Shikshak Yaren observed Ashan for a silent mont, his pale yellow eyes inscrutable, fixed on the boy who had been his student for a handful of weeks and would soon be sothing else entirely.
The harbor noise faded around them, the shouts of the dockworkers, the creak of ships, the slap of water against wood—all of it receding until there was only the space between them, charged with sothing that might have been the weight of what had been taught and what had been learned, or might have been the first stirrings of a farewell that neither of them knew how to speak.
"Execute your mission with utmost precision." His final instruction left no room for doubt, no space for failure, no quarter for the weakness that ca from hesitation or fear. "Until we et again."
Then, with a speed that belied his usual deliberate movents, he turned and was gone. His form dissolved into the harbor's chaos as if swept away by a sudden gust, as if he had never been there at all, leaving behind only the mory of his presence and the weight of his words.
Ashan stood alone at the edge of the dock, the salt wind tugging at his robes, the spray of the sea misting his face.
I rely blinked.
.........
"Captain Osric, at your service!"
The sailor introduced himself with a broad, gap-toothed smile that split his weathered face and seed to promise adventures that had already happened and would happen again. His hand was rough when Ashan took it, calloused from years of hauling lines and handling sails, but his grip was firm, his eyes clear, his welco genuine.
"Arashen Ashan." Ashan offered a courteous nod in return, the response automatic, the words shaped by months of practice.
"Well then, hop aboard." Captain Osric gestured toward the ship with a sweep of his arm that took in the deck, the masts, the rigging that rose against the grey-green sky. "We've a long stretch of the Lady Sea's back to ride."
With that, he leapt nimbly onto the deck, his movents quick and sure, and began unfurling the sails with practiced efficiency, his hands finding the lines, the knots, the rhythm of a vessel that was waking from sleep and readying itself for the voyage ahead.
I am finally leaving this island.
A faint, surprising lancholy touched him, settling in his chest like a stone dropped into still water. He had spent weeks in this place, had learned its rhythms, its secrets, its silences. He had walked its streets, trained in its halls, prayed in its temple. He had beco sothing here that he had not been before.
I am changing places with disorienting speed. And sothing tells this is far from the last ti.
He boarded the vessel that would carry him back to the place of his second birth.
.........
The sun hung at its zenith in a vast, unforgiving azure expanse that seed to go on forever, the blue deepening at the edges, fading to white where it t the horizon.
A cold sea breeze grazed the dark mast where the sails clung, filling them, driving them forward, carrying the scent of salt and distant depths, of places that had no nas and would never have nas, of the vast, indifferent expanse that had been here before there were words for sea and would be here long after the last word was spoken.
"The ship is the mother, the sea is the father,
One gives us shelter, the other disaster.
Love them both, for both are true—
The ship may save you, the sea will choose you~"
Captain Osric began to hum, then sing, the old chantey rough and rhythmic as he spun the ship's wheel, his voice rising and falling with the motion of the waves, his body moving with the vessel as if they were one thing, not two.
Ashan stood nearby, listening, watching the way the light played on the water, the way the wake stretched behind them like a road that was being laid down and erased at the sa ti.
"Isn't that a hymn of the Storm Lord's followers?" He let the question form, let it drift into the space between them.
"Haha!" Osric barked a laugh, the sound bright and genuine. "This tune is claid by every soul who's ever wet a deck! Sailors, pirates, bounty hunters—all have their own version." He spun the wheel, adjusted the sails, caught the wind.
"It belongs to the sea itself, not any single god." His eyes sparkled with mischief, with the particular joy of a man who had spent his life on the water and had found it good.
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"How about it? Care to join in? Loosen the cords on that solemn spirit."
"Cough! My apologies." Ashan affected a few dry coughs, letting them color his voice. "My throat is... uncommonly sore."
"Hmmm." Captain Osric pondered for a second, his brow furrowing, his lips pursing.
Then he dug into a pocket within his oilskin coat, his hand erging with sothing that glead darkly in the sun. "Here! Catch!"
What now?
Ashan caught the object—a peculiar, curving shape, the surface rough, the weight unexpected. It looks like a pipe. He turned it over in his hands, his fingers tracing its curves. So form of dicinal inhalant?
The texture was of old, coarse clay, worn smooth in places where fingers had held it, where lips had touched it, where the heat of a thousand burns had left their mark. It was warm from the captain's pocket, and when he brought it closer, he could sll the residue of whatever had been burned in it before—herbal, earthy, and complex.
"Chilim!" The Captain announced with a chuckle, his grin widening.
"Take a few drags. It'll cure what ails your throat and your soul!"
Ashan blinked in bewildernt. A smoking device to cure a sore throat?
