I do not wish to sound as though
the ancient texts are insignificant. I believe they are still
valuable when used properly. Sometimes, within the decaying tomes,
the pages will whisper names of noteworthy people and dates for main
events. The difficulty lies in sifting through trivial information
that is insignificant to your current research. Once you have found
an important person and event you can begin to seriously dive into
memory retrieval. Without having a clear starting point and instead
randomly diving into the memories of the past it would overwhelm you
in a mass of irrelevant experiences. Searching for information vital
to your research would be nearly impossible. You would be lost, as
though adrift on an endless sea.
Chapter 2
Burtrend
stood at the stern of the ship the Adalina
watching his home, the port city of Bar,
slowly shrink in the distance. The tall mountains wrapped around the
ocean like a crooked finger sheltering Bar from ocean storms and
potential attacks from the sea. Anyone that would war against the
city would need to either destroy her naval fleet at the mouth of the
fjord or travel over the dangerous tropical mountains. Its strategic
placement is the reason the High Council of Vitar called Bar home.
The glistening white spire of Emerau
Tower, seat of the High Council, disappeared from his sight as the
Adalina rounded the
tip of the fjord. One day...
His thoughts were filled with determination, one
day I will return. I will finally enter Emerau Tower and I will show
them exactly who I am and what I can do. He
stared blankly at the craggy cliffs and they sailed along the
shoreline.
Sailors crawled about the ship like
small insects on a larger prey, securing lines and rigging. The sails
billowed out while steam and smoke rose from the smokestack. Many of
the words Captain Marcell and his first mate shouted out at the other
sailors were foreign to him. He ignored them and filled his thoughts
with the little he knew of Salatoria and its crystal technology. It
both scared and amazed him that such a thing could truly exist.
Feeling a strong drive to learn and understand it, he let his heart
soar in anticipation of his future.
It was only a month after speaking
with the assassin and receiving those papers that held so much
information within their ink. Paying the assassin to spy out
Salatoria had left his coffers near empty so he'd needed to
convince Signor Sevron Rainier, his guarantor, to finance his
expedition. It had been extremely difficult to do without showing him
what the spy had found but Burtrend really wanted to surprise him
with the crystal technology upon his return. Eventually Signor
Rainier begrudgingly agreed to it, but only after Burtrend threatened
to quit as an inventor and become a temple proselyte. Doing so would
have rendered the years of funding him through college worthless. He
graduated younger than most with high ranks from the Machinists
College of the Arte in Bar and he was never conservative when it
came to his inventions. His most recent development, still under
construction, was the hydro-electric dam of Lake Teirne. Signor
Rainier is fully expecting Burtrend's future projects to bring an
even larger return on his investment than he already made. Greed
can make men easy to manipulate.
He turned his thoughts back to his
current situation sailing along the coast. This trip was quite
dangerous. He quivered deep inside from a strong wind that felt like
it was trying to blow straight through him and refused to think the
shivers meant anything more. They would navigate through hostile
waters off the Fayneland coast. Vitar had been warring on and off
with Fayneland for his entire life. Meeting a Faynecian naval vessel
in their waters was entirely possible.
While lost in thought Burtrend
fiddled with a bronze medallion hanging around his neck, normally
hidden beneath his clothes. Realizing it was in his hand he studied
the medallion as he had a thousand times before. Stamped on its face
was an elder-vaus, a creature resembling a giant golden eagle, its
wings spread while clutching a three-headed hydra with two tails. The
elder-vaus symbolized Korhan, Vitar's god of fire and order. This
showed him keeping the goddess Tres, the goddess of ice and chaos
symbolized by the hydra, in eternal submission.
Priests taught that should she ever
escape Korhan she would take vengeance on all life, chaos and ice
would swallow the world. Burtrend knew better than to believe Korhan
held her securely. She was free to wander the world, wreaking havoc,
and bringing chaos. Though he was sure if she became powerful enough
she would destroy the world. That is why it was so important for
Vitar to conquer the other nations and bring order to the chaos.
Sadly, the ocean was her home as much as the frozen waists of the far
south. Hoping she would not discover his trespasses on her domain
Burtrend slipped the medallion back under his shirt.
Shaking himself out of his godly
speculation he returned his attention back to the rugged cliffs.
