Once a King
Part 26 The Hermitage
"Pawel? Be not afraid I am here to help you. My name is Aynur."
Skryba, I felt I was in a dream when I heard those words. I felt a presence, a closeness, then I lost consciousness.
When I came out of my dream I was clothed, in a garment much too large for me. It was hooded and warm...made of coarse brown wool, and tied at the waist with a knotted cord.
I was on mossy ground, well above the tide line. Dawn was breaking off the sea, and below me on the beach, was my rescuer...or, so I guessed. A tall, slim, lightly muscled, dark, lean man; his hair closely cropped, dressed only in knee length drawers. He strained to pull the watercraft I came in ashore, and put it under cover.
In his labors, he saw I was awake...and granted me a luminous smile. "I must hide the boat, or the pirates will see it and know we have guests. They trouble our guests in hopes of some wealth having arrived with them. The Hermits, they trouble not, because they know we have nothing but our generosity."
I gathered from his speech, that my arrival was not unique. "So you often have guests?"
"Oh no" replied Ayrun. "We rarely get guests and when they do arrive, they are fully clothed!"
"So, you...Pawel, are doubly rare."
"We have little here, but peace. Every few years, a noble feeling of the need for simplicity joins us...pirates have a long memory, so even the slight possibility of profit attracts them. When they come, they claim never to steal, simply levy a tax that is due to them, or rather a tax they are obliged to collect for some mysterious higher power."
This story echoed uncomfortably with what I knew of the Armored Horsemen, the Men of the Bull.
I kept my silence.
"I must get you to the hermitage, so that you may get clothes for yourself. My habit is the only warm clothing I have, and I will need it to sleep in tonight!
"Do not worry, though we have few guests, we do get donations from the local fishermen. They think it is good luck to supply us with an offering on occasion. So far, their catches increase after they leave us offerings on the beach. Sometimes, those offerings include cast-off clothing, or cloth that Sinaver, our resident tailor, can re-purpose.
"There will be something good for you; I assure you, Pawel. The hermitage is just a short walk from here."
Well short for Ayrun, but I was still weak and befuddled, so the short walk took the better part of an hour and was mostly uphill along rocky, narrow trails. There were clear flowing streams along the way, where I was encouraged to drink. Ayrun asked no questions, but it seemed to me, that he had a handle on my history from the Women of the Moon.