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Concavenator:
It was not a cheerful morning, nor would one come for a long time. But it was morning, and that was cause for celebration enough. All the windows of the inn were boarded and bound with half-rotten rope, and the bitter wind outside made them clatter savagely. Indeed, only the last vestiges of winter torpor would allow any 'ikra to sleep in that building and retain her sanity. Still, a faint bluish light blew in from the north when the cracks and fissures happened to align.
Kukri Taika-Daagru crouched on the moist floorboards, her tail feathers slowly sweeping the cold grit behind her, her aching eyes fixed on the papers of her Poleward journey. The engravings of the Thunder Mountains were frightening: fangs and claws of stone sliding out of icy gums to bite the sky and tear at the clouds. The flickering, feeble light of the tallow candle made them look all the hungrier; the very idea of such a place existing, out there in the invincible winter night, was hateful. Kukri could only hope that the engraver had let her fancy exceed reality, or at least that sunlight would make those peaks and ridges gentler.
A sound could be heard from outside, above the clattering window boards and the babble of the sleepers. This inn just outside Yakak'ratu, the last before the ground rose up as the fearful mountains, was surprisingly well-stocked with travelers and peddlers. Some were clearly active outside already, trying to exploit the few minutes of sunlight, propping up the stands for the coming spring festival.
Sleep would not come for Kukri. She should keep revising her papers, perhaps try to recruit some fellow guest into her mission; but the air inside was damp and moldy and reeking of rendered fat and penguin soup. She longed to take a few steps outside, if the bitter wind allowed it.
pinkgothic:
Kukri would have to wait for the winds to ease. Her mission was one of science, not of heroism, although she might not wholly wish to deny a certain overlap between the notions. Regardless, it was wise not to be reckless about it. This was as far as the ice would yet come and she would have to go before the dawning spring made it recede, but it did not necessitate starting her journey in this weather. There were many days still of the ice simply being where she needed it to be.
The greatest risk was to die in a blizzard. The second greatest was of falling to her death between the yawning cracks of ice or stone. In that, the depictions she was staring at in her mild insomnia were quite adequate - these mountains would kill her if she didn't approach them with care. It was good she didn't intend to journey far; others had drawn these maps at their own peril, and while there were no doubt ghastly inaccuracies hidden in details that might yet prove dangerous to her, she was not the cartographer meant to circumscribe the mountain range.
That, at least, was a blessing.
No matter her stubbornness, she felt some regret at her choices. This was as far from any warming down as she was likely to get. Comfort was something she would at best find once her mission was complete, far from here, in a direction she wasn't about to embark on.
But the work was important.
So was sleep. She lay her head on her forepaws and closed her eyes, trying for it once more, knowing full well it wouldn't work. Her patience for the attempt evaporated a minute into the fruitless ritual; instead, she rose tiredly, letting her restless energy take her to the door, as she considered finding one of locals and ask them for their weather report of the coming days - as though it was at all likely to have changed from what she had last heard. In any case, at this point, she could either stare at the map in apprehension or challenge herself a little in a weather she was bound to encounter on her journey. Latter might at least exhaust her and grant her some easy sleep.
Concavenator:
Outside, the cold was harsh, but not unendurable. The damnable dampness of the inn had soaked Kurkri's black feathers and was now blooming into frost, which she hurriedly scraped off. The wind came as an avalanche down from the looming mass in the south, but couldn't quite penetrate under her coat, nor make her lose her footing. To the depths with it, her ancestors had lived through worse.
Distant sounds of thunder came with the wind; doubtlessly, the ice cracking and shifting in the earliest phase of the vernal thaw. Soon the lowlands and the tundra would be soaked with meltwater, and swarming with midges and mosquitoes. The glaciers didn't look diminished yet; they had turned a pale blue, flecked with the red of the dawn-sunset, as if fires had been set within the icy bulk.
She paced back and forth for a while, her boots cracking through the snow's upper crust, and finally moved to the street on the northern side of the building. Five or six people were trudging in the snow, carrying wooden poles and planks, and rolles of rope, and folded canvas rubbed with tar; and little by little they were pulling up stands and banks for the festival's future visitors. Even in this dismal weather, they could not afford much delay; the seventh and last Day of Awakening would come soon, when the Sun would finally detach from the horizon for the first time in the year.