Peeking out above them he could see the tall mountains and foothills
further inland. Cities and towns occasionally peaked through the
trees, dotting the lush greens of the tropical forests. Mists clung
to the deep valleys, giving the land a mysterious ambiance. Memories
of having sailed this coast and seeing the land like this once before
crept into his thoughts. They were memories long forgotten,
discarded, like broken toys and shattered dreams. His
mother's frail hand holding his tightly. He felt so small standing
next to her tall, thin frame. The
wind from the ocean blew her long blonde hair from her pale shoulders
as they sailed to their new home, Bar. He
cut the thoughts short, knowing the memories only became darker from
there.
The beautiful coastline now sickened
him, so he returned to his cabin in the bulkhead. The balance of the
ship shifted slightly with each wave causing him to gently weave back
and forth while he attempted to walk a straight line. He had heard
that sailors had a difficult time walking on steady ground after they
have been out at sea for a while. Now he could understand why.
He finally made it to his small
cabin. A small hooded glow-lamp illuminated the small room where he
found his luggage secured in a corner and his hammock swinging
slightly as the ship moved. He could hear the loud purr of the engine
and roar of the boiler room reverberate through the walls. There was
even a tiny desk and chair secured to the floor. Burtrend wasn't
sure how he was going to suffer living a couple of months in this
miniscule living space. Maybe I should have
paid for a larger ship, but I was told the Adelina
was one of the fastest ships in the port.
Putting that thought aside, he rummaged
through his luggage and produced a blank journal. He settled into the
chair that was much too small for his tall frame, placed his journal
onto his desk, and wrote a simple entry about their departure.
The next
journal entry he wrote was a couple days later after they traveled to
the bustling port city of Cabuay. There they picked up an ambassador
and a linguistics professor that Senior Rainier had required he bring
with him. Ambassador Alvorez will start and maintain political
relations with the Salatine people while the professor will study the
Salatine culture and language to become and train future translators.
He was just finishing this second entry when he heard a knock on the
cabin door.
"Enter," he said, putting the
quill pen down and closing the ink well. He sighed and turned to see
who opened his door. "Professor Gustavo, I hope you have settled
in."
"Yes, although I lost most my lunch
over the railing due to the blasted tossing of the ship. Are you
absolutely certain there isn't someone you would rather take?"
"I'm sorry if you feel
inconvenienced by this journey but you are my only choice. You have
studied Iddean ancient history and you have a natural knack for
language. Besides, we have already left port and I'm not turning
around. I hope the money I paid will be enough to compensate for any
discomfort." Burtrend looked sympathetically at the portly
professor's sickly face. "Don't worry, Professor, I'm sure
you will get used to it in time." He smiled politely until
Professor Gustavo got an uncomfortably green look on his face and
quickly excused himself. I hope he doesn't
fall overboard while he's relieving his seasickness. He's too
much of an asset to lose him to the ocean.
After a
few days the professor's seasickness subsided and the constant
stream of complaints finally ceased. At first Burtrend was grateful
for the quiet but it started grating on his nerves every time he met
Ambassador Alvorez's haughty, sneering gaze or Gustavo's
resentful glances. The two of them seemed to become fast friends but
neither one was interested in conversing with Burtrend for any length
of time.
The captain tried ignoring Burtrend
as much as possible. Whenever forced to converse with Burtrend it was
with obvious disdain, so Burtrend treated him equally. The rest of
the crew just avoided him as much as possible, making the boredom
intensify. They had just made it through the hostile Faynecian
waters, but they were still not safe and that kept everyone on edge.
He spent time pacing above decks,
occasionally getting in the way or making a nuisance of himself. The
lack of activity gave him time to reflect on how tremendously huge
the world was, seeing the ocean spread out in all directions with no
land in sight. In the evenings, he would usually lay on his hammock
reading the now well-worn pages from the leather envelope.
At the end of a long week, Burtrend
awoke to the sound of running feet and Captain Marcell shouting even
more obscenities. He rushed to dress, hurrying to discover the reason
for the commotion and almost ran straight into a sailor rushing down.
Once above deck he immediately noticed a storm that had advanced
during the night. He stumbled through the blustering wind to the
captain.
"Is there a way to avoid the
storm?" he shouted to be heard over the wind.
"We could if we want to battle a
Faynecian warship. There is one on the northwestern horizon. My small
steamship can weather that storm. It can't fight a warship." He
pointed to a sizable dot on the horizon.
"It doesn't look that big,"
Burtrend argued. Captain Marcell handed him the shiny brass spyglass
and suggested he take a second look. He took a while to figure out
where he was looking, especially since the rough seas and wind were
tossing him about, but he finally got a lock on it. He could clearly
see the Faynecian flag, with the flag of their naval fleet. The
spyglass shifted with the swell and he saw the ram head, ironclad
hull of the Faynecian steam frigate. It was a massive war ship. Its
bulk wasn't a hindrance with the addition of an advanced propeller
system. Such a ship wouldn't take long to intercept them. He closed
the eyeglass and handed it back to Marcell.
