4th of Spring, 514 AV
The Seaside Market
The Seaside Market
She had already emerged from the crowd of gathering people. It was a chilly morning, yet not entirely unexpected given that it was only a few days after the first of spring.
Lenz was bustling by the other busybodies of Sunberth, going about with her daily tasks, only today she felt more lighthearted than usual. She felt clarity overcome her senses. She understood more, she saw more, she could hear more and even smell more as a rank man passed her by.
Holding her nose to escape the pungent odor of stale bread, goat feces and rotten eggs all mixed together, she traipsed over to the stand that stood out to her like a sore thumb.
Eida was already busy about working to organize everything that posed no satisfactory. She was a very immaculate woman whether she accepts the fact or not. This was something Lenz often admired about her. She was laconic, and held structure in everything she accomplished. She only wished her knowledge could rub off on her.
“Now you show up,” the elder lady announced, a hand pronounced on her hip. Lenz shrugged, the smile on her face never faltering.
She loved her job. It brought back the good memories, ripping them away from the bad. The edges between the two, like deciphering what is right and wrong, was challenging to her. They were blurred, meshed together to such an extent that they made Lenz feel very indignant.
Eida seemed very placid at the moment, unlike her usual self. When another season comes around the corner, everyone is relatively rushed, hasty and busy until their limbs fall off, but not for her.
Her grey hair was messy, but not ratty. Her eyes were warmer this morning, instead of the hard and icy cold orbs they were normally. It wasn’t startling, just merely surprising to the woman. She had only known her employer to be stoic and quick to judge.
I guess I have made some headway, she thought, recalling the past few days she worked. They hadn’t started off on the same foot, the two girls. There was conflict, each other grating on one another’s nerves, but they worked it out, or so Lenz hoped.
“Sorry,” she apologized, feigning wiping sweat from her brow. “I had to do some house work.”
Eida chuckled sarcastically saying, “At your tent?”
The word tent left her lips in a way that would have caused an exorable dispute between any normal people, but Lenz simply brushed it off. Nothing was going to fail her jubilant mood today.
“What do you have for me this morning?” she asked, smiling slightly, beams of light radiated off her cheeks and nose.
Her hair was as crimson as ever, shining in the rays of the morning sun. Her eyes twinkled with elation and contentment, her nose crinkling up, her eyes squinting to block out the harsh light.
Lenz was a beautiful woman, often admired by many. She had been compliment before, sometimes even by the child she took watch over. It made her feel embarrassed, humiliated even, something she wished didn’t cause her to turn cherry red.
“Well,” said Eida. “There was a lady who stopped by only a few moments ago. She needed a pair of pants stitched up. A gaping hole, I tell you. These people don’t know how to take care of their clothes.”
The woman giggled, brushing her red curls behind one ear. She swept the palm of her hand over her bangs, smoothing them over the top of her head. Her eyes dulled at the thought of countless bells of work, but she was still anticipatory.
She threw down her hands so that they hit the sides of her pants. “Alright,” she said loudly, walking behind the stand that held a multitude supply of sewing equipment and supplies.
“I’ll get to it right away.”