Closed The Mystery of the Missing Silk Skirt

This is a tale about a stolen article of clothing and the two strangers who tempt to try to find it and the thief who stole it

(This is a thread from Mizahar's fantasy role playing forum. Why don't you register today? This message is not shown when you are logged in. Come roleplay with us, it's fun!)

A lawless town of anarchists, built on the ruins of an ancient mining city. [Lore]

Moderator: Morose

The Mystery of the Missing Silk Skirt

Postby Lenz on March 16th, 2014, 9:56 am

Image
13th of Spring, 514 AV



Birds were chirping through the various clouds that marred the sky. They shrouded the sunlight that attempted to peer through them with minor fight. A mild wind caressed the ground and kissed her face as a woman with fiery red hair traipsed through the city with a smile bolding highlighting at the beauty of her face.

The horizon was wounded with streams of crimson streaks. It was the early morning, an ungodly time for most people, but not for Lenz. She was up and ready, trotting through the city at a rapid gait. She held her smile with relative ease, yet struggled to keep it was wavering as she was greeted by the bustling of people already about with their day.

She immediately frowned, noticing the various stands already set up. She had hoped with much of her heart to finish a few orders early before such a crowd arose from the depths of such commotion.

Either way, she was pleased. The more people, the more money she and her employer, Eida, raked in at the end the day. She was just the person she met once she had emerged from the mob of locals unharmed.

“Hello Eida,” she greeted her, rushing around the counter to join the elderly lady. “How are you feeling this morning?”

“Well enough,” she replied skeptically, taking a few steps back from her jubilant employee. “What’s it to you?”

“Nothing at all,” Lenz reassured her, taking a seat in the chair that was always sitting next to the counter. It was as if it taunted her and called to her each and every day she worked.

“It is very busy this morning, no?” she asked, observing the crowd with minor suspicion. She had become aware of her surroundings far better than she had the first day she had arrived. It was something of habitual instinct to her now, although it wasn’t as advanced as she would have liked it to be.

The woman shrugged and said, “It is like it always is.”

Lenz sighed, brushing her scarlet curls behind her ears. She parted her bangs to the side so that she could see whatever lay in front of her. She then scooted up closer to the table and started to organise her items.

“Has there been anything for me yet?” she asked, straightening the pair of sheers so that they were lying at a ninety degree angle next to the spool of black thread.

“Not yet, but there was a woman who stopped by a few moments ago asking what we did.” She chuckled, throwing her head back in a dramatic attempt to act amused. Lenz caught on to the sarcasm that tainted her words.

“As if she couldn’t see the sewing equipment strewn around that table?”

“Some people,” Lenz chimed in, giggling slightly at her agreement. How could be not notice such things as spools of thread, sewing needles and various articles of fabric?

She went back to organising her utensils, straightening her sewing needle so that it was parallel to the spool of white thread, next to the sheers on the opposite side of the spool of black thread. She wrapped the seamstress tape around her neck and leant over the table so that her elbows were propped up on the surface.

“Some people these days,” she murmured, surveying the crowd. She spotted an elderly couple warily. The last time she had seen an elderly man he had been robbed of his money by a thieving woman.

Her eyes wavered over a young woman with light blond hair. She worse expensive clothing and held a sort of satchel over her left shoulder. It was beige in colour, matching incredibly well with her skin tone which bore freckles all over her face.

Lenz smiled. She loved watching people go about their daily business. She loved eavesdropping inconspicuously on others’ conversations and she loved watching verbal disagreements occur as long as they didn’t get physically violent. It was then that she looked away or tried to rectify the issue at hand.

Suddenly a small hand was slapped onto the counter, barely missing Lenz’s own by mere inches. She was a woman of decent height, with hair as dark as a raven’s wing and eyes as silver as a sliver of the moon at midnight. She had a pale complexion, her face narrow with a nose the smallest, yet most rigid as she had seen.

“What can I do for you this fine morning?” she asked candidly, raising her eyebrows.

“I am interested in purchasing a slim fitting skirt if you don’t mind,” she replied with a sheepish expression. Lenz nodded and went about with her normal procedure.

“I will need to take measurements of your figure if that is alright with you,” she said before taking the tape from around her neck.

