**** Group A (Brisa & Argurios & others)****
Travel was not like any of them expected it to be. Firstly walking everywhere was difficult, true they had a horse but only one and it was strangely resistant to being ridden by anyon but Ronin. Fortunately between the horse and Brisa’s goat they were actually able to pack and carry a fair amount of supplies. The walking, hour after hour day after day was wearing however, on both the body and mind. It seemed there was nothing out there but more wilderness. They encountered nothing to break the monotony. It was not exciting, it was not glamerous, and it was nothing like the adventure stories all of them had heard. It was boring, hot, and tiering.
The were a bit awkward at first, that first night was a long one with no one sleeping well. In fact it took a couple of days to get a good rythym going. They had packed supplies, but not enough. It was by virtue of Brisa’s goat, Daisy that they got along so well, she easily produced a gallon of milk each day, which meant their other food went further and the small amounts that they were able to gather from the land was the icing on the cake. It was a diet, indeed a daily routine, that none of them were used to however in the manner of young children they actually adapted fairly quickly.
For Brisa the nights were the worse. The other’s seemed less bothered but they didn’t say anything when she slept extra close to the fire and the light it gave. She didn’t like the dark, or the night noises. She had always, until this whole thing started anyway, been told of the horrors of being outside at night Now they had no choice.
It was the fourth day that things got bad, around noon it started raining. Not just little soft raindrops but pouring sluicing rain, cold and miserable that cut through the clothes and left one chilled to the bone. Even the animals hated it and the children quickly learned that walking on a dirt road in the pouring rain meant mud. Thick sucking squelching mud that ground into every stitch of clothing they had.
They had to give up. Fortunately they were able to rig a shelter, albeit a sloppy one, to protect a small sputtering fire. They huddled close around the fire and ate the rest of their food stuffs, the food was soaked and would be ruined anyway. A cold miserable day turned into a far colder and more miserable night. No one slept very good and the mood was low. There was no talking, no anything but grumbling.
It stopped raining sometime around midnight but sleep still eluded most. The mud and water soaked clothing ensured that. It was a low point in their travel. Four days and they found nothing, none of them had realized how far away the next town was. When they started to climb uphill through the low pass in the Graypeak mountains Brisa was about to give up. This was for the birds. Only the knowledge that behind her lay nothing kept her moving forward.
On the 6th day Ronin suddenly turned off the main road to a side path. The path was well worn, nearly as well worn as the road they had been traveling, and there was a sign marking the turn. A black bird carved onto a piece of wood.
Brisa spoke up, asking Ronin where they were going, and he said there was an inn nearby. Spirits lifted at that. They had no idea how much an inn would cost but beds, real beds, baths, food, shelter, and warmth was a welcome thought for them all.
****Group B (Adien & Serra)***
Introductions went quickly, as much as each child chose to reaveal anyway. Neither had seen the other around town which made fudging the truth or keeping things to themselves rather easy.
Serra was completely new to the area, and that was plain in her words and comments, however neither child knew what had happened to anyone. They had even missed the dead, their only clue the empty abandoned village and whatever odd things they managed to find that the others had missed.
It was noon, just slightly passed actually, and leaving that day would not get them far out of the village. It was decided to spend one more night in the abandoned village. Serra was more comfortable out on the moor but when she learned what dangers she had luckily avoided, she agreed to stay inside. It would give them time to gather up things for their trip too.
Serra had no qualms about that, she knew what could be sold or traded down the road for food and money and she was good at figuring where valuables might be kept while Adien on the other hand had a more practical approach. Between the two of them they managed to gather quite a load of “essentials” before dark. So many “essentials” that there was no way the two could carry them.
In addition they didn’t really have a clear “goal” in mind as to where they were headed. After barring themselves in one of the houses, getting a good fire going, and setting down to a dinner, a feast from Serra’s point of view, they would have to discuss the logistics and what they actually planned to do. Not really knowing eachother would make this both easier and harder for them but they couldn’t go haring off at random.
*** Group A (Brisa & Argurios & others)***
Inn was somewhat of a misnomer. When the children reached it, about 2 hours before dark, they saw a sprawling set of buildings. It was once a mining town, now the miners homes and service buildings had been carefully roofed, cleaned, and turned into a massive Inn complex. There was a huge stable, staff quarters, three massive courtyards for the pitching of tents, and at the center a huge two story rambling structure that was the Inn proper.
The place was designed to hold multiple caravans, almost a town in and of itself. And it was undeniably empty. No smoke drifted from chimneys. No horses whikered from in the stanbles. No sounds of people carried on the breeze. The place was deserted.
The only inhabitants was a flock of chickens that must have escaped their coop and were now roaming the grounds in perfect happiness. Unlike Twiddledale however it was plain the complex had been purposefully abandoned. Buildings were shut and locked. Gardens were harvested leaving only the newest fruits and vegetables behind. There were no valuable animals such as horses or cows. It was silent and clean, everything was packed up and only the basics remained. The main inn, however, was clean and dry and well stocked. There were so many supplies in the larder that even though the best stuff was gone there was a good supply of staple foods like dried fish, potatoes, cheeses, ground corn, flour, and honey. Even though the best clothing and linens were gone older wool blankets, servant clothing, and basic dishware remained. It would be easy enough for the children to set a comfortable camp here, dry their still damp clothing, clean up, and in general refresh themselves and their supplies. So despite the oddness of the place being abandoned they decided to stay.
They had two hours in which to get the animals settled, gather supplies for dinner, stoke the fire in the big inn hearth, and in general set themselves up for the night. The urge to explore the abandoned buildings was also quite strong in at least Brisa. Why had it been abandoned, it was obviously prosperous and it hadn’t been abandoned all that long ago. The garden, while a bit overgrown was still fairly neat and orderly. Had they known something bad was coming? How had they known? And where had they gone? So similar and yet so different from Twiddledale. Twiddledale had an aura of great disaster, this place had an aura of great mystery. One inspired fear, the other curiosity.