The Severis Tales 5: Eggs

by | October 5, 2019

Part 1

The Severis Tales

5: Eggs

©2019.10 Patrick Rivers

Maven Kalflar arrived at the east end of Barlett in the early afternoon of the fourteenth of Jalis, 1104. It was a warm winter day, a day that was god-sent compared to the harsh winter storms that plagued all of Caldore during Erandor and the turn of the new year. The sky was overcast, and the weather was warm. The horse and the cart she drove from Camden, the large county in South Caldore and lowest area of the country, was reasonably behaved given the conditions.

Maven is a bipedal dragon, or biped. Bipedal dragons are the closest in relation to their ancestral dragon counterparts; however, they are mammal-like in their body functions as well as in their physical features. Ninety percent or more of their genetic makeup is reptilian. In Maven’s case, she has all the features you would find on a typical fantasy dragon: almond-shaped eyes, which are blue; horns on her head, which are curved up with a slight backward bend; scale-like skin across her body, which is blue and soft; a wiggly tail; and, of course, a set of fully-functioning wings for flight. Of her mammal side, Maven has long, thick, black hair. She likes to keep it tucked in a cloche-like hat and wear elvish-styled dresses, complete with hooks and cut-outs to fit her wings and tail.

Maven is a successful woman down in Camden County, in the city of Richmond, to be precise. Growing up in the northeast county of Rale, she had done what many in the poor and impoverished and run-down towns did to survive: turn to crime and other unorthodox means just to stay alive. She held onto a dream that she could escape that life with her best friend, Milakkalos “Mila” Daruginna, and become someone important.

Many years later, it happened: Maven is the proud owner of Kalflar Farms, a company she founded on her love of preserved foods. She has ventured up north to begin an expansion of her company in the hopes of finding a buyer for her foodstuffs; and correspondence between another figure has led her to come to Barlett.

Maven and Mila had not seen each other in twenty years. When Mila had the opportunity to leave, Maven supported her. Mila joined a caravan traveling toward the western prairie counties, stopping in Marius County along the way. Maven herself continued to travel around, when, several years later, she would be given an opportunity to travel south for an apprenticeship, an option she took with great pride. That was ten years ago. Five years later, she became the proprietor of her own company, selling preserved foodstuffs enjoyed by many pub patrons and shop customers throughout South Caldore.

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Maven rolled up her horse and buggy to a building with a large triangular roof on the eastern edge of town. It was the sort of building you would find in the outlying rural areas, or, in the middle of nowhere. It looked a little run-down and in need of repair. It would be like any other building if it were not for the large blue sign above the front door that had a large white question mark painted in the middle of it. Below the question mark was a sign that read “Information Centre.” It is one of the typical Caldore Government-instituted buildings to service tourists and travelers who are looking for information about the town they have come to.

The bell rang at the top of the door as Maven walked in.

“Good morning,” said the clerk sitting behind the desk. “Welcome to Barlett! How can I help you today?”

Maven waddled up to the small desk. She noticed the neatly folded brochures, other pamphlets on a nearby counter, then the large map of Barlett on the wall. “I just came in from a long ride from Camden,” she said, keeping her gaze on the map. “Could you please tell me where the Barlett Inn is?”

The clerk moved out from her desk, and using her finger, drew imaginary lines along the map showing her the route from the Information Centre, “Turn onto Main Road here, and here, and then here. Barlett Inn is the premier lodging for many travelers, with excellent food and bedding,” she said in her forced courteous and professional tone.

“Great,” said Maven, nodding appreciatively. However excellent that was, she was not going to sell product to just one place. She has been in contact with that one shopkeeper, and she was keen to meet the person, but she is looking for more interested parties. Business was purely on her mind–so, she followed up with, “Is there any other places for food and drink?”

“There is indeed,” said the clerk. “The east end has many shops, most notably on Ash Street is Severis General Goods,” The clerk showed Maven on the map how to get to it. She continued on, saying, “Further down the road on the same street is Mila’s pub, an establishment that serves various drink and food, and-“

“Stop right there,” said Maven, suddenly giddy. “Did you say Mila?”