“Do what you have to do,” she said, lifting up her arms so that Lenz could wrap the tape around her waist line.

She made sure to write down the measurements on a piece of scratch paper she had retrieved from underneath the counter. She also went to measure the height the lady wanted to dress to be before measuring the lowest part of her legs in terms of finding out how wide the longest part of the skirt would be.

“Is there any particular fabric you wish for me to use in making your skirt?” Lenz asked, looking up at the woman to see her initial reaction.

She portrayed confusion and then brilliance and then bemusement all right after one another. Finally she came up with the idea to purchase silk.

“Very wonderful choice my lady, but is there any specific colour you wish to choose?”

“I would love to have just the basic white silk.”

It was a rare choice, given the attire the woman currently wore. She had well groomed hair, a somewhat cleansed face, yet she wore regular clothes for wishing to purchase such expensive clothing. However, Lenz didn’t question her choices. She wasn’t thrown into a quandary, instead she nodded her head.

“Alright,” she announced, tentatively making eye contact with her first customer of the day. “It shouldn’t take me more than a bell or two.”

“That sounds marvelous. I should be back soon to pick it up.”

The two then nodded to each other in mutual agreement before Lenz set off to do her duty.
Image
Last edited by Lenz on March 16th, 2014, 10:03 am, edited 2 times in total.
Image
User avatar
Lenz
A Lost Survivor
 
Posts: 583
Words: 528134
Joined roleplay: August 16th, 2013, 9:04 pm
Location: Sunberth
Race: Human
Character sheet
Storyteller secrets
Scrapbook
Plotnotes

The Mystery of the Missing Silk Skirt

Postby Lenz on March 16th, 2014, 9:59 am

Image
13th of Spring, 514 AV


She first proceeded to find the silk fabric. It would have been folded up in an immaculate fashion underneath the counter on any other occasion, but after an attempt of thievery a few days ago, Eida had suggested to stash it in the back somewhere.

She didn’t know where her employer ran off to every single day, but then again, it wasn’t her place to question her disappearances. She simply went about and did her work. Besides, she was paid at the end of the season, and that was all that mattered to her at this point in her life.

She was scrounging around the various boxes that held a multitude of fabrics until she finally came across an off white silk. She was sure the lady wouldn’t mind the colour. It was close enough anyways and it would have to do.

She pulled it out and went back to the stand to set it down. She pulled out a decent amount and measured it with her tape until she found the proper length she had written down only moments ago.

She grabbed the sheers that were set off to the side and snipped of the large piece of the fabric. She then folded it in half and measured it again. Once she had made sure it was of proper length, she grabbed her sewing needle and the spool of white thread.

She unwound a few inches of the thread and then stuck it through the eye of the needle. She made sure excess was sticking out of the eye of the needle before continuing to stick the tip through the fabric.

She kept the two cut sides relatively close as she sewed them up. She stuck the tip of the needle through the fabric and went up a few centimetres only to stick it through the other side, tightening the hold as she went.

Finally it was all sewn up to the best of her ability. Lenz sat back to observe her work, only realising that around ten or fifteen chimes had gone by. She was making good time with the pace she was currently working at.

“Well done, Lenz,” she said aloud to herself as she folded over the top hem of the soon to be skirt. It resembled what appeared to be a belt, more or less. She then took the seamstress tape and measured on the side of the skirt up until a few inches and then took the sheers and snipped.

With a small cut on the side in terms of showing more feminism, Lenz sighed with gratitude. Subtle relief exploited itself from between her teeth. Her lips tried to hold it back, but it was far too defiant to be stopped.

She took a little break then, leaning back in her chair before racking her brain for how she would finish her product. She stood up from her chair and walked to the back of the stand, starting to rummage for anything to accessorize the outfit with.

Coming up with nothing, she returned to the front of the stand only to find that the skirt was no longer there. She had just left it there for less than a moment or two. Where could it have gone?

Lenz leant over the counter, peering from side to side to try to see if anyone had stolen it. This town was crawling with ignorant thieves of various shapes and sizes, all of which were strongly despised by the woman.

