You wake to the boat’s dull thud against the dock, gulls keening like loose coins, and the sll of salt blown in on a wind that tastes of ho. The line between foreign and familiar is thin, but when the hull grinds the quay you recognize the cadence of your own land: rope rasping on timber, the distant toll of a harbor bell, the ordered chaos of n unloading cargo. For all that the hills you once called yours lie far inland, the shore feels like the first page of a map you know by touch.
Before joining the bustle, you steal a mont alone at the boat’s prow. The slate is warm in your hand—Heyshem’s ssage waiting, curt and exact. He has arranged matters with the head of the Seafarers’ clan: only one inn will take a party of your size. Fewer roofs an fewer places to hide eyes. He has also set a eting. The Seafarer-head will receive you there, discreetly, with news of ships, captains, and any cargoes that sll wrong as they cross the coastal lanes.
You note the detail that matters most: the eting is private, and the inn is a single, deliberate point of exchange. Heyshem’s hand reaches through the slate in the kind of planning that keeps people breathing—one roof, one hour, one place where faces can be counted without drawing the House’s net tight around them.
You gather your captains and speak softly. Most of the company stays aboard until the eting is concluded. A small party—your two squad captains and a trusted runner—will go ashore with you under the cover of settling the rchant’s business. Rend, Bram, and one steady hand remain with the boat to secure her and watch for House signals. Your brothers will shadow from the crowd at a distance; they are not to enter the inn unless called.
You lay out the signals—simple, survivable things. A shorn tuft on the rightmost mooring post ans the Seafarer-head is delayed. A loop of red yarn tied to the inn’s latch ans the room is clean and the talk can be had. A single bell rung from the quay ans the House’s watchers are present and you withdraw at once. In a place thick with eyes, simplicity keeps n alive.
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You step from the boat into the quay’s clamor. rchants haggle. Sailors curse the tide. A boy runs past with a string of fish, his bare feet splashing through morning puddles. You wear a rchant’s ease over a Huntsman’s watch. At the inn’s door, the landlord tips his cap, only mildly surprised by the lord’s sigil; the House has already made your presence public enough to quiet his curiosity.
Inside, the Seafarer-head waits in a private room. He is older than his charts, his hair white as rope left too long in the sun. He greets you not as an envoy, but as one coastline-keeper to another. His voice is gravel and tide.
“Heyshem sent word,” he says. “He wanted few ears. I watch boats by night. I have n on the sheds who count crates when captains think no one is looking. What do you need to know?”
You answer plainly: nas of captains, odd cargoes, n who grow careful at the ntion of the eastern isles. You watch his face for what cos easily and what he sets aside. He gives you what he has—a small broker who moved two crates of iron bowls last month; a crew sailing under a false manifest; a stretch of shore where n worked in the fog and buried sothing that slled of ash. Each piece is small, but together they begin to stitch a ledger whose pattern you can almost see.
Before you part, the Seafarer-head leans close and offers a thing of honest weight: a rumor that a rider went inland bearing a seal that matched a scholar’s hand. He cannot say if it points to a scion or rely a clever clerk, but the shape of it matters. You promise to slate Elara and Theron at once. In return, you slip him a modest gift—an embroidered band for the wrist—sothing he can show his watchers if proof is ever demanded.
Back on the quay, you breathe in the familiar and the dangerous together. You have a list now: nas to follow, a place where iron hides beneath salted fish, and a whisper of scholarly seals moving inland. Heyshem’s plan is working—one inn, one eting—but the work has widened. You must warn, collect, and bind evidence. Shepherd scions if found. Feed Elara the proofs she needs. Keep the lord’s impatience from hardening into a blade that cuts the clans before law and learning can hold it.
You return to the boat with new nas heavy in your pocket and the slate hot with ssages. The shore has given you a beginning. The road inland will ask for more—quiet hours, careful words, and the patient listening that turns rumor into verdict.
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