Even with trying to remain unnoticed and law-abiding, Aurianne had courted a few near disasters with over-amorous men, and others who just found the idea of her being free and unmarried somehow threatening. The Bridge sure was not an easy place for a single woman to live, and she had no desire to return. The redhead had been going to tell Jhary that she needed to leave, and could not bring herself to stay any longer, in spite of the bard's generosity.
However, that had seemed a bit harsh after recent events, and gaining a glimpse of the usually happy man's torment. So she had declined to do so for the moment. However, as providence would have it Jhary had already arrived at his own conclusion. After weeks at the Bridge searching, he was drawing undesired attention from the Banned Angels who set upon him for tithes and taxes, and he also wished to be gone. The trio had agreed to stay until the end of the week, and then set forth to help Aurianne rescue her henchman Darius if he still lived.
The stables made Aurianne smile. The smells, and the sights, all crafting the fondest memories. She didn't know what she would do after she had achieved her revenge. She had dwelt on it though at least a little. Would she just be alone wandering? She didn't like that outcome much, there seemed no point to it all. So she thought of other scenarios. Could she even dream of teaming up with Jhary Brannon, she liked the man, no, it was well beyond liking. He was what so many women sought in a man, even if sometimes he appeared a bit cowardly. The music, the charm, the romance, the dimples. She laughed at herself, then at Isabou who whinnied on seeing her mistress with pleasure.
She had decided to head southeast that day. It was more open and the buildings quickly dispersed into mostly single-story shanty huts. A vast suburb of corrugated iron and reclaimed salvage. The negative was the roads were more than muddy, but the positive was Aurianne was mostly left alone. Isabou's great hooves struck the sticky soil and sent mud flinging in all directions. Still, it felt good to ride.
Aurianne lost herself in the rhythm of the great animal's gait. Isabou had settled from an excited gallop into an easy canter. Beauty ran at a safe distance behind trying to dodge the flying mud. As she looked about her Aurianne was amazed at the vast and very youthful populace. There was rarely an elderly person to be sighted. Gray hair seemed endangered. This was true even in the inner city of the bridge where the more affluent lived.
This continent used to carry such a different demographic. Governments worried incessantly at a burgeoning elderly population that rode on the shoulders of the young. War, lack of medical options, and zero birth control had seen a complete reversal in this trend. Not many lived to an old age any more. Youth was everywhere, both despoiled and not, and all vastly uneducated. Though Aurianne as a growing girl had hated to sit those long afternoons enduring her mother's tutelage, she was glad of it now. At the time adventuring and hunting had seemed far better uses of her time.
Halfway through her ride, the young woman paused at a public watering trough. These conveniences were scattered all over the city and its outskirts. Isabou blew bubbles, played, and drank, and Aurianne laughed. These small moments were the things she lived for. As she sat watching her mare's antics she spied something shining in the sand at the edge of the road. She dismounted to investigate, avoiding the worst of the sticky mud. She picked up the flat object and cleared it of sand with her fingers, it was an old cell phone. The touch screen was black and lifeless, but miraculously not broken. A curio of the past, a time when people were 'connected'. She remembered her mother's distaste for the devices, and how annoyed she would be when she was doing something and it chimed for her attention. Other people seemed to feel this too as she recalled.
Aurianne turned the object in her hand and wondered honestly, were they better off without? It may have been handy to relay an urgent message, but she could see it would be very intrusive as well. Contemplation over she flung the mute artifact into the bushes, it could continue its rest there.
She took a circular route, winding back through the more deserted, industrial sector of the town. There were some viable businesses conducted here, but a lot of ruin also. Most of the industrial estates were too large to really be of use in an anarchist age, unless for salvage.
The rain began to deluge and Aurianne parked Isabou in an abandoned, partially stripped metal spanned shed to wait out the worst of the downpour. The water roared on the iron above, and ran in an almost continuous curtain off the side of the span.