She looked one way and came up empty handed. She then looked another way and saw someone she recognized. It was a woman with incredibly dark hair, her skin was pallid in comparison with her long locks. She walked briskly, without turning around and in her hand held a silk skirt.

“Hey!” Lenz called out, jumping over the counter. She started to sprint through the crowd, running through people and almost pushing some down in the process.

She almost tripped over her feet as she accidentally lost sight of the woman. Incidentally, she hadn’t been paying attention, causing her to run straight into a man of tall height.

The two came crashing down, hitting the ground hard.

“I’m so sorry,” Lenz blurted out, spluttering on her words as she tried to stand up. She was hasty and kept tripping, having her fall down again and again.

She tried to maintain her bearings, straining her neck to search the crowd of bustling people. Her eyes fluttered over heads of all colours, of people of all sizes, but alas, she couldn’t find the woman who had sticky fingers.

“I’m sorry,” she said again, taking a gander at the man she had run into. “You by chance haven’t seen a woman with dark hair carrying a silk skirt have you?”

She only hoped he brought her good news.
Image
Image
User avatar
Lenz
A Lost Survivor
 
Posts: 583
Words: 528134
Joined roleplay: August 16th, 2013, 9:04 pm
Location: Sunberth
Race: Human
Character sheet
Storyteller secrets
Scrapbook
Plotnotes

The Mystery of the Missing Silk Skirt

Postby Gad on March 17th, 2014, 6:39 am

What was today? The 13th? Gad sneered at the thought. A bad luck number. Why? Who kenw? But, luck was strange like that, it never really made sense. Gad thought about the irony of it all. There were three legged, one eyed dogs named 'Lucky'. 'Lucky', sure, but they never say if it's good kind or the bad. Gad had always felt he had an overabundance of luck. He was born lucky, and lucky to be born. He was alive in Sunberth, and, well, he was alive in Sunberth. He couldn't help but feel that sneer turn to a grin as he mused philosophical about the nature of luck. And that's just what luck is, he thought, a sneer to a grin, and back again. He didn't know what it was, maybe something in the air, or the water, but he could feel it was going to be one of those days. He was alright with that. Those strange little meetings and run-ins he tended to have usually worked out pretty well. If not, they were at least interesting stories for later. All that presentiment aside, he was in the markets to make some coin. There was a hustle and bustle of people moving around already, and the place was getting crowded. This was the kind of place he liked, the kind of crowd he lived off of. It was a bunch of people just looking for ways to spend their money. He scanned them with a keen eye, looking for the type of people who might succumb to his schemes. He spotted a smartly dressed blonde. She was cute, and freckled, with some expensive looking personal affects. As she started moving towards him, he nodded and smiled.

"Hello darl-"

"Get lost creep."
She didn't miss a step and neither slowed down nor sped up, but kept a constant pace with her eyes ahead of her. A local girl, no doubt.

"Well- uh, oooh kay then. So, I'll see you later?"
She was moving quick. He shrugged, and looked at the ground and kind of grinned to himself. All the hook you needed was a little conversation. If he could just get some of these people talking, he was sure it'd only be a matter of time before they gave him what he wanted. He spotted another lady, with dark hair, walking briskly. She had a silk piece of clothe of some kind or another tucked in her arm. "Hey hey hey baby, slow it down for a chime, let me talk to you." She didn't seem to notice him. "What's the rush sweetheart?" She continued past him, but did spare a glance over her shoulder. She looked him up and down with a solemn expression but then shook her head and chuckled to herself, and then sped up. "Well, petch you too!" This was why Gad had such trouble working women over, he thought. A man thinks he's better than you. A woman knows it.

Gad didn't mind having women fall all over him, but if you'd asked him, this wouldn't have been what he imagined. "Yeah, fine." He shoved her off of him and scrambled up to his feet, brushing himself off. He tucked his hands into his pocket making sure his coin bag was still there. It was, but he checked his other pocket and the ones in his jacket too, just to make sure she hadn't slipped anything into them, perhaps in an attempt to frame him up. It never hurt to be cautious. Once he was done inspecting himself and brushing the dust off, he took her in. Young, petite, curly red hair, hopelessly in love with him. Yeah, he felt that was a fair assessment. Or maybe that hopeless look was from something else? "What? No I- wait, actually, yeah. Yeah I think I did." He felt kind of rude now, not that he'd admit such a thing, and reached down to help her up.

