Summer 85, 512 AV
West Street, afternoon.
“They’re a bit long, don’t you think?” A fly buzzed around Seven’s head, and he brushed it away impatiently.
“How fortunate for you, that you’re standing in a tailor’s shop.”
He came upon Gadderjack, Gadderjack and Bon long after noon. It was a pretentious name for a tailor if he’d ever seen one, embellishing the sign over its large windows in gold-painted wooden letters. Its door had swung open with a whisper and the bell above it tinkled cheerfully and again when it thumped shut. The pinched face that had greeted him belonged to a middle-aged woman. She introduced herself as Isabella in a short discourse, and then propped him on a dais and began to take measurements with a length of fabric tape.
“Your accent is lovely,” she mentioned, stooping to take the halfblood’s inseam. He shied away when unguarded hands brushed long-healed scars. “I’ve never heard of your family name, either. Is Xu spelled with an ‘s’, or a ‘c’?”
“Neither,” Seven chewed his lip. “And I’m from Lhavit.” His hands drooped to fuss with the buttons that lined the front of the trousers; he’d always been partial to laces.
“Ah, Zintila’s city of stars. You’ve come a long way for pants. Turn, please.”
She took measure of his arms, hooked the tape around his neck and his chest, and informed him on a few occasions that he stood no taller than her thirteen-year-old daughter. New clothes were plucked from obscurity several times over, and he stripped to his smallclothes and re-dressed until a proper fit was found.
The slim charcoal linen trousers he settled on flaunted his willowy frame; he chose a cotton shirt as crisp and white as any he’d ever worn; his scarlet cravat was tied loose about his neck and only worked to brighten his eyes. Everything seemed to fit as if it were made for him, down to the matching waistcoat with brass buttons that refined him as a proper gentleman.
The woman adjusted Seven’s collar before grabbing him by his shoulders and turning him to the assembly of full-length mirrors on the near wall. “I’d certainly buy you a drink,” she mused, spiderlike fingers moving to fuss with the wild mop of white atop Seven’s head. “You see? This is worth the money, is it not?”
Seven managed a smile. The wraith of a man that had emerged over the course of his summer had all but gone, melted away in the swelling heat of a dusky shop. He looked like somebody worth something now, and though he wasn’t, he took his joy in the illusion. “How much?”
He swallowed a scowl when she dropped her saccharine hospitality and demanded thirty gold-rims of him, but he obliged her all the same.
Zeltiva wasn’t hard to navigate; there was certain comfort to be found in a tangle of streets that were anchored to the ground. It took him all of a few days to find enough landmarks and memorise here and there the name of a street to keep himself oriented, though he’d clung to the haughty shopping district and the university, only wandering dockward to seek his room at the World’s End.
He kept beneath the cool shadows of stone and brick buildings, the strap of his canvas haversack gripped in one clammy hand. Nothing rang familiar on this cobbled road a short throw from West Street until he came upon a wall of bright windows and bold letters that read Zeltivan Glassworks. Half impulse, half burning curiosity—that which had nagged at him since he left the odd girl and her automatons with his money—he turned abruptly and left the street in favour of the workshop.
West Street, afternoon.
“They’re a bit long, don’t you think?” A fly buzzed around Seven’s head, and he brushed it away impatiently.
“How fortunate for you, that you’re standing in a tailor’s shop.”
He came upon Gadderjack, Gadderjack and Bon long after noon. It was a pretentious name for a tailor if he’d ever seen one, embellishing the sign over its large windows in gold-painted wooden letters. Its door had swung open with a whisper and the bell above it tinkled cheerfully and again when it thumped shut. The pinched face that had greeted him belonged to a middle-aged woman. She introduced herself as Isabella in a short discourse, and then propped him on a dais and began to take measurements with a length of fabric tape.
“Your accent is lovely,” she mentioned, stooping to take the halfblood’s inseam. He shied away when unguarded hands brushed long-healed scars. “I’ve never heard of your family name, either. Is Xu spelled with an ‘s’, or a ‘c’?”
“Neither,” Seven chewed his lip. “And I’m from Lhavit.” His hands drooped to fuss with the buttons that lined the front of the trousers; he’d always been partial to laces.
“Ah, Zintila’s city of stars. You’ve come a long way for pants. Turn, please.”
She took measure of his arms, hooked the tape around his neck and his chest, and informed him on a few occasions that he stood no taller than her thirteen-year-old daughter. New clothes were plucked from obscurity several times over, and he stripped to his smallclothes and re-dressed until a proper fit was found.
The slim charcoal linen trousers he settled on flaunted his willowy frame; he chose a cotton shirt as crisp and white as any he’d ever worn; his scarlet cravat was tied loose about his neck and only worked to brighten his eyes. Everything seemed to fit as if it were made for him, down to the matching waistcoat with brass buttons that refined him as a proper gentleman.
The woman adjusted Seven’s collar before grabbing him by his shoulders and turning him to the assembly of full-length mirrors on the near wall. “I’d certainly buy you a drink,” she mused, spiderlike fingers moving to fuss with the wild mop of white atop Seven’s head. “You see? This is worth the money, is it not?”
Seven managed a smile. The wraith of a man that had emerged over the course of his summer had all but gone, melted away in the swelling heat of a dusky shop. He looked like somebody worth something now, and though he wasn’t, he took his joy in the illusion. “How much?”
He swallowed a scowl when she dropped her saccharine hospitality and demanded thirty gold-rims of him, but he obliged her all the same.
Zeltiva wasn’t hard to navigate; there was certain comfort to be found in a tangle of streets that were anchored to the ground. It took him all of a few days to find enough landmarks and memorise here and there the name of a street to keep himself oriented, though he’d clung to the haughty shopping district and the university, only wandering dockward to seek his room at the World’s End.
He kept beneath the cool shadows of stone and brick buildings, the strap of his canvas haversack gripped in one clammy hand. Nothing rang familiar on this cobbled road a short throw from West Street until he came upon a wall of bright windows and bold letters that read Zeltivan Glassworks. Half impulse, half burning curiosity—that which had nagged at him since he left the odd girl and her automatons with his money—he turned abruptly and left the street in favour of the workshop.