By the seventh day the place should be ready for pilgrims and travellers; the spring festival was all the richer and gayer in the cold and lonely Yakak'ratu, and drew attendance from many places. And by the same day, Kukri ought to be at the edge of the ice, taking her measurements. She approached the workers. Perhaps someone in the city, free from the burdens of the Guild of Carpenters, would consider following her?
pinkgothic:
It was not technically her calling to offer her help erecting the stands. Back home, she wouldn't even have considered it for as much as a fleeting moment - it would hardly have been tolerated much more than she would tolerate someone giving her opinions on the extent and quality of the glacial expanse over the generations.
Similarly, it was not technically her calling to interrupt the work and it was best to wait for a break in the activity, by which time this fleeting hint of dawn would be over and a long, drawn-out twilight would take its place before the night fell yet again.
Talking to someone soon was paramount, though. Someone more familiar with the local terrain would certainly be a good travel companion to have. Even someone not familiar with the terrain would be of great use in helping her carry provisions and equipment, and if she did fall without crippling herself, in helping her back on track.
She pulled her coat a little tighter about herself, breathing thin clouds of frost into the air, and stepped closer to the commotion. Between the wind's brushes of breath, she raised her voice to ask: “Might anyone here be free to travel in the coming days, to assist this representative of the Society of Natural Philosophy in a journey to the edge of the ice?”
Concavenator:
Some of the workers stopped, mostly the younger ones, unsure. The eldest, who balanced heavy planks even as her muzzle feathers were turning grey and sparse, approached Kukri. “Not before the Month of Water”, she began rather brusquely. “We've got to finish building before then”. Her Chaatai was flawless in form, somewhat shaped by a hissing Tayaka accent, but she obviously hadn't had many relations with members of the upper guilds; had Kukri ever addressed her own colleagues this way, they would have pretended not to hear.
She lowered one end of the wooden plank into the snow, and leaned against it, looking much more comfortable than it should be possible in such an environment. “We've few women after last year's draft, and the poxes before that”. The draft, at least, should have spared Yakak'ratu's men, but it didn't need to be said that nobody would have let their son or husband leave with a stranger, even if they'd had no eggs to care for. “Go see the shacks behind the inn, or the temple's yard – plenty of people with nothing to do, over there”.
pinkgothic:
Kukri was certainly envious of the ease in which the workers braved the weather, herself merely able to tolerate it. It highlighted just how crucial it would be to have a travel companion. The manner in which she was dismissed, however, did not sit right with her, though she chose not to comment on it - there was nothing to be gained from pointing out poor form, when nothing the woman had said was technically incorrect. (Indeed, sometimes even correcting something that was technically incorrect was a waste of time, serving neither practical nor educational purpose.)
The only reasonable response, then, was to thank the woman for the suggestion - which Kukri did - and be on her way to explore the option. She did not honestly expect to find anything. People described as having nothing to do were often poor material for doing anything at all.
Concavenator:
Indeed, the temple's yard, half-illuminated by the few braziers that were still burning, was mostly occupied by street children that still hopped in the manner of nestlings every few steps; women leaning against the rough stone wall in a state halfway between intoxication and drunken slumber; and a few men that would, sell their services as nest-tenders and housekeepers.
Kukri had seen plenty of wretched poverty in the streets of Chaatai already. Fortunately her duties at the guildhouse were frequent and urgent enough that she had to keep a steady brisk pace through the streets, and could pay little attention to their content. She did not have that luxury now. 'Au'a the Merciful must certainly accept all who appeal to Her, whatever their faults; but Kukri would have to show more discernment. After all, she was pursuing a sacred mission.
pinkgothic:
There was an urge to take a deep breath to temper herself, but the icy air firmly argued against it. Instead, Kukri worked her tongue along the roof of her mouth, her attention wandering through the yard. The most able-bodied were the men, of course, but they were considerably less likely to be educated for the manner of gruelling travel she had to do than any local woman.
The children could likely be taught easily, possibly even in time for the trek, but no amount of pragmatism made her consider it in earnest. Even ignoring all ethical considerations, they would be able to bear fewer loads and they would not have the very experience she ideally sought.
But as drunkards were right out, she went back over the idea of asking the men, even as she continued to scan for the signs of any woman who was perhaps merely poor, not drunk, though she expected those were less likely to show themselves openly, if indeed they had any pride. And any woman should have at least some pride, if she hadn't seared it away with drink.
Concavenator:
It was hard to judge who was in fact drunk to the point of impotence, who was more lightly altered, and who was merely half-asleep. There was one woman sitting parallel to the stone wall, in a covered corner mostly free from snow, with her tail up against the wall. She did seem quite young, with no obvious infirmity, and the way she fidgeted with the pebbles on the ground suggested that her mind was not entirely clouded. Yet there must be a reason if she wasn't out helping with the building. Perhaps she'd been excluded out of some foolish prejudice that Kukri couln't guess, or perhaps she actually was unable to do heavy work for less visible reasons.