The clerk nodded. “Mila Daruginna runs it. Coffee, ale, great pub grub. Fine lady, if you ask me,” she said.

Maven’s eyes grew large. After twenty years? Oh my god, I might wet myself, she thought. I…I don’t know what to say!

The clerk nudged her seemingly petrified body. “Hey, are you alright?” she asked.

“Yes, I’m fine–and yes, she is a great lady, indeed!” said Maven. She took a copy of the map from the display and raced out the door, yelling “Thanks a bunch!” on her way out.

The clerk waved to Maven as the door closed. “Anytime.”

It was clear the Information Centre does not get many visitors, and Maven’s brief appearance gave the clerk a small amount of joy. It was over all too soon, however, and the sombre mood returned to her. The clerk lumbered back into her chair at the desk, put her feet up, and continued reading her newspaper she had just finished reading a moment ago.

#

Maven’s heart pumped all day. She was fluttering with anxiety since hearing Mila’s name at the Information Centre. Her tail wagged uncontrollably, and her wings fluttered on their own. The bellboy at the Barlett Inn asked her multiple times if everything was alright. The receptionist did the same on her way out into town. It was such an unexpected turn of events for her: a reunion of long, lost friends. This trip was supposed to be all business, but she had friendship competing for first place in her mind.

Instead of taking her stabled horse, Maven took a horse taxi to the east end straight to Mila’s pub. She became annoyed at the taxi driver when he too asked if anything was wrong. She simply paid him, with a fifty-cent tip, gave him a courteous thanks, and departed the carriage.

Before she knew it, she was on the raised porch and facing the large oak door. She stared at it for several seconds; and as she put her hand on the handle, began to have reservations. Come on, Maven–you can do this, she thought nervously. Twenty years is a long time, and she had no idea how Mila would react. Bravely, she entered the pub.

It was astonishingly busy. The smell of alcohol and coffee wafted through the decorated interiors and painted posts. Booths and tables lined the sides of the windows. Various tables and stools were scattered across the large floor, host to many patrons, tall and short, elf and bipedal, young and old. This was her friend’s business. It made her smile. It made her feel warm inside. It was that type of warmness you feel when you know that everything had turned out alright.

The bar spanned a large section of the back wall, with the till near the right wall. Ahead of her, the bar turned a corner and continued down, where a hallway with toilets and other facilities continued on. Redge, Mila’s cook and trusted person to run the pub on her absence, stood with his back away from Maven. As she approached, Redge disappeared, and Mila suddenly showed up in his place. She was drying pint glasses and putting them on a large tray on the back counter. Maven stopped, breathed in, approached the bar, sat down on the stool right behind Mila, and waited.

Mila heard someone’s throat clear. She turned around, and she was about to tell them to go down to the till to order, when her eyes locked onto Maven’s heartfelt blue almond-shaped eyes.

“Hello, Mila,” said Maven, croaking with emotion.

Mila gasped with shock. She dropped the pint glass from her hand, which shattered into a thousand pieces on the wooden floor. Her light grey face turned white with disbelief, and her eyes welled up with tears. “Oh my god,” she cried. “It’s really you. It’s really you!” She dropped her towel onto the counter, and ran down the length of the bar, nearly pushing her waiter, Tom, over the countertop. She flipped up the counter door and rushed out down the other end. “Maven Kalflar!” she sang, hugging her best friend as tight as she could.

“Milakkalos Daruginna,” replied Maven, welling up herself. “I’m so glad! I just am so glad!”

“What are you doing here? What the hell have you been doing these past twenty years?” asked Mila.

“It’s a long story,” said Maven, sitting down on the stool. “I’m the owner of a preserved food company coming to expand up north. I have a contact in Barlett I came to see. I was not expecting to hear your name; so, I came here,” She looked around at Mila’s own accomplishments. “So, I see you’ve done yourself good as well. Very good!”

