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Ash 35, 122
"So what happens next, anyway? Do we bait them up here somehow? Or do we have to... go down to them?”
Imogen Ward stood on the beach, peering into the surface of the water with distrust written across her face. She had long since returned to her natural form, the only remaining hint of lemur-ness being the white tail, and put her clothes back on. Except her boots, anyway; she figured that there was no point bringing footwear to the beach when you were bound to toss it anyway once proper foraging got underway.
Thankfully, going barefoot was easy for Orkhan. Even if there were sharp rocks or the sand got too hot, the ability to exchange skin for scales took a lot of the guess-work out of walks. So it was that the young Sunsinger easily hustled to the shoreline in time for the planned crab campaign with Destyn, who kept calling them "water bugs". Were they? They certainly did look like large, wet bugs, but they also seemed too... large and solid, to Imogen's mind. Perhaps someday, in the unlikely event that she survived to retirement, she would travel to some great university's zoological institute and force the scientists to justify themselves.
The notion of crab fishing appealed to Imogen, and greatly. Wet bugs or no, they were meaty, too small to seriously injure her, and had a sweet and satisfying taste. The animals had enjoyed a bad reputation in Zaichaer (though they had been catching on when imported live and freshly boiled with a side of butter) largely because of the poor quality of the specimens in the river. She knew from her last visit to Ecith that the seas south of Sangen were filled with delicious species. It was all she could do to keep her mouth from watering with anticipation.
But cruel reality set in when Imogen reached the beach and started waiting for her new fae friend. Every so often, a crab would scuttle up onto the shore, sure- but mostly the little ones. The big ones, the tender, sweet, meaty ones... they stayed in the water, scuttling along, nearly out of sight from the shore. If she wanted to capture a basket of them, enough for a proper feast, she was going to have to find a way to draw them out.
Or go in after them.
This did not appeal to the Ork at all. It wasn't that she couldn't swim, but- well, actually it wasn't not that either. She could tread water. Opportunities to practice more than that had been scarce in her homeland (after all, none of the Sanctuaries had room to host a swimming pool), and only idiots spent time trying to swim the Talacara, which could turn nasty and sweep you away in an instant. No, she'd reluctantly done her training in running and climbing and so on, but swimming was only ever an occasional vice.
Well, perhaps Destyn had something in mind. He'd mentioned having caught the damn things before; perhaps he knew some secret method to fish the damn things out?
"Unless I...” Imogen mused quietly to herself, voice lost amid the wind and gentle surf. There was one power she might employ. This just seemed like a damn silly way to use it.
There lives one moment for a man
When the door at his shoulder shakes,
When the taut rope parts under the pull,
And the barest branch is beautiful
One moment, while it breaks.
So rides my soul upon the sea
That drinks the howling ships,
Though in black jest it bows and nods
Under the moons with silver rods,
I know it is roaring at the gods,
Waiting the last eclipse.
- The Ballad of the White Horse, likely in reference to crabs.
~~~
"So what happens next, anyway? Do we bait them up here somehow? Or do we have to... go down to them?”
Imogen Ward stood on the beach, peering into the surface of the water with distrust written across her face. She had long since returned to her natural form, the only remaining hint of lemur-ness being the white tail, and put her clothes back on. Except her boots, anyway; she figured that there was no point bringing footwear to the beach when you were bound to toss it anyway once proper foraging got underway.
Thankfully, going barefoot was easy for Orkhan. Even if there were sharp rocks or the sand got too hot, the ability to exchange skin for scales took a lot of the guess-work out of walks. So it was that the young Sunsinger easily hustled to the shoreline in time for the planned crab campaign with Destyn, who kept calling them "water bugs". Were they? They certainly did look like large, wet bugs, but they also seemed too... large and solid, to Imogen's mind. Perhaps someday, in the unlikely event that she survived to retirement, she would travel to some great university's zoological institute and force the scientists to justify themselves.
The notion of crab fishing appealed to Imogen, and greatly. Wet bugs or no, they were meaty, too small to seriously injure her, and had a sweet and satisfying taste. The animals had enjoyed a bad reputation in Zaichaer (though they had been catching on when imported live and freshly boiled with a side of butter) largely because of the poor quality of the specimens in the river. She knew from her last visit to Ecith that the seas south of Sangen were filled with delicious species. It was all she could do to keep her mouth from watering with anticipation.
But cruel reality set in when Imogen reached the beach and started waiting for her new fae friend. Every so often, a crab would scuttle up onto the shore, sure- but mostly the little ones. The big ones, the tender, sweet, meaty ones... they stayed in the water, scuttling along, nearly out of sight from the shore. If she wanted to capture a basket of them, enough for a proper feast, she was going to have to find a way to draw them out.
Or go in after them.
This did not appeal to the Ork at all. It wasn't that she couldn't swim, but- well, actually it wasn't not that either. She could tread water. Opportunities to practice more than that had been scarce in her homeland (after all, none of the Sanctuaries had room to host a swimming pool), and only idiots spent time trying to swim the Talacara, which could turn nasty and sweep you away in an instant. No, she'd reluctantly done her training in running and climbing and so on, but swimming was only ever an occasional vice.
Well, perhaps Destyn had something in mind. He'd mentioned having caught the damn things before; perhaps he knew some secret method to fish the damn things out?
"Unless I...” Imogen mused quietly to herself, voice lost amid the wind and gentle surf. There was one power she might employ. This just seemed like a damn silly way to use it.