Another woman was sitting on a stack of firewood, her coarse boots tapping softly on the lower logs. Her toeclaws looked recently sharpened, and there were tiny featherless scars on her muzzle;she was talking with a man wrapped in a greenish cloak, haggling in a way that indicated some rapidity of thought.
As for the other men, six or seven of them, they seemed to have had little luck, and some were clearly looking at Kukri with strained hope. One was carrying a heavy bundle, which she dearly hoped did not contain an egg. They had at least the advantage of a lighter frame, and probably few who would protest their absence. Still, Kukri hesitated at taking any man in such a dangerous journey if there was any alternative, even though these men were clearly used to far harsher conditions than those of Chaatai.
pinkgothic:
The biggest issue with asking one of the men was that they would surely say 'yes', wholly in absence of whether or not they could shoulder the burden she would require they carry (metaphorical or otherwise). She wasn't altogether willing to rule them out entirely, but she would approach the women first - at least the one that looked less absorbed in bartering and, for that matter, less likely to slit her throat.
Her tongue probed at her teeth as she made her way toward the woman with the pebbles, inwardly steeling herself for a potentially ghastly revelation about her mental health or personality.
“Excuse me,” she interrupted the woman's present wandering thoughts, fashioning her tone into something as soft and accommodating as she could get away with without outright dismantling her status. “I am of the Society of Natural Philosophy, presently looking for some assistance in the coming days, for a journey to the edge of the ice and back. Might you be fit and free for such a task?”
It was, perhaps, vaguely implying more than it should - namely that the woman could seize upon the task if she so wished without further scrutiny, as long as she considered herself fit for the task.
Concavenator:
The woman looked up from the ground, and jutted her head forward in a more dignitous pose. There still wasn't anything obviously wrong with her, besides the frail feathers and thin face that could be expected from anyone in the late winter. She stared at Kukri for an uncomfortably long time,as if she'd been unsure that the new presence wasn't a confused drunkard or someone mocking her. “What for?” she asked suddenly. “And for how much?”
The funds given to Kukri by the Society were hardly generous; she had already resolved to pay for her meals and lodging out of her own stipend.
pinkgothic:
“I am to take measurements of the ice, but will hardly make the journey to my destination without a companion, someone both capable of helping me carry provisions and equipment and to share in some degree of first aid should something happen to what is then either of us,” Kukri elaborated in the briefest fashion, hoping it would for now suffice for the woman to gauge whether it was a task of interest to her. “I regrettably have no direct means to pay you,” she admitted. “But I can provide for you and I can offer to act as a mentor if you have any interest at all in applying to the Society of Natural Philosophy,” Kukri offered.
In absence of goods to trade or funds to give, Kukri's time was the only commodity she could readily promise, and she did not do it gladly, having plenty of tasks both in pursuit of her profession and private to fill it with. It was unusual for the offer she had made to be spoken of this frankly, something she was acutely aware of - typically the guilds waited for the guildless to express interest, and even then, mentorship was the exception, not the rule, with most applicants practically left to fend for themselves to prove themselves worthy.
It was only the matter-of-fact tone of voice she said it in that stopped it from sounding like the mark of desperation, but the effect was substantial. It was clear it was essentially the only card she could play, but also that she was frankly willing to play it, and that she could play it for anyone else qualified for the task if present company sought to take advantage of her situation.
That the bottleneck was finding 'anyone else qualified' was left unstated - and, despite circumstances, not necessarily obvious to onlookers.
Concavenator:
The woman in the yard turned away her gaze, thinking over Kukri's words. “No direct means to pay her” was clearly not enough to smash the deal in the nest, which spoke of her situation. The offer of mentorship could have been intriguing, if the woman believed the guild likely to accept her, as it would mean a lifelong guarantee of shelter, a modest wage, and some protection by and from the law. The chapter of Yakak'ratu had no permanently residing members, but that could change. Of course the guild wasn't at all likely to welcome a low-born from a frontier city, and Kukri, who just barely qualified, couldn't offer strong recommendations. But a brave enterprise that captured the hearts of the public, and the retrieval of good data, would improve her chances by far.
Still, a podocarp planted for next year doesn't cure hunger today. The promise of “providing” would have to carry most of the deal's weight, and would have to be convincing. Eventually she said, with a note of uncertainty in her voice: “… How long we'd be gone?” It was quite possible that she didn't expect to eat at all during the expedition; or at least, she expected to be expected to do so.