GREYBARROW | LOWER QUAY | RAIN-SWEPT NIGHT
The Sea of Pelluria battered the piers like a drunkard denied last call, heavy-fisted, bitter, and unrelenting. Rain fell in waves, carving rivulets through the tarps strung between barnacled mooring posts, drumming against every shingle and staved barrel like a war chant with no refrain. Lightning spidered across the black sky, throwing the harbor into stark, silvered relief—masts like gallows, ropes like nooses, and the occasional hulked vessel rotting in its berth like an omen half-remembered.
There, tethered by a double loop of salt-pickled rope, bobbed the
Netherthistle.
A low, wide-bellied river barge, her hull slathered in pitch and scars, she crouched against the dock like a beast unchained but not yet leaping. Bundles of netting and crates lashed with eel cord were stacked beneath a tarred canopy, their shadows cast long and twitching by the lamplight affixed to her prow. It was an old-style lantern—driftwood-wrought and fish-oil fed—that gave off a sickly amber glow, painting the quay in honeyed hues that no eye could mistake for warmth.
Wexley Thorn stood mid-deck, boot braced on a coil of damp rope, oilskin cloak snapping behind him like a storm-witch’s banner. His cone-hat was tied tight against the wind, lenses fogged and gleaming as he adjusted the barge's rigging.

A second gnome worked closer to the prow, cursing as he hauled a sack twice his size across the slippery deck.
This
other gnome—thick-browed, sun-browned, sharp-eyed, younger than Wexley by some margin. Yet he still bore the same unmistakable riverfolk hallmarks: callused fingers, a broad nose like a chipped helm, and the hunched, coiled posture of someone who expected trouble to come from the water as often as from above. His clothes were stitched from eel-hide and salvaged sailcloth, and his fingers flicked knots with uncanny precision.
"Rain’s trying to drown us before the river gets its shot." He spat over the rail, then caught sight of movement along the quay.
The party approached, their outlines refracted by the storm: tall and resolute shadows framed by the flicker of half-drowned torchlight.
"Those our precious cargo then?" Thaelin muttered to Wexley, not low enough to avoid being overheard.
Thaelin straightened, wiped his hands on his jerkin, and shot Wexley a crooked grin.
"Aye. Precious and doomed." Wexley didn’t look up from the knot.
"Keep your tongue civil, Thael. They’ve chosen a difficult path."
Behind him, a soft rustle stirred in the darker half of the cargo canopy, but neither gnome acknowledged it. Wind howled through the sail-less rigging like a dirge.
Wexley finally finished with the rope he was dutifully working on, eyes sharp behind his lenses.
"You’ve time for questions, if you’ve the sense to ask 'em. Once we’re off this pier, we ride quiet and fast. Stuck to the shallows."
He gave the deck a last, lingering glance, like he was counting more than crates.
"Serah better hurry. We will not delay much longer."