Svurrl
Cam looked up when Svurrl spoke, briefly regarding the drogue before nodding and scooting closer to the collection crystals to make more room. He didn't speak, but he didn't seem to mind the company either.
When beside the fane, Svurrl could get a good look at what he was working on. An ink painting, or rather, one of several ink paintings. Several coiled scrolls sat beside Cam, and one that had already been completed lay to the left, weighted open to dry in the reflection of the collector. The one he was working on looked about half finished; the general form was complete, but details seemed missing. The paintings, from what Svurrl could see, appeared to be vistas of the hinterlands as seen from the wagon, done in a stark style of black ink at various dilutions. [Brilliance+Wisdom: Auto-Succeed] Interestingly, Svurrl didn't remember any of these vistas. If he looked at the one that Cam has already completed, he could remember bits and pieces: a jagged standing stone, more than a dozen feet tall; a fungal circle, large enough to swallow a wagon; a distant series of wedge shaped mounds, too far from civilization to be created and too regular to be natural. They were familiar, but each one was days apart on the trail, hardly part of the same panorama.
As Svurrl watched, additional lines began to take shape on the ink painting Cam was hunched over. The twisting lines of lampades at rest, the curve of a heavy coat covering sloping shoulders, a thin limb braced by knotted lampades raised towards the horizon. The details were still to be added, but it was clearly the outline of Svurrl. It just wasn't clear what Svurrl was doing.
Joan and Mudren
"Trader, friend Gude," replied a third, but still familiar voice from up the trail. "One apologizes for not being seen sooner. There is a disquieting thing ahead, and one didn't wish to be seen until it was sure of who you were." The speaker stepped out of cover, a human of middling height that had somehow managed to entirely conceal his entire body behind a thigh-high boulder. Mara's pathfinder, Brynd. Mara had once said that the reason for his prowess on the ground was that he'd been raised by Temani manhunters. Brynd had never confirmed that, but it would explain a great many things about the man.
"One was returning to tell the others, but it can show you. You can judge," Brynd adds, beckoning Mudren and Joan further down the trail he'd marked earlier.
Lora
Lora was on a return pass when the third figure emerged below, stopping Hawkwood and Gude. Sharp eyes found the face familiar, not a friend, but not an enemy either. [Finesse+Speed: 11, Pass] Something else moved at the edges of Lora's sight, small with distance. Near the outcropping that hid the fire, a dark shape darted out, visible only for a moment before it disappeared behind a copse of the thin trees.
Averrco
Averrco kept pace with Borou and Mara, though the conversation was infinitely less interesting when they were both on point. From what Averrco had seen, the pair would remain at the ready until someone brought back word that all was well.
When the tension was broken, it was done by a youthful morisal from the back wagon, not a rush of bandits or the crack and whistle projectiles. The newcomer was slender, pale colored, and seemed to have a great deal of reticence in approaching Mara while she had her hands on a rifle. The morisal also pointedly avoided looking at Averrco. "Lady M-mara? I, we, need..." The morisal knotted its hands, the thin pseudomans twining as it tried to speak. "There's a card game and Barek is there and we need someone else there," it finishes in a rush.
Mara looks utterly confused. "It's just Mara, Iri, and I'm a little busy to be playing cards right now. You should think about getting back and enjoying the game without me."
The Morisal, Iri, continued to fret its hands. "But... Barek... He's been..." Iri trailed off, looking hopefully between Borou and Mara.
Mara still looked baffled, but Borou groaned. "He's been drinking like a fish and isn't letting anyone leave the table?" Iri nods and the Aoul shakes his head. "Kadi. Very stupid, very large, but a good worker. At least, when hasn't been drinking," Borou explained to Averrco, noticing the blank expression. "Mara tanned his hide just after the expedition started, for the same problem, and he's been passably sober since."
Mara cursed, finally taking her eyes of the horizon. "Averrco, I'm not your captain, but I'd appreciate it if you try and take this one. No offense meant, but Borou and I are both better to fight anything that comes after the wagons, and you seem like the kind of type that can talk somebody down." Mara paused, looking at Iri and apparently misinterpreting the morisal's horrified expression. "Plus, you're both Sal-Leifnin, maybe she'll be a little less shy around you."