It hadn’t taken long for the new raid to be put together after Saria had shown the Northmen the way to the next village. Aelle had even had his own ship built, to be a part of the thane’s fleet, though he would continuously rave about how his vessel was supposedly of higher quality construction. She didn’t know enough about ships to have any idea of that sort of thing, so she would simply agree and restate something he had already said in a way that made it seem like she was complimenting him. In reality, she had no idea what she was talking about when it came to the boat. She saw a boat, next to more boats, things floating in the water that hauled things around like gigantic bloated horses with large cavernous stomachs where their riders would stay.
While she had eventually fixed her original dress, she had tucked it away somewhere. Perhaps she would wear it on the day she found true freedom. The thought still echoed through her mind occasionally, though she had grown almost content with what she had going on in her life now. It would be nice, she thought, to have her own bed though. Aelle could be a bit grabby after enough drink, and it was often hard to fight off his advances without stepping out of line. She had come up with a few tricks, found a few hiding spots, but for the most part it was harmless as he’d end up falling into a drunken slumber before ever getting to her. That was sheer luck, she knew, and she’d prepared herself for the day that there was no escape. It was only a matter of time. While he had grown on her, especially in these past few days with the construction of the vessel nearing completing and his mood being entirely wonderful because of it, she was still resentful deep down. She still had a bit of her that would not forgive what had been done to her home, but she would hold onto that hatred as long as necessary until she were safe to do something about it. For now, Saria simply pushed it to the back of her mind whenever it surfaced.
Aelle was leading her around to board the new vessel, raving about something boat related that she still did not care about. The sooner she was off the boat and onto solid ground again, the better. The sea was not predictable, and she didn’t trust it one bit. She spied the front of the boat, a beautiful intricate dragon carved upon it as if to greet any opposition with the idea that the vessel housed the ferocity of such a beast. Saria smiled to herself, for she had a secret about such things that she would not divulge. While there was no true dragon aboard the vessel, there was her book and that was close enough, now that she was aboard and being dragged about by Aelle. He went off to do more exclaiming and continue his excitement, and she sat nearby as the boat heaved off toward the port. Standing was not her favorite activity during the time the ship was in motion. She was not built to be at sea, she was built to be a librarian or something similar that stayed inside and never went out to sea. Ever.
As the boat found the port sand, Aelle was going on about naming the boat and worked himself up again, catching Saria in a spiraling hug that nearly suffocated her. Sometimes, she thought as she regained her breath, he really did not remember he was as strong as he was. Her ribs expanded back into their appropriate positions after a few exasperated breaths, though she had half expected them to at least be cracked. Aelle was faster than her in general, and given that his current mood rivaled the energy of an excited child, she had given up on trying to run after him, simply taking her time and continuing properly and ladylike. He wasn’t exactly going to leave her behind, after all, she was ‘the mage’ behind the whole operation. She wasn’t terribly thrilled with that idea, either, though she was still grateful to not be a hand in the fields. Sometimes she fretted over how involved with this raid she would have to be, would she have to kill anyone? She knew she could not ever take someone’s life, not unless they had severely harmed her or someone she… Saria stopped herself and moved to a new topic of thought. The new topic she found was how frustrating it was that whenever Aelle was dragging her off somewhere, he was quite literally dragging her off somewhere, quite often grabbing her about the waist and carting her off. As was the case at this moment, as he opened the door to this new tavern where he was expecting to find recruits for the ship and raid. He set both her and his coin down and gathered the attention of the tavern, though she disliked his addition at the end about her.
The mage is judging their words, oh of course, because I am a truth-seer? Aelle, you overstep my abilities and it is not entirely believable. But sobeit, if I am judging these men based on their words I suppose I will have to pay attention now. For dramatic effect, Saria rested her head on her hand and looked bored, delicately blowing a small cloud of flames from between her pursed lips, and gazing almost menacingly at the men of the tavern as smoke trailed from her smirking mouth as she bit her lip playfully. It was not a wild bit of flame, it disappeared once she closed her mouth, but it served her purpose, causing some of the men to think twice about coming near her. No, there is no dragon aboard the ship, but then again… There’s me.
During the preparations for the raid, Saria had spent any time she could working at the book. The page she’d opened her first day in the hall, she could read it now. She could read nearly half of the pages. She knew almost how the book worked, and knew enough to how it wanted her to read it. That was the secret, about the dragons and all. Her book was of the dragons, she was sure. It was their magic held in its pages, and it would only reveal its secret language and powers to whomsoever it deemed worthy of it. So it was not fire she breathed, it was dragon’s fire. But how she had learned that, she would not tell anyone, nor would she tell anyone she was playing with a much more deadly kind of fire. It had affected her mind, slightly. It made her almost cruel, though she was still the compassionate Saria she always was, but it had made her more reserved and much more appreciative of any solitude that she could find, but she assumed that as dragons were rumored to be of such a manner it must be a side effect of having access to their kind of magic. But those were her secrets, things she kept locked inside, that she would not ever let out.