Rhys felt the subtle change in air as they moved between buildings. Shade cooled the stone beneath their feet. Sound softened, then sharpened again as they passed open doorways. A conversation about grain prices drifted out, then vanished behind them. Laughter followed, brief and unclaid.
Caria glanced once at a side street branching off to the right. It led toward quieter space—less noise, fewer people. She didn’t suggest it. There was no reason yet. Her attention returned to the road ahead, to the way the crowd thinned and thickened in slow pulses.
Puddle adjusted seamlessly, stepping around a bucket left near a doorway, skirting a tethered mule without startling it. Its presence drew no comnt. If anything, it fit the place—another creature moving with purpose, neither wild nor ornantal.
They crossed paths with a pair of guards near an intersection. Not soldiers, just local watch—leather worn smooth, expressions tired rather than sharp. Their eyes flicked over the group, asured and brief, then moved on. No interest lingered.
The town deepened after that. More signs appeared. More voices overlapped. The sll of food grew stronger, layered with oil and tal and sweat. Life pressed a little closer, but it still didn’t crowd them.
Rhys felt the mont approach when stopping would make sense—not because of need, but because the road would soon ask it. He didn’t act on it yet. He let the sense settle, waiting for it to beco clear.
Caria matched his pace, her steps even, her presence steady at his side. There was no need to speak. The rhythm they shared held.
They continued on, carried by the town’s current, until the world itself would tell them when to pause.
The road answered a little farther on.
The press of people eased, not thinning entirely but loosening, as if the town itself had exhaled. Ahead, the buildings opened around a broader junction—not a square, not quite a crossroads, but a place where several paths t and slowed. A well sat off to one side, stone rim worn smooth by years of hands and rope. Nearby, a low-roofed structure carried the steady murmur of voices and the clink of cups.
Rhys felt it then—not a pull, not a command, just a quiet alignnt. This was a place ant for pausing. He slowed without signaling, and the choice settled naturally between them.
Caria noticed imdiately. She didn’t question it. She let her stride shorten to match his, her gaze moving once around the junction, noting entrances, exits, the posture of the people gathered nearby. Nothing tense. Nothing sharp. Just people resting where roads crossed.
Puddle ca to a stop with them, its form relaxing slightly now that movent wasn’t required. It held position near the edge of the space, out of the way, patient.
They stood there for a mont, not blocking the road, not committing to anything yet. A wagon creaked past. Soone laughed inside the low-roofed building. Water sloshed in the well as a bucket was drawn up.
Rhys let his breath settle. Stopping didn’t feel like interruption—it felt like the next step taken sideways instead of forward.
"This works," Caria said quietly, not pointing at anything in particular.
"Yes," Rhys replied.
They hadn’t chosen a destination yet. They didn’t need to. The town had offered them a pause, and they accepted it the sa way they had accepted the road—without ceremony, without urgency.
Whatever ca next would co from here.
They remained there a mont longer, letting the shape of the place finish forming around them. Not studying it—just allowing it to settle into familiarity. The junction wasn’t important because of what it offered, but because it asked nothing. People passed through, paused, moved on again. No one owned the space. No one hurried others along.
Rhys shifted his weight slightly, testing the stillness. It held. The quiet inside him matched the quiet of the place, even with all the small sounds layered over it.
The low-roofed building near the well released a warr scent as soone opened the door—stew, bread, old wood soaked with years of smoke. Conversation swelled briefly, then softened again as the door closed. It felt like an invitation that didn’t insist on being accepted.
Caria followed his gaze, then looked back to the road they’d co from, then to one of the branching paths leading deeper into town. Each direction felt viable. None felt urgent.
"We can sit," she said, just as calmly as before. "Or we can keep standing. Either way."
Rhys nodded. "Let’s sit."
They moved without haste, angling toward the building, not cutting anyone off, not drawing attention. Puddle followed, keeping just behind them, its movent unremarkable enough that people adjusted around it without comnt, the way they would around a cart wheel or a post.
Inside, the light dimd slightly. Wooden tables bore the marks of long use. A few travelers sat with cups in hand, talking quietly or staring into nothing in particular. No one looked up for long when they entered. They were simply two more figures choosing rest.
They took a table near the wall—not hidden, not central. A place that allowed presence without participation.
Rhys sat, setting his gear down at his feet. The simple act of stopping fully settled into him now. The road loosened its hold. The town’s rhythm took over.
Caria sat across from him, posture easy, awareness intact but unstrained. Puddle settled beside the table, close enough to be part of them, far enough to stay out of the way.
For the first ti since leaving the forest, there was nowhere they were ant to be next.
And that, too, was enough.
They sat like that for a few breaths, letting the space finish acknowledging them. The tavern—or wayhouse, or whatever na it carried—didn’t rush to define itself. It simply existed, and allowed them to do the sa.
A server moved between tables with practiced ease, setting down cups, collecting coins, exchanging a few words that sounded familiar without being personal. When she reached them, she paused just long enough to et Rhys’s eyes.
"Food’ll be ready soon," she said. "Drink now or with it?"
"Now’s fine," Rhys replied.
Caria nodded in agreent.
Reviews
All reviews (0)