by Avari on June 21st, 2012, 8:05 pm
With her eyes trained toward the inn patrons' midsections where their pockets bulged and their packs sagged, Avari entirely failed to recognize the old fortune-teller she had met only that morning when he entered the inn's common room and took his seat. All that registered in her mind was a brief impression of a thick dark cloak and the flash of a silver-topped cane, which made her dismiss him as not worth the trouble. She promptly moved on to the next person behind him, without even glancing up at his face.
Instead, she focused on a hardy-looking traveler dressed for exploring the wilderness, with sturdy boots, leather breeches, a fringed jacket, and a hooded cape, all of which bulged with pockets and pouch flaps. Out of one pocket on the side of his pack, she spied the dull gleam of waxen coverings wrapped around a loaf of hardtack and slices of yellow cheese. Once, Avari might have disdained such mundane spoils from her thievery, but in the aftermath of the massive storm and resulting famine that overwhelmed Zeltiva, valuables like art or jewelry had grown less important and precious in the Konti's eyes. Practical items, on the other hand, were more essential than ever.
For a moment, she lingered in her seat to study the man and calculate her angle of approach. The man was choking down a mug of kelp beer, but neither his senses nor his focus seemed affected by the drink. His pack was slung across the table beside his arm, where he surely would notice anyone reaching for it in a suspicious manner. Avari sighed and slipped off her gloves and her wide-brimmed hat to reveal her pale hair and skin, deciding she would have to distract him if she wanted to pilfer his goods.
Somewhat thankfully, some of the Konti healers who came to Zeltiva in the spring had stayed at the Grotto, which meant that most of the patrons were accustomed to seeing Konti women pass by. A few people glanced her way or raised their eyebrows when Avari walked toward the traveler and offered to read his palm and tell him his fortune. Though visibly startled, the man set down his mug and extended his hand readily enough.
Instead of taking his hand in hers, as she did for a true "palm-reading," though, Avari merely let her left hand hover just below it, avoiding actual contact with his skin. Her right hand drifted innocuously down toward the table. She knew she had to keep the man's attention on her, though, so he never wondered where her other hand was or connected her in any way to his missing trail rations.
So, she addressed the man in as pompous and solemn manner as she could manage without bursting into laughter, almost as if she were declaiming some epic poetry or dramatic verses.
"You may be wondering why I asked to read your fortune, sir," she began, lifting her chin proudly. As she expected, the man nodded; after all, it didn't take divination to know he was curious about why she had approached him. "While I will offer my services to any who ask me, I must confess that I was...drawn to you, sir. Your aura drew me from across the room, like the tide to the moon. I could sense that you are an exceptional individual, a man destined for heroic deeds and for greatness. My curiosity inflamed me, I must confess, and I had to come and perceive for myself what your legend would become."
While she spoke, Avari unobtrusively slid her right hand along the table until it brushed the edge of his pack. With an effort, she never moved her eyes, but held the man's gaze firmly in her own, while her hand delicately conducted its blind exploration. There! The tip of her forefinger touched the distinctive wax wrappings around the rations. Carefully, she inched her hand toward it, until she held a corner of the wrappings between thumb and forefinger.
"Now, let me confirm my observation and see if you will indeed achieve the greatness that I sensed for you," she continued, perhaps too abruptly. The man started a little at her tone, but nodded eagerly. She tilted her head at his upraised palm and made to peer thoughtfully at it. "I see... I see..."
There! Gently, so gently, she eased the wrappings out of the pocket, careful not to nudge the man's pack or move it in any way. Once it was out of the pocket, Avari gripped it tightly in her right hand and sighed inwardly in satisfaction to feel the bulges of nuts and dried fruit within the covering as well. She began letting her hand drift back to rest naturally at her side, where she swiftly tucked the trail rations into a cloak pocket.
Only then did she finally let her hand make the slightest contact with the tips of the man's outstretched fingers. Her Konti gift to see what a person loved or desired most was activated by touch and the visions it gave often engulfed her, which would have been an incredible distraction during the act of theft. Now, Avari reluctantly but resolutely allowed herself to glimpse into the man's greatest desire, in order to lend some verisimilitude to her pretend "palm-reading."
What she saw almost made her gasp in horror, if she had not quickly bolted down on her reaction. The man loved most of all to hunt, it turned out, and what he loved most about the hunt was the kill, the sight of blood flowing out of his prey as it lay shuddering and dying. Avari nearly choked in revulsion as she beheld a vision of the man shooting arrows into a beautiful, brown-eyed young fawn and burying knives deep into its velvety hide until its soft, spotted coat was stained as red as rust. It was a nasty desire, a terrible passion rooted in love of violence and a driving need for control and dominance. She wished that she had never touched his hand and seen his heart's desire.
What made the vision worse was the knowledge that sometimes, the desires that she unearthed were so strong that they subtly influenced her own feelings. She could only pray that this desire would not change her somehow. Avari was not a killer, whatever other heinous things she might be.
"Y...you will be a great hunter, I see," she managed to stammer out. "A mighty hunter, able to use bows and arrows, knives, and snares to capture the most elusive prey. I see you wrestling a...a glassbeak and bringing it down with powerful blows. Only the blue Akalaks will be your equal someday. Your people will honor you for the pelts, bones, and meat you bring home and praise your name."
With that, she dropped his hand and managed to sketch a hurried bow to the man. Still remembering the sight of the half-eviscerated little fawn, Avari backed away, clutching the pocket where she'd hidden her pilfered trail rations tightly with her right hand. She didn't know if they had been worth the visions she had seen. With her left hand, she fumbled to tug her gloves back on. More than anything else at the moment, she wanted something to protect her skin and her mind from more nasty desires like those of the man with the trail rations.
Avari "Everyone wants something... And when you know what a man wants you know who he is, and how to move him." - George R. R. Martin, A Storm of Swords |