Season of Fall, Day 44, 511 AV
A thin sliver of Leth's moon was shining wanly through the misty clouds that scudded across the bruise-purple night sky as Avari strode through the streets of Zeltiva with her head held high and entered the Kelp Bar with a swagger in her step. While some nights were suitable for skulking in the shadows like a common footpad, tonight the Konti was in a mood for company, camaraderie, and tricking people out of their money rather than stealing it from them. These moods came upon her every few weeks with the regularity of the tides shifting with the moon, filling her with the desire to mingle with the travelers and locals and lose herself in the joy of conversation. With a grand gesture, Avari pushed open the door to the unprepossessing bar and slipped off her wide-brimmed hat, revealing her distinctive too-fair hair to everyone inside the bar.
Almost immediately, a few cheerful shouts greeted her arrival. Over the past three years, Avari had made it a habit to stop in at the Kelp Bar at least a half-dozen evenings every season and managed to establish a minor reputation as a middling but enthusiastic gambler, lover of gossip, and occasional palm-reader and fortune-teller. Her fortunes were especially popular, for they always seemed to foretell the subject getting everything they wanted most out of life. She didn't simply predict that everyone would find fame, fortune, and everlasting love like some charlatan, either; she gave each man a fortune as unique and individual as he was, one that rang of his fondest dreams and deepest desires. None of them could know that these "fortunes" were completely fictitious, without a hint of predictive power behind them; they were merely pleasant stories that the Konti wove to catch their fancies and win their confidence and friendship.
For Avari firmly believed that there could be no more valuable friends for a thief in Zeltiva than the sailors and stevedores who labored every day at the city docks. Sailors knew all about trade routes, ship information, and the other cities that did business with Zeltiva, and they had taught her much about which vessels to watch out for, which were leaving port loaded with coin, and which were returning with a bulging hold full of trade goods. Similarly, the stevedores were responsible for measuring, inspecting, and loading the wealth that flowed across Zeltiva's magnificent wooden piers, and many of them could be persuaded to gossip about the rich cargo they handled when they were in their cups. The tidbits that Avari managed to coax out of them during her rowdy evenings at the Kelp Bar often provided her with valuable clues about prime targets to watch, investigate, and rob.
So, she smiled brightly in the sputtering lamplight that illuminated the Kelp Bar and waved hello to a few familiar faces. "Oswell! Alfred! It's good to see your ugly faces again," Avari said laughingly to a squat, blond sailor and a lean, black-haired deckhand sitting at a nearby table. "I do believe it's been at least a season since I last saw you two. Have you been away on a long voyage?"
"We just got back from running the Syliras route," Oswell acknowledged gruffly. "Damned long time on the sea, if you ask me, and not a lot to show for it after all that trouble. I bet you were missin' us, eh?"
"Not a chance! You two are too shrewd for me. I was glad to keep my money where it was for once," Avari replied with a chuckle, seating herself unasked at their table. She sighed wistfully. "I wish I could be so lucky as to live off the riches of the sea like you two and sail off into the horizon every season."
Alfred, the black-haired deckhand, snickered. "Riches of the sea? If it were that rich, why do you think we're always trying to make our fortunes with the dice or betting on wrestling when we've got a bit of shore leave? It's no paradise scrubbing decks every day or swabbing out the cabins, I can tell ya." He squinted at her. "What is it that you do again, exactly? You know, every day, making your living?"
"Surviving," Avari replied succinctly. "Staring at grubby palms in the marketplace when I have to and trying to outwit gamblers like you two when I can."
The two men grinned and relaxed, taking deep swigs from their tankards of oily green kelp beer. Both of them -- and indeed, every man that Avari had ever tried to drink and dice with, she reflected -- had been initially distrustful and uncomfortable around her, not knowing how to address a woman who spoke to them in an easy man-to-man fashion and enjoyed throwing dice or playing cards with such fervor. Her pale hair and skin had made them wary too; they were always suspecting that she was using her Konti powers to see things she shouldn't. It hadn't been until Avari started controlling her bets and winnings carefully, so that she always left the bar with only modest earnings or small losses to dispel any belief in uncanny luck or irrational love for the dice, that they gradually lost their wariness around her and began seeing her as just another gambler.
Now, Alfred put down his tankard with a thud and produced a small leather throwing cup. "Speakin' of which," he said, lowering his voice conspiratorially, "on our trip, I got this fancy new set of dice. From Alvadas, it came. Guaranteed lucky, the man said."
"Lucky my arse," Oswell snorted. "Didn't you lose fifteen silver mizas against Nikoli not two days ago with them?"
"Hush up," Alfred grumbled at him. "I won three golden mizas with 'em five days before that, or don't you remember? Anyway, do you want to see 'em?" he asked Avari.
She nodded eagerly, and the deckhand beamed. Proudly, he tipped the throwing cup and laid six dice onto the rough wooden table between them. Carved in the standard cubic shape with black pips on each face, they appeared to be made out of some worn, light-brown material the color of old ivory.
"Made out of the bones of a wizard," Alfred confided. "That's what the man told me. They've got magic in them, and that's why they're lucky."
The Konti sucked in her breath. She knew only a little about magic and wizards and less about Alvadas, but she was quite sure the merchant who had sold the dice to Alfred had been pulling his leg. Still, the dice looked to be well-made, whatever their original form had been, and they would certainly serve for dicing...and for other uses as well.
"Well, I don't know about that," she said to Alfred, shrugging. "May I take a closer look, though?"
He nodded, and Avari reached out and swooped up the set of dice into her hand, balancing them in her palm as she peered closely at the small cubes. They were lighter in weight than she expected, and the brownish hue of the bone did indicate a certain amount of age. Perhaps she was imagining it, but Avari thought she even discerned a slight musty odor to the dice, though it might only be her imagination or the fact that they had been inside a leather cup for a while. Like a superstitious gambler--or, like a Konti who used dice to scry the future--she closed her hand around the bone dice and closed her eyes for a few moments.
When the dice cupped in her palm had grown warm, Avari focused on a single thought inside her mind. Will I find a worthy source of profit tonight? Yes or no?
She threw the dice and examined the results: six sixes. Perfect harmony and congruity. Yes, the sequence told her, unmistakably.
"Good test throw," Alfred remarked admiringly.
"Yes," Avari answered, beaming with delight. It was a very good throw, indeed.