He let the thought surface, let it drift. A novel concept. Especially since my throat is perfectly fine.
He lifted the chilim, caught the lingering, deeply herbal scent of previous uses.
There was sothing else beneath it, sothing sharper and cleaner, sothing that might have been the ghost of the fires that had burned in it before.
Potent stuff.
"Give it a try!" Osric urged, his voice bright, his eyes fixed on Ashan's face. "A whole new world of perception awaits."
Ashan didn't imdiately comply. First, he focused inwardly, let his awareness settle, let the gray-white whirlpools spin to life behind his eyes.
[Viksana: Analyse]
The information ca in a flood, too fast to parse, too fast to hold—but he let it wash over him, let it settle, let it reveal what he needed to know. No tampering. No hidden malice. No traps waiting to be sprung. Just complex plant residues, the ghosts of a hundred burns, and a faint, unfamiliar energy signature that pulsed with a rhythm he did not recognize.
Satisfied.
He gripped the chilim with both hands, felt its weight, its warmth, its presence. He brought it to his lips, and the mont it made contact, a sudden, strong suction pulled at his core—not at his lungs, not at his throat, but at sothing deeper, sothing that was not quite physical. It drew not air, but a thread of his own prana, a thin, bright line of energy that he had not known was there until it was being drawn out of him.
What—?!
"Haha! Don't fret!" Captain Osric's voice cut through his surprise, bright with laughter. "That's a special design for our kind. It uses a dab of your own prana to ignite the blend within. Common fla won't touch it."
Understanding ca in a flash, and Ashan relaxed his guard, allowing a minuscule stream of energy to flow from his core to the bowl of the chilim. The clay glowed faintly for an instant—a soft, warm light that was there and gone—and a thin, aromatic ribbon of smoke spiraled up from the bowl, curling toward the sky, catching the light, holding it, releasing it.
He exhaled gently, and the wind caught the smoke, whisked it away, scattered it across the water until there was nothing left of it but the mory of its passing.
"So?" Osric watched him, his grin still wide. "Feel that mont of bliss?"
"Cough! Not... unpleasant." Ashan managed the words, the smoke still lingering in his lungs, the warmth of it still spreading through his chest. He handed the chilim back, his fingers reluctant to release it. "What's its cost?"
"This specialty piece? Runs about fifteen bronze coins." Osric tucked it back into his coat, patted it once, fondly. "Up to fifty for the real fancy ones within the Order's markets. The common folk use cheaper ones, but you'd need Rajyam coin for those."
Right. Ashan let the information settle, let it beco part of the map he was building. The Order's own economy. My House oversees smithing and mining. He felt the corners of his mouth twitch. A tangible benefit of my choice. If I can impress Kumar Taevor with my work, financial constraints might... loosen.
"My thanks for the experience." Ashan offered a light nod, the gesture easy and unforced. "I'll leave you to your duties."
"Aye aye!" Captain Osric tipped an imaginary hat, the motion theatrical and affectionate, and resud his humming, his voice blending with the creak of timbers and the sigh of the waves, becoming part of the rhythm of the vessel, the sea, the voyage.
.........
Ashan retreated to the small cabin allotted to him. It was stark: an old, dark mat unrolled on the plank floor, and a single iron candle-stand bolted in a corner, a stub of tallow waiting within. The walls were close, the ceiling low, the air still and warm. It slled of salt and wood and the particular emptiness of a space that had been waiting for soone to fill it and was content to wait a little longer.
No respite from the daily discipline.
He settled onto the mat, felt the fibers give beneath his weight, felt the ship's motion beco part of his body, the rise and fall of the waves a rhythm that was not quite the rhythm of breath and not quite the rhythm of blood, but sothing in between.
He sank into sadhana.
The room, devoid of external light, was filled only with the slow, asured rhythm of his breath, the pulse of energy that moved through his channels, the weight of the days that had passed and the days that were to co.
Shikshak Yaren's directive is clear: fortify the foundation. He let the thought surface, let it drift through the stillness. But how?
Do I drill deeper into the Bodh via other mantras or kriyas?
Experinting directly with my siddhi is still too dangerous without fuller comprehension. My divination... I have neglected its practice.
He turned the problem over in his mind, the ship's gentle rocking a trono for his thoughts. The answer, when it ca, was not a sudden revelation, not a flash of insight, but a slow, steady settling, like sedint finding its level at the bottom of still water.
Senses.
He let the word fill the space behind his eyes, let it beco the shape of what he would do, the path he would walk.
The foundation of perception, the first gate through which all urja and understanding must flow. To refine the vessel, one must start with its most imdiate instrunts. He let the thought settle, let it beco part of the rhythm of his breath.
He would begin there.
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