SOMETIME TOWARDS THE END OF FALL
IN FRONT OF MEKANIKS AND GOLAMS
This particular week started with copious writing. Jil, being a Nuit having no need for sleep, worked endlessly on increasing her shop's popularity. Business was breaking even, but she desired for more profit. The customers were trickling in, and the only way to lure more was to take action, she planned, writing these all down in a list:
Shouters - Hire someone to call out to customers as they pass by?
The sentence was crossed out a few times.
Give free stuff.
Small print: Will end up broke. Followed by: Buy one take one? Half the price off your second item? Sahova never stooped this low.
On the bottom of the list, encircled: Hand out flyers.
The fact of the matter was this: there weren't a lot of people who could work with magic, maybe there were better gadgeteers, but when it came to experience, Jil was much better at world magic. Her animated objects were top of its class, or at least better than what was available out there. She didn't want to compromise her profit for a few customers. They'll buy her items or they'll look for something else. The only way to increase profit would be to increase the number of people coming in. She noted, count the number of people coming in within the day, and make a table who buys an item and who doesn't.
She even noticed, as she was quite observant when it came to these things, that she was starting to cater to a particular group of people. Kids weren't her real customers, their parents were. Running Mekaniks and Golams meant appealing to the person with the money satchel. She wondered if what she was planning had good business sense. Anyway, she would find out soon.
Jilitse bought a stack of papers together with two bottles of ink, enough for about 40 to 50 fliers. Jil began steadfastly, working atop her table accompanied by candles until the wee hours of the night. She began by writing her shop's name, "Mekaniks and Golams", imitating the unusual script it was written with on the sign outside. It did not matter that writing and writing and writing was repetitive, she tirelessly swept her quill and pen on many sheets of paper, taking care to make sure that each line was written smoothly, each letter legible in straightforward Common. She layered the paper one atop the other with the shop name exposed to let the ink dry. Jil's diligence kicked in most of the time, evident in the way she would let the quill drip on the bottle's mouth to ensure that the ink wouldn't smudge once she wrote. The best thing about living a mediocre life is that, though you would not make particular effort to excel, you skirt the point where you become a failure. Right now, there was nowhere to go but up up up: her desire to improve and develop herself burn brighter than the light on her wax candles.
This was the end of being mediocre! Fantastic!
As she wrote her shop's name on the last flyer, Jil took a separate piece of paper. Her mind whirred and sparkled today, barely resting. It was exhilarating, and she felt like she will never get bored again.
She wrote these exact same words using the exact same script on each of her flyers. She closed shop that day because she anticipated that it would take her a full day to finish them. The problem was in handing them out, though in retrospect, she should have just opted to give out the flyers on her own. She had hired a dubious kelvic cat with a mesmerizing grin to hand them out, paid him a copper for every flyer he'd sent out.
Those who received the invitation came across a person with a disconcerting smile, or an unusually-colored unusually-striped cat. Perhaps they received the flyer while they were on the streets, or the strange messenger delivered it to their homes. Jilitse didn't really know how the cat distributed the flyers, and later she would wonder if the cat had distributed them at all.
The paper would read "Mekaniks and Golams" but would not contain the original message. Instead, in pretty script:
Those who would visit would find a long table in front of Jilitse's shop. It would be filled with numerous treats and tarts and teapots of various shapes and sizes. But none of them appeared to be tangible. Jilitse would be seen arguing with an unseen companion, complaining about "this table in front of my shop", waving the original flyer at the invisible enemy.
IN FRONT OF MEKANIKS AND GOLAMS
This particular week started with copious writing. Jil, being a Nuit having no need for sleep, worked endlessly on increasing her shop's popularity. Business was breaking even, but she desired for more profit. The customers were trickling in, and the only way to lure more was to take action, she planned, writing these all down in a list:
Shouters - Hire someone to call out to customers as they pass by?
The sentence was crossed out a few times.
Give free stuff.
Small print: Will end up broke. Followed by: Buy one take one? Half the price off your second item? Sahova never stooped this low.
On the bottom of the list, encircled: Hand out flyers.
The fact of the matter was this: there weren't a lot of people who could work with magic, maybe there were better gadgeteers, but when it came to experience, Jil was much better at world magic. Her animated objects were top of its class, or at least better than what was available out there. She didn't want to compromise her profit for a few customers. They'll buy her items or they'll look for something else. The only way to increase profit would be to increase the number of people coming in. She noted, count the number of people coming in within the day, and make a table who buys an item and who doesn't.
She even noticed, as she was quite observant when it came to these things, that she was starting to cater to a particular group of people. Kids weren't her real customers, their parents were. Running Mekaniks and Golams meant appealing to the person with the money satchel. She wondered if what she was planning had good business sense. Anyway, she would find out soon.
Jilitse bought a stack of papers together with two bottles of ink, enough for about 40 to 50 fliers. Jil began steadfastly, working atop her table accompanied by candles until the wee hours of the night. She began by writing her shop's name, "Mekaniks and Golams", imitating the unusual script it was written with on the sign outside. It did not matter that writing and writing and writing was repetitive, she tirelessly swept her quill and pen on many sheets of paper, taking care to make sure that each line was written smoothly, each letter legible in straightforward Common. She layered the paper one atop the other with the shop name exposed to let the ink dry. Jil's diligence kicked in most of the time, evident in the way she would let the quill drip on the bottle's mouth to ensure that the ink wouldn't smudge once she wrote. The best thing about living a mediocre life is that, though you would not make particular effort to excel, you skirt the point where you become a failure. Right now, there was nowhere to go but up up up: her desire to improve and develop herself burn brighter than the light on her wax candles.
This was the end of being mediocre! Fantastic!
As she wrote her shop's name on the last flyer, Jil took a separate piece of paper. Her mind whirred and sparkled today, barely resting. It was exhilarating, and she felt like she will never get bored again.
"Jilitse would like to invite you to visit Mekaniks and Golams at the Bizarre. It's the perfect time to buy a trinket as a gift or a bauble for decoration. Best automatic gadgets. Accepts requests for automatons."
She wrote these exact same words using the exact same script on each of her flyers. She closed shop that day because she anticipated that it would take her a full day to finish them. The problem was in handing them out, though in retrospect, she should have just opted to give out the flyers on her own. She had hired a dubious kelvic cat with a mesmerizing grin to hand them out, paid him a copper for every flyer he'd sent out.
Those who received the invitation came across a person with a disconcerting smile, or an unusually-colored unusually-striped cat. Perhaps they received the flyer while they were on the streets, or the strange messenger delivered it to their homes. Jilitse didn't really know how the cat distributed the flyers, and later she would wonder if the cat had distributed them at all.
The paper would read "Mekaniks and Golams" but would not contain the original message. Instead, in pretty script:
"I, Jilitse, owner of Mekaniks and Golams, would like to cordially invite you to celebrate my first month in Alvadas. There will be tea and tarts and chat of magic and mystery. Hoping that you would join me at the Bizarre the day before tomorrow at the sixth strike of the bell in the afternoon."
Those who would visit would find a long table in front of Jilitse's shop. It would be filled with numerous treats and tarts and teapots of various shapes and sizes. But none of them appeared to be tangible. Jilitse would be seen arguing with an unseen companion, complaining about "this table in front of my shop", waving the original flyer at the invisible enemy.
OOC :