"Why, what's it to you?"
Retired.
Gad
Gone
 
Posts: 243
Words: 265579
Joined roleplay: January 27th, 2013, 2:07 am
Race: Ghost

The Mystery of the Missing Silk Skirt

Postby Lenz on March 17th, 2014, 7:32 pm

Image
13th of Spring, 514 AV


The man looked her up and down, the sensation of spiders crawling up and down her back. It was a weird feeling, but she knew he couldn’t mean anything other than a simple inspection of her personage, for she was doing the same to him right then and there.

Her eyes sauntered over his figure, taking in his features like they were the last amounts of oxygen left. She inhaled his scent inaudibly and watched him stand up.

He had dark hair, very dark in fact, but obviously able to be inferred as brown rather than black. His eyes were a beautiful green. It was as if she were looking at meadows or grasslands; vast landscapes of the foliage that struggled to make peace with the many cities and inhabiting locals.

She smiled a little when he offered to help her up, and even more so when he mentioned seeing such a woman running past him. This meant that she wasn’t far behind. She couldn’t waste much time, though, but the least she could do was stick around to answer the man’s questions. After all, she had run into him, causing the two to go hurdling to the ground.

She too started to brush the debris that littered her pants. She straightened her shirt and tugged at her coat so that it covered her the way it was meant to.

Her eyes fluttered over the crowd once more before reverting back to him.

“She has stolen something from me,” she said.

It was funny to her, given that she resided in such an anarchical city. There were bound to be people stealing other people’s things, and she knew that. She had witnessed such things going around, without accounting for how it happened, more or less why it had happened.

It made her feel terrible, the contents in her stomach churning at the thought of the crimes that swarmed the minds of the beings that lived here. How did these thoughts come about in their head? Were they formed by some malevolent monster or by the sweet whispers of devilish spirits?

“I was trying to chase her down,” she started to explain, biting her lip as the dark hands of embarrassment started to wrap themselves around her neck.

She started to blush slightly again, her cheeks transmuting the lush rose tint that had sat dormant in the back of her mind for so long to the front of the stage. She bit her lip harder, her front teeth threatening to penetrate the dry skin of her lips.

Her canines peeled off the chapped flesh as she began to chew on the inside of her cheek. She swallowed large gulps of air, anxiety started to well up inside her.

“My boss is going to kill me if I don’t find and return that silken skirt,” she said.

Her eyebrows furrowed, a definite crease forming in the middle of them. Her nose crinkled and her eyes narrowed as she cut her attention into two. She was looking at the man when she spoke, but her eyes were lingering elsewhere.

Bewildered, she added softly, “I need to find her.”

She wanted to thank him, and was about to let the words escape from behind the barracks of silence when a thought bubbled to the surface of her consciousness.

She was aware that no one helped anyone around these parts of the world, but she was hopeful and willing to try.

“Do you know which way she went?” she asked. “No wait…”

Lenz brushed crimson curls behind her ears once more. They had escaped their hold when she had fallen on top of the stranger. She stopped biting her lip, yet kept fidgeting in desperation.

“Would you be willing to help me look for her?” she asked finally, pouting slightly.

She stuck out her lip in an inconspicuous way all while looking concerned and in need of help. It was the truth though, and she only hoped she would receive his aid in the end.
Image
Image
User avatar
Lenz
A Lost Survivor
 
Posts: 583
Words: 528134
Joined roleplay: August 16th, 2013, 9:04 pm
Location: Sunberth
Race: Human
Character sheet
Storyteller secrets
Scrapbook
Plotnotes

The Mystery of the Missing Silk Skirt

Postby Gad on March 21st, 2014, 5:46 am

This girl seemed to be showing all the hallmarks of stress. Gad guessed he understood. Something crafted from silk would probably be highly valuable to the right people, which probably explained why it was stolen. So, Gad could sympathize to a certain degree. He still had trouble getting the picture though. This was a city where if something was stolen from you, you probably wouldn't get it back. Though, Gad had doubts it was much different even in other cities, he hadn't been to them and couldn't say for sure. Ultimately, though, you woke up in the morning knowing if your were stolen from, cheated, or harmed in anyway, you probably wouldn't receive anything in the way of compensation, or retribution. Gad made his peace with that a long time ago, as he assumed most in Sunberth had. This woman seemed very stressed out about something Gad doubted was in her control. He didn't really want to get involved, but, then she layered on all that pouting.

