Cinnamon Bun - Chapter Five Hundred and Forty-Six
Added 2025-07-02 05:12:10 +0000 UTCChapter Five Hundred and Forty-Six
We carried what we could back to the Beaver, and what we couldn’t carry came by cart. Chloe hired a few random ostri off the street to pull along a large cart that had a repurposed fuel tank strapped to the back of it.
It was funny, she just stepped out of her shop and asked the first few ostri passing by. Most refused her, but eventually a few of them shrugged and accepted, just like that.
Apparently ‘jobs’ were a weird and uncommon thing here.
“So... no one has a day job?” I asked.
“Of course they do,” Chloe said. “You don’t gain levels without specializing, everyone knows that. But most ostri, especially the younger ones, prefer to wander from work to work. Some will find something they’ll be passionate about and stick to that for the rest of their lives, but a lot wander for a long while before finding their vocation, if they ever do. There’s a reason that the ostri are unconquerable.”
“I can’t imagine trying to tax them,” Amaryllis said.
Chloe snorted. “Good luck with that. If you even manage to explain the concept to them, they’ll wonder why you don’t just do the things you’d use the tax money for yourself instead of hoarding wealth to do it later.”
“The city is very nice and clean,” I mentioned. “And pretty friendly.”
“It’s cultural,” Chloe said. “You clean up after yourself. You might pick fights with anyone here, but you need to be looking for a fight, and so does the person you’ll fight. Beating up someone just minding their own is such a faux-pas that it’s just not done. It’s unsportsmanlike, dishonourable, and gains you nothing.”
How weird! “So if you’re looking for people to work on something, you just ask?”
“And you won’t find harder workers,” Chloe said with a nod. “But don’t expect them to show up again the next morning, let alone in a week.”
“I don’t know where they fall in the trifecta of good employees,” Amarytllis said.
“Ah, the what?” Awen asked.
“Hard working, cheap, timely,” Amaryllis said. “It feels like they hit two of out three, but miss the third one so much that it makes them poor employees.”
Chloe laughed, which sounded a little like birdsong. Funny, how Amaryllis’ laugh wasn’t usually so melodic unless she giggled involuntarily. “You’d lose that Harpy Mountain attitude quick enough, if you stayed here for any amount of time, princess.”
“I’m hardly a princess,” Amaryllis said. “Especially not when you use the term so derisively.”
We reached the Beaver and I stepped back to let the experts take care of refuelling the ship’s bunkers. It was something sensitive and dangerous enough that I knew better than to stick my bun nose into it.
I told the crew that they could head out and explore the city if they wanted, and some of them took up that offer and did just that. Caprica left with Bastion to buy some souvenirs for her sisters and parents (it was a date, obviously, not that Bastion was informed) and to send off letters that may or may not reach Sylphfree.
The scallywags went out for something similar. They wanted to try to local food.
They came back an hour later, Oda’s face covered in tears. As it turned out, the food here was more than just ‘spicey’ it was nearly lethal. He was tearing up and snot kept flowing out of his nose, but he was also putting on a brave face.
A bit of Cleaning magic blasted at his face and into his mouth actually did the trick, which was good because I wasn’t sure if there was a cure for eating something too spicy.
It took a couple of hours to move things into the Beaver and finish the refueling. By the time we were set to leave, it was already mid-evening, and the sun was starting to dip down towards the horizon.
Usually, I might have wanted to stay, but... we were on a bit of a timetable, and the information we’d picked up from Chloe and some others in Come Here and Die suggested that the safest route out was north and around, which would add a good day to our travels compared to the straighter route we’d planned on taking.
So, with only one final stop for the day to hire a Ostri healer that could hit the entire crew with ‘healing’ magic (it tingled, but not in a bad way) we set off just as the day was starting to turn to night.
Our next destination was the impolitely named Weakling’s Rest, far to the north.
The Beaver rose, using the still-climbing hot air over the desert and wide-spread sails to gain a bit more acceleration than usual until we’d climbed to a nice cruising altitude, then we pointed our prow north and spun the engines up.
I watched Come Here and Die slowly scroll past behind and below us. I think it would have been fun to spend a few weeks there, and get into some fun trouble, but time wasn’t always so free.
I’d be back, I decided, one day. Maybe with fewer friends, or more of them. We’d stick around, get used to spicy food, and live the hard but carefree lives of ostri for a while. It’d be fun!
But for now, I had a different sort of fun to handle.
Since I was too energized to sleep at the moment, I told Clive to head down and get some rest while I took the helm. It wasn’t too hard. I just pointed us due-north, the mountains of the Break mountain range way, way off to the left, and the desert ahead and to our right.
A few hours into the night, I felt a good wind coming in from behind us, so I shut the main propellor engine down to conserve fuel and helped deploy our sails to near-full to better catch the wind.
It was pushing us a little to the east, but the occasional adjustment of the rudder kept us on track.
Almost everyone was asleep soon enough, and I found myself nearly alone up on deck. The exception was Orange, who came up and curled down atop a heap of ropes just next to the helm. She was sleeping too, but sometimes her head would move and I’d catch a glimmer of kitty-cat-green eyes in the dark. She was growing up into a fully adult kitty.
Time really did fly when one was... flying.
I needed to put more thought into that one.
In any case, a few people woke up in the middle of the night and came up to see if I wanted to switch out, but something about the warm air and the swaying of the ship was keeping me awake. So I stayed at the helm and just floated along until I saw the first glimmers of sunshine on the horizon.
That’s when the sleepiness hit me, and I decided to head down and crash onto my bed.
I awoke a bit after noon, to the sound of someone cooking in the kitchen. Someone had opened my door at some point, and it was squeaking back and forth slightly.
I yawned big, then stretched until my toes shivered, then got up.
The scent wafting from the kitchen was pulling me out of the room. It was spicy and warm and... a bit savoury? Was that pasta too?
I glanced down at myself, and felt a bit grossed out on realizing that I’d slept in my day wear, not even taking off my shoes of the night. A wave of Cleaning magic made it less bad.
“Sleep well?” Awen asked from behind the stove.
“I did,” I said. “Or I probably did? I don’t remember sleeping at all. I think I could use some more.”
“Hmm, might be best to, ah, not?” Awen said. “You’ll only stay awake all night again.”
“True,” I said. “Need a hand?”
Awen smiled. “I wouldn’t mind one! I’m making... actually, I don’t know.”
“You don’t?”
She shook her head, blonde hair rippling. “No. It’s just whatever cans we’ve had for the longest, and some spices that Calamity bought. It smells nice, though, I think? There’s no meat!”
I came over and looked at what she was making. It was, as she said, a bit of everything. Chopped and diced tomato-like... fruit or veggies. Chopped carrots, peas and cubed-up potatoes, as well as some veggies that looked like they’d been bought at Come Here and Die that I was unfamiliar with.
I supposed that chopping up any veggie and adding it to warm water wasn’t the wrong way to cook them. Plus, the water had turned into more of a broth.
Sniffing it from up close made my tummy rumble to remind me that breakfast had been missed. It also smelled very spicy, but in a good way. “Oh, I think this might be good, like chili without ground beef! Get me a bowl, I’ll help by taste-testing!”
***
Comments
Chili without meat you say. Sounds like a curry to me. Just needs some rice.
Coleman
2025-07-02 13:10:15 +0000 UTC