by Gortimir Strongfield on March 22nd, 2010, 11:10 pm
Finally progress was being made. Since entering the overwhelmingly predictable city, Gortimir felt the only progress he had made was in the temple when Izurdin was communicating in some way with the Isur. He felt at peace there and comfortable- feelings that did not carry over to the other places he had visited so far. The structure of the city and demeanor of the citizens here just gave him the impression of being forced or perhaps conformed into something strategically planned by some controlling higher power. The thought was amusing but the short, muscular man would not outwardly show his entertainment with the thought.
Dexri seemed to be quite the businessman. His organization was showing through and his mind for economics seemed to be overshadowing his care for the Knights he was representing. Of course he wanted these structures along the roads to be strong and sturdy, but if Gortimir had listened thoroughly then these attacks and losses suffered by the Knights came during construction. The Isur intended to play this fact when negotiating.
Gortimir nodded while listening to Dexri explain about credentials. It was sound business practice for a potential employer to want to know the accomplishments of potential employees. This question did not bother him, in fact it made him respect the man more for his judgement, and he certainly did not take it the wrong way. He started to reply, "Nothing around here that you would know about, as I'm new... around here..." His voice was allowed to trail off as the blueprints were brought out and focus was realigned.
The blueprints seemed very accurately drawn which spoke volumes about the professionalism either intended or demanded from the Knights. Which he was still not sure. The Isur had truly not constructed entire buildings before and his experiences came while growing up among his people and watching his father while helping where he could. The Isur were a very talented race when it comes to creativity and creation, thanks entirely due to Izurdin himself, and Gortimir would only want to put forth his best efforts. The taunting task of building an entire outpost lingered in the back of Gortimir's mind, but equipped with such accurate plans he felt his relatively limited developed skills could prove to be enough to accomplish the task and be proud of the results.
With the skills he did have in architecture, Gortimir identified the masonry requirements that he really had only the most common knowledge of. The carpentry and construction he felt he could manage, again mainly because of the accurate, legible, clean, and simple nature of the blueprints. As for the flying foes the Knights were facing, but the time he got out there and started working he felt his creativity should come through with some sort of answer. Being honest, the Isur replied simply, "I'll have need of somebody more skilled than I in masonry. I can learn from them easy enough I'm sure that with some demonstration I can take it up well enough to meet these requirements. Concerning the rest of the plans, the structure seems simple enough." All the structures in this city seemed simple, for that matter. In that regard, these prints did not surprise the blue-hued man one bit.
"I can accomplish what you seek with the labor and resources you've mentioned. Without knowing the area well nor being familiar with the threat your Knights face, I cannot guarantee the precise timeliness of completion," It was not a lie, though he left out the factor of never completing an entire structure like this before. Collectively he had most likely helped his community with several times what Dexri was asking, but that was also not alone. Continuing to keep his pride in tact, he decided to give this keen businessman an answer he should understand regarding the price. "I would not feel honest if I demanded a high price without you being familiar with my abilities. Though the risks involved with these flying menaces should inflate the costs, I would suggest an agreement that if you are satisfied with my work future contracts would be worth more, as you see fit." It was, of course, his way of expressing his experience was not vast but that the nature of the job required more than typically minimum wages demanded by new lead architects.
Avatar artist credit goes to Nathan M. Rosario and Hex is responsible for the perfect Isurian modifications!