Her fidgeting and sweet faced shenanigans made him a little uncomfortable, but if the intention was to soften him up, well, it was working. He was about to point her in the northerly direction the woman had gone, but then the redhead asked him for a big favor. He mulled it over in his mind. He could have, and probably should have, told her to petch off, and that he wasn't going to get involved. But, then, she would probably still go after the woman, and it might turn ugly for the redhead. He judged that perhaps he shouldn't have even believed her but she seemed honest, and so he took her pleas and face value. He deliberated in his head. He guessed he could tag along with her, and keep an eye out for the girl. If things got too hectic he could always back out later. And, if everything turned out well enough, he might get something out of the arrangement. After a pause he shrugged and put forward in a friendly fashion; "Okay."

Gad put his arms out in the universal sign for 'after you', and directed the girl Northward. He didn't know if this was a set up or a con, and so he was cautious to put his back to her. "She went this way, to the North. I saw her with that silk skirt you mentioned. Hey- don't stress out so much. I mean, either you'll find it, or you won't, right? Haha." He rubbed his chin. "Yeah, she was in an awful rush to get somewhere. You recognize the person who took it?" Gad realized he was the situation he often had fallen into of carrying on a conversation with someone whose name he didn't know. "By the way, I didn't catch your name." Of course, she could've just given him an alias, as he was sure many of these interesting folks he met were wont to do, but at the very least it'd help having something to call her.
Retired.
Gad
Gone
 
Posts: 243
Words: 265579
Joined roleplay: January 27th, 2013, 2:07 am
Race: Ghost

The Mystery of the Missing Silk Skirt

Postby Lenz on April 2nd, 2014, 4:49 pm

Image
13th of Spring, 514 AV


She felt so embarrassed, having run into someone. It was tradition to brush it off and run away again, for most people would do this, at least in such as city as Sunberth. However, Lenz couldn’t help but stay around, apologise and make a bigger fool out of herself than she already had.

Thankfully, unlike any other local, the man she had trampled into was kind enough to offer her help. She needed this, or else she would get into some large amount of trouble if she returned empty handed.

Another thought couldn’t help but pop into her mind. She had left the stall unmanned. Eida disappeared as she usually did, leaving Lenz in charge of guarding all her property and the value that attached to it. She felt sick, her stomach clenching and unclenching, causing pains to radiate up her back, to her chest and down to her pelvis all in the same cycle. She held back a gag that was forming in the base of her throat.

Positivity came and masked the pessimism at that particular moment in time, something she couldn’t fathom would happen before hand. She sighed, thinking over the possible outcomes. Eida could return only mere moments after Lenz ran off and take over. She could have been in the back the entire time. Or no one would be cruel enough to notice the free stuff lying around.

She went with the first idea, seeing as how the other two, especially the last one, seemed most illogical. At least to her standards and current state of mind. She wasn’t that lucky per say.

She felt a wave of reassurance smother her the instant the man comforted her with his words. She had only left a few moments ago, heading north. At least she had a direction and at least she knew she wasn’t far behind. She was willing to track this woman down with the last strength of courage that bubbled up inside of her.

“I didn’t recognize her, although I know what she looks like,” the woman said, brushing her curls out of her face. They always fell so that she couldn’t see. It was making her more irritated every day. Some days she even threatened to cut them all off, but she admired the colour and the style too much to actually go through with the plan.

“Oh,” she said, startled. He wanted to know her name? What should she say? She wasn’t one to lie, and even given the current situation she always seemed to fall into, she couldn’t make up an alias for her life. “My name is Lenz.”

She shifted from one foot to the other, desperately in need to get going. The woman could have ran faster by now, caught more ground, causing the red head to have less a chance of finding her.

“Come on,” she urged, gently touching his wrist. An electric shock sprang up her forearm, eliciting a fire to burn inside her chest. What was that?

