Continued from Carry On or Carrion
His traveling companion seemed to come alive when she saw what he'd been using as a map. Her enthusiasm washed over him and made him smile in turn. It was rare to see someone so taken by something, so unguarded. It made him feel at ease. This person was not a threat. Were she better off, perhaps she could be a mark, but the quality of her possessions indicated to him that this was not someone with much in the way of coin to spare. An artisan, then, and a traveling one, at that. Not a threat, not a customer, and not a mark. Which left few categories in Thomas' personal taxonomy, all of them benign and most even positive.
He took the proffered water skin and had to school himself not to suck it down. He was well-used to taking care with food, but he had not grown up in a place where water was so scarce as this, and his thirst clawed at his throat as he sipped the water delicately. Still, he knew better thanks to one of his erstwhile traveling companions. Water sickness was a real threat in dry environments, and if you threw up your water from drinking too fast, you ended up thirstier than before and with less water than you started. So he sipped it and watch her work.
Thomas didn't know too much about art, but he had been in proximity to fine things off and on for much of his life, and he had a decent appreciation of aesthetics. Velx's maps weren't fine art, exactly, but there was an artistry to them. He could imagine them framed and behind a desk, certainly, or spread across a large table while suitably important looking men wearing military uniforms pored over them. Also, it was satisfying to watch her work, and he was happy to supply the details she asked for as her clever hands translated his half-recalled approximations into something that a future traveler could make use of. He'd grown disused to being useful, but it wasn't a bad feeling.
"I would be most grateful for your help, Doña. I have nothing more than this map to guide me, and I'm more used to poking through estate sales and tinker's wares than I am in venturing into caves like this."
The thought that he could venture all this way only to entirely miss where the treasure was buried had not occurred to him. He'd been so preoccupied by the thought of being murdered by bandits or the harsh climate that the thought of failing to find what he sought had not gotten a chance to lodge in his head, but now it was there. He'd been a fool to go alone, and was all the more grateful that it was pointed out to him via a chance encounter with a helpful stranger who seemed more interested in the physical landscape than in the prize he was after.