Fabien Kaan
10-22-15, 12:07 PM
Fabien didn't care for Etheria Port very much, but business was so very good.
Peering from between strands of filthy, blonde hair, the boy watched guards moving about the bustling market. They were genial and calm until someone took too many liberties, and then a transformation would happen. Nothing of the sort had occurred thus far this afternoon, but Fabien knew he was being watched as closely as every other merchant. Those disrupting the guild's delicate balance would be removed.
He sat beneath a canopy very close to the docks themselves, a prime location that he'd simply been fortunate enough to get. He could even read the name plastered on the nearest ship: Minnowfish. Stupid, he thought.
The boy was filthy. Ragged, ripped grey pants and a tattered old straw-colored tunic hung off of his body, too big for him. He was barefoot and his feet, hands and face were caked with mud and grime. He had a patchy, inconsistent beard and deep bags hung below his eyes.
Next to him, though, outside of the canopy and well within the view of anyone stepping into the road from the docks, were the most beautiful of pots and urns. Some big enough to hold a gallon of water, some small enough for a beloved plant. They shone with a luster that could not possibly be natural, and in fact was not, and commanded attention from any who turned their way.
Indeed, he had made some sales already, but the afternoon was still young. Hours and hours of sculpting mud and clay - not as a craftsman would, of course, but with the aid of magic and attunement to the earth, would make him a rich man by sundown. He hoped.
In the distance, a large ship was slowly pulling into port. From the size of it, and the colors of the flag flapping above, he thought it might be from Corone.
Fabien smacked his chops. He would prepare to get attention driven his way, and allow the luster of his wares to do the rest - he'd have to compete with the dozen or so other merchants nearby, who would all be screaming for the attention of these new arrivals, but Fabien had the location advantage.
Peering from between strands of filthy, blonde hair, the boy watched guards moving about the bustling market. They were genial and calm until someone took too many liberties, and then a transformation would happen. Nothing of the sort had occurred thus far this afternoon, but Fabien knew he was being watched as closely as every other merchant. Those disrupting the guild's delicate balance would be removed.
He sat beneath a canopy very close to the docks themselves, a prime location that he'd simply been fortunate enough to get. He could even read the name plastered on the nearest ship: Minnowfish. Stupid, he thought.
The boy was filthy. Ragged, ripped grey pants and a tattered old straw-colored tunic hung off of his body, too big for him. He was barefoot and his feet, hands and face were caked with mud and grime. He had a patchy, inconsistent beard and deep bags hung below his eyes.
Next to him, though, outside of the canopy and well within the view of anyone stepping into the road from the docks, were the most beautiful of pots and urns. Some big enough to hold a gallon of water, some small enough for a beloved plant. They shone with a luster that could not possibly be natural, and in fact was not, and commanded attention from any who turned their way.
Indeed, he had made some sales already, but the afternoon was still young. Hours and hours of sculpting mud and clay - not as a craftsman would, of course, but with the aid of magic and attunement to the earth, would make him a rich man by sundown. He hoped.
In the distance, a large ship was slowly pulling into port. From the size of it, and the colors of the flag flapping above, he thought it might be from Corone.
Fabien smacked his chops. He would prepare to get attention driven his way, and allow the luster of his wares to do the rest - he'd have to compete with the dozen or so other merchants nearby, who would all be screaming for the attention of these new arrivals, but Fabien had the location advantage.