It was true that she hadn’t felt anyone’s touch in for so long, but why him and why now? He wasn’t necessarily special in anyway. Sure, his eyes were beautiful, the emerald green they were. But overall, he was a normal looking fellow of average appearance. She sighed quietly to herself before turning on her heel and starting to walk away at a slow gait.

“You said she went north, right?” she asked aloud, more so musing to herself than anything. She didn’t expect the man to follow her, although she had high hopes he would. She didn’t know anything about him. He could very well be a mass murder in disguise.

She chuckled inwardly at the thought. However, she did want to know something about him, whether he told it fake or not. She wanted to know his name.

“What about you? What is your name?”


OOC :
Oh my goodness, I am so sorry for the delay. I don't even know why I let this go so long without a reply!
Image
Image
User avatar
Lenz
A Lost Survivor
 
Posts: 583
Words: 528134
Joined roleplay: August 16th, 2013, 9:04 pm
Location: Sunberth
Race: Human
Character sheet
Storyteller secrets
Scrapbook
Plotnotes

The Mystery of the Missing Silk Skirt

Postby Gad on April 6th, 2014, 6:34 am

When Lenz touched Gad's wrist, a bit of static shocked him. She was touchy. "Lenz? Like, what you see through?" He wondered if it meant she had some kind of clarity. He shrugged. "Yeah, north." He stepped after her, his pace was brisk, but he made sure not to overtake her. Lenz didn't seem like a pseudonym, and so when she asked for his name he returned the favor. "Gad." he offered a hand. She seemed mostly harmless, so what was the point in deceiving her? At least, about his name. "So, you said your boss will kill you, right? You don't mean- like, you're just kidding about that right?" Well, it was possible, in this city it was even easy. "What do you do, anyways?" Gad was having trouble connecting just how this girl and the skirt fit together. Of course, after he asked the question, the thought that she made it crossed his mind. However, he was more asking to shift attention away from him. He didn't sense anything ominous or underhanded about her, but he wasn't about to reveal an overabundance about himself either. Not like that. Not the truth, at least.

"So, you have any ideas about what you're going to do when you find this woman? Like- how exactly do you plan on getting that skirt of yours back?" Gad rubbed his chin. "Because I don't think she's just going to say 'Oh no, you caught me, please take it back and forgive me for my thievin' ways!'" Gad chuckled, and looked over to Lenz. "Well, that might be nice, but yeah, no. Don't see it happening. I'm just saying, I hope you've got some kind of plan tumbling around in those red locks of yours or else this is gonna be real real awkward when we find this broad." They were covering good ground, the pair of them, when Gad thought he saw the cloak the woman had been wearing fluttering around the bend. He picked up speed and made it to the turn quickly, but when he got around, she was already gone. The alleyway split into three different pathways ahead of him, and it was clear the thief could've easily taken any of the three. Of course. He looked to Lenz. "Did you spot which way she went? If not, we could always flip a coin? Heh." He crossed his arms and peered down each path. This was curious. Why go through all the trouble for a skirt? Unless- how valuable was silk? Gad wasn't an appraiser of fabrics, but the idea that he was helping to retrieve something of value for free grated him. He thought about speaking up about it, but he'd decided to wait until they actually had something tangible.
Retired.
Gad
Gone
 
Posts: 243
Words: 265579
Joined roleplay: January 27th, 2013, 2:07 am
Race: Ghost

The Mystery of the Missing Silk Skirt

Postby Lenz on April 6th, 2014, 7:21 am

Image
The woman couldn’t help but laugh. Even through the veil of disappointment and pessimism that shrouded her with its dark hands she let out a giggle. It felt good; it made her feel better about the current situation. But why with him of all people? She didn’t mean to be critical and judgmental, but she didn’t even know him. Although, his comment made her chuckle like a little girl. She was easily manipulated and had been her entire life.

“No,” she corrected, smiling wildly as she continued to push through the crowd of people all the while maintaining her grasp on which direction the woman had fled. They weren’t too far behind, yet man’s words were distracting her.

Wasn’t that a good thing? All her life she had wanted distractions and now she had one. She had craved shifts and twists in everyday life, to sway her from reality and pressure her into the surrealism of imagination and dream. However, now that it was here she was all serious and stoic. She didn’t know what it meant.

