The scent found him before the doorway did.
Lemon and butter, bright and clean beneath the deeper comfort of baked crust and simmering broth, drifted down the corridor in warm ribbons that cut clean through tar, brine, and the ever-present memory of coal. Swifttail had known it was coming. He had scrubbed the last of the engine-smudge from his paws with deliberate care, brushed out his platinum fur until it lay neat along his shoulders, and drawn on the secondhand navy coat he’d altered to fit his frame, the cuffs hemmed, the sides taken in, the seams reinforced where they had begun to give.Beneath it, his familiar green tunic rested like an old comfort worn thin with memory.
He paused at the threshold of the galley just long enough to take it in.
Lanternlight gilded the tables. Steam curled lazily toward the beams. Laughter rose and fell like surf against the hull. And there, across the press of bodies, he caught sight of Silvertongue, caught mid-conversation with an officer, posture composed, expression attentive. A small warmth stirred in Swift’s chest at the sight.
He knew the stories that lingered behind that composure. The old fears that striped fur could summon without warning. Silvie’s unease with badgers was no secret to him. Swift’s gaze flicked, almost involuntarily, toward the broad-shouldered figure commanding the galley. For a heartbeat he wondered how that meeting would feel when it came.
He did not interrupt. If Silvie was on duty in that moment, then so be it. There would be time. There was always time, when a ship was steady beneath their paws.
His gaze shifted fully now, settling at last on the badger presiding over the abundance.
He was aware, distantly, of the old tales. The ones of Badger Lords and bloodwrath, of ancient wars and vermin cast down beneath striped vengeance. He had grown up on stories too, though his had been told beneath the sweep of the Skyfire Veil and tempered by traders who came and went with goods and gossip alike. Till Dupré stood nothing like the fearsome figures of childhood legend. She stood like a professional at her post, sleeves rolled and work well done, a cook proud of her craft.
He stepped forward without hesitation.
“You’ve done the Hide proud, Chef!” he said warmly, offering a respectful incline of his head before reaching for a tin plate. “Smelled it all the way down the corridor. Thought the boilers had sucked up a school of fish and were cookin’ it into soup. This stew of yours is definitely preferred!”
A generous wedge of bream found its place first, the lemon glaze catching the light. A ladle of fish stew followed, thick and fragrant, then a square of shrimp and potato pie balanced carefully along the rim. Bread - proper crusted bread - was tucked along the edge, and a small tart claimed what space remained. When Till urged him to take more, he yielded with a sheepish grin and allowed another spoonful of something sweet to be coaxed aboard.
He poured himself a flagon of sweet cider, licking his chops as the liquid gleamed and foamed invitingly.
The galley was thick with beasts now, elbows and shoulders jostling in good humor, and he turned sideways to navigate the crush, shielding his plate instinctively as one seabeast laughed too loudly behind him. He stepped to avoid another, half-turned...
...and collided solidly with something that did not give.
The impact was firm enough to jolt the breath from his chest. His plate tipped treacherously; gravy sloshed toward the rim; cider surged within its tin cup in a perilous arc. For a heartbeat it seemed certain the floor would claim a casualty.
Swift’s grip tightened. He shifted his weight back, leveled the plate with quick, practiced reflex, and steadied himself before anything could truly spill.
“Woa-woah... Gates, sorry...” he began, already looking up.
His eyes were met by a todd with golden-red fur with broad shoulders, a bowl and spoon held in his capable paws. Recognition followed a breath later; he’d seen the towering fox about deck, warbow slung with easy familiarity.
Noticing a narrow pocket of space beside him, just enough to stand without impeding the flow of traffic, Swift angled himself into it with quiet practicality, back half-turned to shield his plate from further disaster and keep his cider secure.
He tore a piece of bread free and dragged it through the stew before taking his first proper bite.
The sound that left him was low and involuntary, somewhere between a hum and a groan of contentment. Lemon brightened the fish; herbs lingered; the broth settled warm and steady all the way down.
Worth the wait.
He swallowed, wiped his paw discreetly against a folded cloth at his belt, and cast a sideways glance at the larger fox beside him. Up close, it was easier to see the set of fatigue in the line of his shoulders, the heaviness beneath the eyes that only came after long labor.
“Looks like you’ve earned this,” he observed gently, gesturing with his bread toward the laden tables before claiming another bite. “Shift must’ve been a heavy one. Good thing the reward’s fit for it.”
Another mouthful, this time of the shrimp pie, and he gave a small nod of approval to the air between them, as though sealing an agreement with the galley itself.
“I’m Swifttail,” he added after a moment, tone easy and unforced. “Can't say we've had a proper introduction.”
He followed the introduction with a sip of cider, the sweet, fresh taste settling easy on his tongue. He remained comfortably in the shared pocket of space, half an eye still on the room in case familiar faces drifted free of their duties before the apricot jelly vanished entirely.