Out of Character:
Closed to Dissinger. Bunnies preapproved. Takes place under this profile for Karuka.
Just off the coast of Dheathain, a large vessel plowed through the waves with barely a bob to acknowledge them. It was laden with commodities from all over the world to sell to the Dheath, or to trade for unique Dheath goods to sell at its next port. They were so close to Talmhaidh that the captain could almost feel the weight of extra gold in his purse, the reward of unloading his ship.
The ship's bursting cargo holds were far from the only things the captain would be glad to see offloaded. A ship as big as his had plenty of space not only for crew and cargo, but for a bevy of passengers as well. While ferrying tourists to and from their destinations paid good money, and the captain usually enjoyed having strange faces acknowledge his power as the absolute authority on board, this time around he had taken on two people who made him uneasy.
He would be more than glad to be rid of the passengers this time, if just to see the man who hid his face and the girl who accompanied him off his vessel.
The girl was on deck, he could see her red hair shining beneath him. She had spent more and more time looking toward their destination as the days had passed, watching intently though there was no land to be seen. What was so important to her to make her watch the bare seas hour after hour? What was so powerful that it drew her to a near-constant vigil? And why had it been days since last he had seen the giant of a man that had boarded with her?
~*~*~
Amber fingers tapped the rail impatiently, and bright blue eyes pierced the distance. It had been a long six days, but the journey was near its end. At last, green hills and craggy cliffs rose out of the deep, and fair winds sped the boat along on its way.
Less than an hour after she first spotted the land of Dheathain, Karuka saw the first buildings of Talmhaidh rise up from the ground. It was almost like a homecoming; the land opening its arms to receive the ship was the closest thing to Ireland the young woman would ever see again, and it was here that she hoped to seek out the answers she needed. Without those answers, she wouldn't have the strength to bear the burden that had been given her.
That burden had been a man once, with a name and an agenda, with free will. Now that man was a flesh-eating monster with a score to settle. For some reason, he had been bound to her; she was safe from his grisly appetite and had a limited amount of control over him. She was using that now to keep him confined to quarters.
Despite the fact she'd made sure he had fed before they ever left Radasanth, it had only been a couple of days into the journey that she'd noticed him eying other passengers like slabs of meat. While there were several dozen people on the ship who did not comprise part of the essential crew, anyone missing would be noticed, people would become paranoid, and eventually the killer would be caught and dumped into the sea. While that probably wouldn't kill Seth, the potential for disaster his appetite caused made it prudent for him to just keep low.
Very, very low.
But now with dock so close, it was time to return to the room, feed her baby phoenix, pack her bags, and tell Seth that they were about ready to disembark.
~*~*~
The late-afternoon sun bathed Talmhaidh in light and warmth, and Karuka breathed in the rich scent of land as she stepped foot on the ramp. While traveling by boat no longer frightened her, she liked having solid ground under her feet, and there was no relief quite like purifying her lungs of the salt that cloyed the sea air, that infiltrated every breath and created a thin crust on anything exposed to it in a matter of hours.
She held her baby phoenix, Taodoine, on her forearm, letting the warm little ball of fluff get a good view of the new land. When he'd first hatched, he'd been small enough to fit in the palms of her hands, but a mere week later the red and gold chick required an entire arm to cradle him. His bright blue eyes looked at the strange land with curiosity, but not fear; he was secure where he was nestled, safe from harm.
At Karuka's side, but still as far away from her firey little pet as he could get was the ghoul, who fidgeted impatiently while they ambled down the gangplank. Near starvation, each moment that kept him away from his prey was an age too long.
When they finally reached ground, Seth started to break away from his keeper, eager to hunt, but a strong, slender hand grabbed hold of his cloak with a speed her humanity belied, holding firmly. When he turned to her, mild annoyance outlined on the visible lower half of his face, Karuka looked up at the much taller man.
"Be careful, Seth."
That was all she said before releasing him. If they hadn't been surrounded by a crowd of passengers, jostling to disembark, she'd have been more specific - don't be seen, don't take an innocent life - but she didn't have the luxury of privacy to direct the ghoul whose handler she'd been made. She could only hope he'd be judicious when he selected his target.