“Ten years running,” said Mila. Instead of running around again, she slid over the top of the bar, carefully avoiding the shards of glass on the floor. “I finally found a thing I’m good at. I’ve become a good person,” she said while sweeping up the glass on the floor and disposing it into a garbage bin.

The two talked for what seemed like ages, picking up from where they left off two decades ago. They exchanged exciting stories of random encounters: Mila told Maven about some of Caldore’s famous people visiting the pub, and the ones she threw out, while Maven talked about leaving Rale and her apprenticeship in Camden.

At some point in the evening, Xiveer Severis and Franklin “Jok” Ferguson–Xiveer’s best friend and next-door farmer–came into the pub for a drink. They sat down at their usual spot at the corner of the bar straight ahead of the door, while talking about their own home in Providence Bay.

Since Franklin returned a few days ago from his winter holiday, Xiveer tried to tell him about mucking up his shed. He wanted to apologize to him, but he couldn’t say it. That, or he could not find the words to describe the horrific scene that unfolded when those winter geese bit into his nether regions. As he sat down on the stool, he ended the topic with “At least Larry had a blast. Gave him some insight.”

Mila came up them. “Oh god, it’s the clown and the klutz,” she said sarcastically, scowling at them with her hands on her hips. “I suppose you want something to drink, eh?”

“No, we just wanted to sit at the bar and watch everyone else’s life unfold,” said Xiveer, believing himself to be witty.

Then, Xiveer heard a voice he had not heard in ages–eight years to be precise. It was a voice that not only startled him, but also reminded him of an ordeal most unsettling.

Maven cocked her head forward past the post to see, and her jaw dropped. “This cannot be true! The gods cannot be serious!” she said with elation.

Xiveer blinked. “Maven? Is that you?” he said.

“For heaven’s sake–you two know each other?” said Mila, completely taken back by it. Maven had not mentioned him specifically in the entire time they talked.

“She came to my rescue eight years ago. I never thought I’d actually see you again. This is a real turn-up for the books, ain’t it?” said Xiveer.

Franklin looked at him quizzically. “You never mentioned this before. Come on–let it out,” he said.

Xiveer began by scratching the hair behind his horns, then told the story. Eight years ago, he was traveling to Tonton County to pick up some items that, for some reason, could not be delivered to the shop. The weather turned nasty, and he was forced to stop in Rale County, a place he knew, as a former traveling merchant, was dangerous. Since Mila left Rale, many improvements have been made to the quality of life there, but crime was still a problem. Unfortunate for Xiveer, he encountered Jergen Pret, who was known as a ganger. In the northeast, a ganger is a slang term for a bully-like person who tries to shake money or food out of victims, or “clients,” if you will. They are like a loan shark of sorts, resorting to bullying tactics to get what they want.

He was minding his own business, drinking at a corner table, when Jergen Pret came in through the door. He went up to the bar and pestered patrons that owed him whatever money they had, which was very little in those days. They were half-dragons, and Jergen himself was no fan of bipeds or hybrids. After a few racial slurs and threats, Xiveer had enough. In all the stupid things he has done in his life, picking a fight with a ganger had to be among the dumbest. He was about to have a painful death.

But then, an angel with actual wings arrived. Sitting in the opposite corner of the room was the young, impressionable Maven Kalflar, who felt compelled to come back to visit her family during her apprenticeship. She intervened; and that day, both Jergen and Xiveer learned the deceiving strength a bipedal dragon carries. She flattened Jergen like a pancake. Before he and his “colleagues” could react, Xiveer and Maven bolted out the pub, and rode dangerously through the stormy weather into Tonton County, into safety. They parted, never knowing each other’s surnames, and that was the last time they saw each other, until today.

“That’s quite a story,” said Franklin, sipping his beer. “Does Leena know about this?”

“No!” shouted Xiveer suddenly.

“But, why?” asked Franklin.

