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Weather: Snow descends in big, flat flakes from an overcast sky. Weather is indeed coming back in with the colder evening, but it isn't remotely as harrowing as the previous evening. It is cold; colder than is necessary to produce frozen precipitation, but the many weeks of the season have hardened most to the worst of it. The wind is still an issue, but at least it hasn't gotten any worse. To make it short, the weather outside is frightful, but it isn't insurmountable.
Time: Early evening. The time for Tea has passed, as tends to happen when people are lost in conversation about important matters.
Ambience: The day begins to shuffle into the softer tones of the evening, turning from a white and blue atmospheric greeting to the very beginnings of lustrous twilight hues. There is still a bit of light in the sky, but it is receding in the way it usually does around this time at winter.
Inside, the party may take refuge in warm and comfortable surroundings of old stone and crafted wood, the scent of food, tea, burning wood, and grapeseed oil leaving a distinct impression upon one's olfactory memory. The light is warm and soft, birthed of crackling fires, candles probably made from local beeswax, and oil lamps. The wind still blows upon the walls, still makes its presence known, but the hound of winter has no teeth in this place, at this time.
The cellar... remains.
There was a measurable amount of increase of Lizbeth's mood as she received the positive remarks from Kathryn was unfortunately tempered by the fact that the recent dialogue involved key concepts like
undead and
child bride. This put a sincere amount of malleability to the warm and fuzzy feelings one might get from a cherished mentor's positive feedback.
"I like it, all of it. I really do. I just hope it's... you know, enough." She did seem to throw herself into her martial studies. Driven, one might say. Hoping to lighten the mood with something near to philosophical, she mentioned,
"It's really funny that all of this came from the land, here." As far as anyone knew, anyway. The Ankheg chitin was taken from beasts of the land. The weapons she carried - most of them - were recovered from the Vineyard grounds in one way or another.
The musings from Kosara came with something more of confusion. It sounded rhetorical, which was Lizbeth's hope as she appeared to have no idea how to answer.
"I, um. Hmm. I don't know. It's not like I can tell what they're thinking, right?" Yeah, she hoped that the question wasn't aimed at her with the intent of getting an answer. She did recall a little something, though.
"I was still there when Master Baronfjord got finished with Toombes's bones. The voice told us to enjoy the holidays, or something like that. But he's doing things anyway. Right? He's not keeping his word." It was odd, in hindsight, that Lizbeth's issue in that moment was that the quite possibly undead monster who might or might not want her as a child bride was being dishonest. There was definitely a need to reassess priorities.
Lizbeth quietly drew her short, curved sword with the layered, mottled blade. It didn't look quite as nice when she first drew it, but apparently all it needed was the application of a little magic that she hadn't possessed not so long ago. She held a foreign blade and it felt comfortable, balanced beautifully, and was something she was becoming very familiar with. With a sigh, she sat, suddenly sullen, and watched the light from multiple tiny sources reflect from the broad side of the blade.
Meanwhile, Urmdrus attempted to continue the conversation, answering as he might. Kathryn's question about the distillery came first.
"Not edge. Middle, south fields. Under the hill, with the big tree." Yes, the Hidden Distillery was near the edge of the Rose River Vineyards, but not quite along it. The question about long storage seemed to puzzle him for a moment.
"No. Made stone cellar cover, for long storage. Long time ago. Don't know where they are now. Never used." He continued to answer the flurry of other questions which came at him, now with a touch of annoyance in his voice.
"No. Didn't build everything. Lot of work - local labor. I fix. I maintain. I do special work. I don't build barns. No stables. No sheds. Big House already here, when I came. Once, built outhouse." He shrugged,
"Emergency." The Mosswaters, to their credit, were also taking things as they came. Tarace listened on to Kathryn's insistence that he stick around, and although he didn't really want to stay in a place that may or may not be cursed, he was forced to admit, if only to himself, that the tall warrior lady had a point. Maybe even two. All the same, he gave a glance to Barbal to see what he thought on the matter, the latter of which threw his hand up and shook his head. Finally, Tarace answered,
"Okay, fine. It was going to be nightfall by the time we got back anyway. The fellows back home know what to do, I suppose." Still, he couldn't help wring his hands about something, which came out in the form of,
"But seriously, Barbal, of all the things to drink in our neighbor's entire winery, you had to pick the cursed wine. Sometimes, I swear you try to do things like this." Many a tsk and head shake later, Barbal just sighed and stared straight ahead until it was done.
The gruffer Halfling farmer, Barbal, concentrated on sipping his brandy (possibly out of spite) and fielding questions which came his way, possibly even in an act of solidarity with Urmdrus, a Dwarf who shared his boldness of speech.
"Townsfolk?" he regarded.
"I mean, now as you mention, maybe. Never been to the south deserts, m'self. But the older folk do, I guess, look a little different from the folk back in the Township and the younger ones, for the most part. I never thought of it much, being honest. Those Humans, they got a lot of details from person to person that're different, let alone culture to culture. I never paid it much mind." He thought about it for a moment with an expression on his face like he had never considered a thing he was staring at for years.
"Come to think on it, I did hear some of the old timers use different words for things, never quite knew why. One fella, called a knife he was buying in town a 'kard.' Or something like that. Wasn't a poker player, neither. Other words, too, but that one stands out to me, first one I remember." Barbal looked a little surprised at himself.
"What do you suppose that means?" From seemingly out of nowhere, Urmdrus offered up,
"Music. Hear music, some nights. South. Strings."