x This room seemed to be bigger than the previous one. Made sense of course. The previous room had been the hallway. The bat didn’t know what kind of chamber this was, but he guessed the living room. Although he could be wrong. It was the most probable that he was wrong. After all, he had never been here before, and since the twilight did not allow him to see details, he could only detect rough shapes. That was quite a bother, but he was used to it. He could still use his other senses, like touch, to make out the details.
Slowly he stalked farther into the dark space in front of him, his feet almost made no sound. Well, it wasn’t audible to the human ear, but to him it sounded as if he was stomping his boots on the floor. Although that wasn’t entirely correct. If it would sound as if he pounded his feet on to the ground, the noise would be louder. So actually it had to be reformulated like this. It sounded as if he was pounding his boots on the floor, if he had the deaf ears of a human. That didn’t have the same feel though.
The bat noticed he’d stopped paying attention to where he was going but was still walking. Quickly he started doing so again, only to notice that he had almost crashed in to a vase. His fingers traced the lines at the sides of the thing. It was cold. Something was carved in it. A pattern of sorts. The thief let his hand slide over it a couple of times. He realized it was not a pattern, but a chiseled image of something. He didn’t know what though. He tapped on the vase with the nail of his index finger, hoping the sound would tell him what material it was made of. A high, jingling tone waved through the room, louder than he had expected. He placed a finger on the surface to make the noise stop.
It wasn’t made of ordinary stone, he could tell. Actually, he had known from the very moment he’d touched it. It had been too rough. Rock didn’t make a sound like this one had. Maybe it was made out of glass? Somehow he felt like that wasn’t it either. He was close though, but it wasn’t quite like glass. Then what-? Skyglass? Maybe. That would make this a truly expensive vase. Valuable also. But unsellable. He sighed. He’d have to look for something else. Something smaller.
Softly he paced to what he expected to be a cupboard or something amongst those lines. It turned out to be a table. A solid piece of wood, very smooth at the surface. It seemed a bit unpractical to the bat. Who would ever want to eat while sitting at a cube of wood? There wasn’t even space to place your legs! Very uncomfortable.
Then he spotted something else. In the corner of the room, the thief detected another solid hearing thing. Stalking closer, the bat could see it had a different shape than the previous lump of wood. It was a shape he recognized. The grinned. The thing was long, but not high. The top curved a bit, arching slowly downwards. The thief ran his fingers over the surface of the thing, which was almost entirely made out of wood. His fingertips touched something rather cold, almost like ice. Metal bands strapped on the upper side of the box. Tracing them down to one of the vertical standing sides, his fingers passed a small groove. Following it to the left, he came across the thing he had been looking for. The lock.
Each chest had to have a decent lock. This one had one too. Or, that was what he assumed anyway. On that notice, it would prove rather difficult picking it, and especially so in the dark. The thief wasn’t quite skilled enough to do so, but he could try to force it open. He had brought his hammer and wedge, so he could make an attempt to use them. It would create a lot of noise, but he was willing to take the risk. If the man came to check what was going on he’d just grab it and run. If it wasn’t too heavy of course.
On his knees, the bat moved so the short side of the chest was stuck between his legs. Then, he placed his wedge in the groove, as close to the lock as possible. With his hammer, he carefully searched for the top of the wedge, and held the head of the tool against it. Giving it a swift and soft knock, he got to work, stopping at random intervals to check if the inhabitant of this place, who was also the owner of this chest, hadn’t woken up yet.
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