Spring 7, 513 AV
A Farrier's Home, Endrykas
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The Spring Festival hung in the air more thickly as it entered its final day. The pavilions around Endrykas were thick with the gathered sundries of the Clans, the streets heavy with the smells of rich cakes and the preparations of the last day of feasting. It was early yet, though, and most of the city had been up late listening to tales, swapping stories. It showed in the demeanor of those who walked the ways of Endrykas - the city was awake, yes, for Endrykas was a city of living things, and nature was no respecter of persons, no matter how hungover. But a sort of humid muted quality hung over the city, a combination of heads held gingerly, and the warm, sweaty pleasure of people stil snuggled close against the encroaching sunrise in the cots of the pavilions. Life, this morning, was thick and well stewed but did not, perhaps, bubble and snap - it simply steamed pleasantly.
Aramenta Stonewhistling had been, the night before, old enough to participate in the night's festivities as a full adult. She had not drunk so much - liquor, anyway, tended to irritate her fragile throat - but certainly she had perhaps stayed up a bit too late, listening to a narrow old woman telling an entrancing, long lay of the Time Beneath the Caverns, when the Striders gnawed at the growth of stones, and the Earth herself fed the people at her breast.
Livvy had not stayed up late whatesoever. She was nearly a woman herself now, only a year younger than her mistress, and aa practical one at that, who knew how things worked: a sleepy city liked to have more of its work done for it by others. She had gone to bed early, imagining a busier morning for herself today. She had been correct, bustling about in the paddocks just as the first sliver of light pierced over the horizon, helping to muck the stables, and carry water. Ara had woken with her - it was seldom that Ara could sleep past when Livvy crawled out of bed, and usually a sign of illness rather than luxury. She had curried and fed Canterfoot, first, then yanked on a pair of worn boots to turn to the same muck-work as Livvy.
They were both, then, wide awake by the time the sun crawled over the horizon, and rose up to mid-morning, and Father, grudgingly satisfied with Ara's hard work, had sent them off to run an errand - this was the day for settling spats, and the Stonewhistlings had one with a neighboring pavilion. The argument was over a neighbor's strider who had twisted his hoof galloping in amongst the Stonewhistling herd. Ara was to go to the farrier's for liniment. The farrier the Stonewhistlings frequented, like most businesses in the city, was not marked in any particularly apparent way. For Ara, it need not have been. She simply knew it was there. She chattered happily with Livvy as she walked, leaning in close to whisper in her ear.
Livvy chuckled, and waved her hand dismissively, over some private joke. They passed an old woman, who sat atop half a hogshead, twirling horsehair into long braids with bits of unfinished stones woven into them. They glimmered softly in the light of morning, meant to be woven into horse-manes on festival days. Ara stopped, and looked over the woman's work with the delight of a child not quite grown up, and signed softly in a sort of pretty admiration. The woman looked up - she recognized Ara, who was near her own people, still - and nodded with a grin. "Kind of you, Ms Stonewhistling."