat upon his brow. "Good day, sir. I hope I'm not interrupting?"