"We are securing everything and
heading into the storm. If they try following us, the storm will
likely sweep us apart. After it blows over I'll figure out our
heading and get back on course." Seafarer legends held that in the
eye of the largest ocean storms is an unexpected calm. Burtrend
wasn't sure he believed it and wasn't willing to find out.
"Captain," Burtrend spoke
tensely, "Surely we are fast enough to avoid such a large ship. Is
it possible to skirt the storm? We just need to get close enough..."
"That," Captain Marcell cut
him off, pointing to the Faynecian ship, "was built for war. If
we try to skirt the storm, they will
get close enough to bombard us with their cannons. I also can't
guarantee that the storm won't turn and overtake us anyway. You
hired me to get you safely across this ocean, but you need to trust
me to do that. I've been sailing longer than you've been alive so
don't take me for a fool, and don't act like one yourself. "
Marcell was right and Burtrend hated him for it.
"What do you need me to do?" The
question came out quietly from his lips.
"Nothing, go to your cabin and wait
it out." Captain Marcell replied briskly. As an afterthought he
added, "Perhaps you might try praying to your god. Although, I'm
not sure how it'll help, seeing as we are in her
domain." Burtrend Bristled at the reference to Tres. He had heard
that many seamen refuse to worship Korhan for fear of Tres. They
didn't want to worship Tres and her chaotic, spiteful ways, but
worshiping Korhan brought down her wrath. He despised that cowardly
belief in the sailors, almost as much as he despised Faynecian gods.
Burtrend was sure he could help with
something, so he wandered around the deck watching the dark clouds
move closer and the men run about. He wondered at the darkness of the
storm. It appeared too ominous to be safe. Surely
Tres is behind this. Somehow, she learned I was here.
He saw the captain glaring at him between orders. Glaring back,
Burtrend went below deck. He noticed the professor peeking out from
behind a cabin door and ignored him. Once inside his cabin he started
pacing the small room, a few feet at a time. Eventually he stopped to
check the binding on his things and packing loose items that had been
in his desk. He finally collapsed into his hammock and dozed lightly.
Burtrend woke, noticing that the
tossing of the ship had become extreme. The steel hull seemed to
amplify the drumming sounds of the storm. Boredom and curiosity drove
him to venture out and was tossed about by the violent waves as he
tried to walk. He found water splashing down the stairs from rain and
waves crashing over the gunwale. He attempted to go above deck, but
the force of the storm threw him back down. Wiping the water from his
face, he stubbornly climbed the stairs again, clutching the rail with
all his strength.
Once above deck, he lost his footing
and tumbled to the side, grabbing anything he could before he finally
managed to stop sliding. Captain Marcell is
going to get us killed! The captain of that war ship would have to be
insane to follow us! Another swell crashed
over the gunwale, blinding him with the salty sting of ocean water in
his eyes. Captain Marcell was right, I should
have stayed below deck. I'm
no match for this storm.
"Burtrend! You fool!" The
captain's voice was barely audible through the drumming of rain and
thunder. Time slowed down, or it seemed to, as a sailor with a rope
lifeline tied around his waist slowly stumbled toward him. Burtrend
watched as a large wave crashed onto the deck just before the sailor
reached him. Salty ocean water instantly filled his mouth, choking
him. The full force of the wave slammed into him and knew he didn't
have the strength to hold on any longer. The large swell swept him
from the deck, sending him quickly beyond the sailor's reach. Pain
seared through his head when it hit the railing. Then his body jolted
as it slammed into the ocean.
The dark waves of the ocean tossed
him about helplessly, like a bristle seed in a strong wind. Water
lapped against his face, threatening drown him. In the chaos he
barely noticed a crate that had loosed from the ship and had been
tossed overboard by a wave. He used every bit of strength he had left
to swim to the crate, struggling to move in the turbulent water.
Finally reaching it he desperately grabbed hold to keep his head
above the water. Horrified, he watched the storm tear him and the
Adelina further apart.
This is what I get for wandering into the
realm of Tres. He prayed,
Korhan forgive me and guide me to do what is
right. He lifted his body onto the crate,
grasping tightly to the edges to hold himself secure. He couldn't
tell how much time had passed but it felt like an eternity before the
storm had calmed enough for the waves to stop crashing against him
and he could finally relax his grip. Eventually exhaustion took over
and his world went dark.
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