Xiveer couldn’t think of a reason. In fact, he made up an alternate telling of the events. He was too frightened of Leena’s reaction if she had known the truth. He spun a tale in place of the real one, and that was that.

“Leena? Who is Leena?” asked Maven.

“Leena my wife, Leena Severis,” said Xiveer.

Maven stroked her chin. “So, you’re Xiveer Severis, then? You are Xiveer Severis of Severis General Goods?” she asked.

Xiveer nodded. “Yup.”

She looked at him right in the eyes. “You owe a damn pint!”

“Fair enough,” said Xiveer, laughing. “What will it be, my lady?”

Maven looked over at the end of the bar, checking each label on the beer taps. “Nor’easter Drake,” said Maven.

Franklin raised an eyebrow. “That stuff ain’t for the faint of heart. A surprising choice,” he said.

“I’m more surprised that you two aren’t married,” said Maven, pointing at Xiveer and Mila, respectively.

Franklin just had to turn his head to avoid laughing directly into Xiveer’s face.

Xiveer himself simply shrugged, nodding with agreement.

“You must be joked!” Mila said in surprise. “I wouldn’t marry him within a month of weekends!”

While she went off to pour what would be Maven’s third pint, another patron entered the pub. He was a big, burly man, with a furry white coat with patches along the arms. He is a sailor on a ship that is in overlay at the west end docks for a few days while a storm passes over Lake Winlan, the large body of water that cuts deep into Caldore, serving many ports of call along the mainland as well as the maritime provinces. His hair was off-white and ragged with a matching weather-beaten face, a face has seen the face of battle in an arena of sea and ice, and storm.

The man, innocently enough, went and ordered a pint at the till, retreating to a quiet corner of the pub, and drank in silence. About half an hour or so later, he got up, and made his way to the door, catching a glimpse in his eye of two familiar figures sitting at the bar. Suddenly, his heart raced, and he began to sweat. What are they doing here? Are they after me, after all these years?

The man was Jergen Pret, and he immediately recognized them both. He had tried to escape the life in Rale County, but his unruly infamy that he became known for followed him throughout the years, trapping him forever in an endless depression that made him prone to drink. The sight of both Xiveer and Maven triggered in him a relapse, of which he had not had in many years, and it sent him into a sharp downward spiral. He bolted out the door and ran aimlessly down Ash Street to somewhere unknown.

Meanwhile, Maven told Xiveer about her mission in Barlett. His interest piqued almost immediately. She refused to tell them what was on offer, but she was looking for a common place to debate with her prospective buyers and award the magic contract that would secure her first northern distribution. Mila suggested the pub would be a great place–partly, because Maven is a friend, and would say no otherwise; but mainly, because, like Xiveer, she wanted to know more about Maven’s mystery preserved food.

But it was getting dark. The reunion was over, and Maven had to leave. “Well, I can’t tell you how pleased I am to see you both. I must be going, but I will be back tomorrow at four o’clock in the afternoon,” she said. Maven tipped her hat to them and turned to leave.

“Maven,” said Mila with a flat smile on her face.

She turned around. “Yes?”

“It’s good to see you again.”

Maven smiled and turned around. Before leaving, she did a wiggle of her tail, and she flicked her wings out. Free of her nerves, she left the pub on a high note.

The friendly physical gesture turned Mila’s face from light grey to tomato red. Clearly, she was either embarrassed, or she was blushing from some sort of attraction. Mila knew full well it was embarrassment.

Xiveer laughed. “Now that was interesting. You two get up to something back in the day?” he asked coyly.

Mila threw a peanut at him. “Oh, shut up,” she shouted, going back to her bar tending duties.

“Come on, let’s get out of here,” said Franklin, putting his cap back on. “Leena’s gonna flip if we aren’t at dinner in time,”

Mila glanced at them as they passed through the door. What a pair, those two, she thought, disappearing into the back.

#

Part 2

Part 3

Part 4

Part 5

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