12th Glade, 4623
Hakon had never thought he'd be so lucky as to return to Northradica. He barely remembered the land he was from, but as he got closer to Osthwick, he noticed that people looked a bit like him, sometimes: tall and muscular but not overly broad. Most of the people had lighter hair than he did, and some had lighter eyes, but he remembered very well that his dad's hair was almost black compared to the villagers', so presumably that was why he was a bit starker looking than many of his countrymen. As he continued North along the river to Oxentide, he felt more and more at peace. The mountains, still redolent with snow, the chill in the air, the deciduous trees giving way to evergreens, the stark, desolate beauty of it. He hadn't known how much he craved it again until he saw it, but once he caught his first view of Northradica, he couldn't stop smiling.
The further north he traveled, the colder it got, and the more he liked it. He had never developed a taste for some Northradican things, like mead, but he was starting to warm up to it. It went with the local cuisine really well, for one thing, and it lit a fire in the belly that made riding all day a bit easier. He found the people friendly, even when they saw the guild sigil on his neck. He wasn't sure if it was because they could tell he was from here, or if they were just less inclined to be frightened than the villagers near his tower. IN any case, though, it felt nice to be seen and treated as something other than a useful leper, though he cautioned himself not to get used to it.
Oxentide was grand, cold, and old. Andros' letters had mentioned that his friend had established something of a permanent business up here, and given up peddling. Hakon had many questions about this, but with the letters being written, and presumably read to him, by his business partner, he kept most of them to himself, and just sent back his congratulations and a heartfelt wish for prosperity. In his mind, it was well-deserved; Hakon had been traveling through Radenor for the better part of a decade. He was heartened that the man had been putting away enough to save up for a venture like this. If Hakon himself had any wealth to spare, he would have co-invested, but he donated what he didn't spend, so he was not exactly flush with cash.
Hakon had sent word ahead in the last major town he'd stopped in that he'd be on time for their meeting, and the location was hard to miss: a large gastropub in one the city's numerous squares. Even in Frost, there were market stalls and people energetically trading, buying, and selling, mostly hot food and drinks, and the sort of perishables people needed to get through their day: ingredients for making supper, rations of lamp oil, and so on. Hakon was rather unaccustomed to commerce, still, and tried not to gawk at it as he waited by a table next to a small window in the thick stone wall of the restaurant for Andros to arrive. It had been no few years since he'd last seen the man, and he found himself looking forward to it.