Had Lhex bestowed upon her his wrath, in the form of natural occurrence? Was she not fit for a life of running? Running in terms of away from her past, the torment she had been thrown into with endless suffering through flashbacks and nightmares.

“No,” she continued, blinking rapidly and brushing her hair out from her eyes once more. “There’s a ‘z’ at the end.” Her smile did not falter as she took a glance behind her. A hand was outstretched for her to take, yet she hesitated.

“Gad.” And he was making fun of her name? She continued smiling, radiating her warm and comforting aura as she took in his.

She summoned the Djed from the depths of her consciousness. It welled up inside of her and slithered through her veins and arteries until it manifested into her eyes. She adjusted, slowly growing weaker, yet not enough to notice. She would only take a few chimes to really get a feel for this man.

However, instead of just sensing little emotions or seeing frantic images playing across her field of vision, she started to taste something instead. It tasted bitter, yet not from him but instead she caught a sense of loss and longing as if someone close to him was no longer around.

She couldn’t assume anything, though. She didn’t have enough power to see through any and all facades he portrayed for her entertainment. She only knew he was imprisoning emotions of hatred and depression deep inside of him. She wouldn’t bring it up, though. The colours subsided and the taste left her mouth. She wasn’t drained per se, but her mind started to buzz as she focused her Djed elsewhere.

She had been affected by what she had felt back there. They had moved a few feet since then, but it still followed her like a haunt, a spirit traipsing through the life it was captive in. Thankfully a question arose to deter her somber thoughts.

“No,” she said reassuringly. “I’m sure she won’t really kill me.” But then she paused. This was Sunberth after all, and no matter how highly she doubted the thought, it still lingered in the air like a foul odour. “I don’t think so at least.”

Profession. It was a difficult word to define no matter how obvious the question. What did she do, or what did she like to do? What did she want to do or what had she done before present day? Did she like what she did enough to tell him the truth?

“I’m a seamstress,” she blurted half mindedly. She didn’t mind the job, the tasks that her employer gave her each and every day. It was nice, and simple work which she happened to love no matter how many terrible memories came swarming back into her mind in the middle of the day.

For some strange reason, Lenz found herself mesmerized by Gad. He was young and sort of attractive. The way he spoke just made her feel so comfortable, even in her own skin. It wasn’t like he had a voice as smooth as honey or words so elegant they could put her to sleep. He was just an easy guy to talk to and she enjoyed his company. Better to have run into him than someone else, she thought without dwelling on the matter for too long.

He had a good point, however, as he began to plot aloud.

“I don’t know how I’m going to get it back, but when I find her, I’m not going to give up until I return with that skirt. Would you help if I needed it, though? Or would you leave me as soon as I found her again like everyone else would?”

She didn’t mean to sound judgmental, assuming everyone was a filthy thief, but she just couldn’t help it. From everyone she had met or happened to run into, everyone was rude and incredibly foul both inside and out!

Suddenly Gad picked up speed. He rounded a corner, almost leaving Lenz behind in the dust. “Wait!” she called out, finally catching up to him and almost running into him again as he stopped short.

“Did you spot which way she went? If not, we could always flip a coin?”

She smirked again, but as quickly as her lips were marred with the expression, they deflated as her peripheral vision caught sight of something very familiar. An off white elegant fabric swayed past a corner. She dodged for it, putting one foot in front of the other and almost tripping before regaining her balance. She kept running, rounding corners and more corners, completely neglecting to check to see if her new acquaintance had picked up the hint and was following her. She didn’t mean to leave him in the dust this time, but she needed that skirt!

All the while she was running she couldn’t help but curse the persons who put so many tight turns in such a city. What was the need? What use did they serve? After rounding another corner, she stopped to catch her breath. Either her mind was starting to play tricks on her or this thief was faster than she had initially thought she would be.

But then the sun pranced upon black hair, a woman standing near two heavy set men. She was talking to them, she knew that for certain, yet she couldn’t see what she was saying. Her back was turned to her, her front facing away.

“Gad?” she whispered, calling out to see if he was nearby. She coward behind a wall, her head peeking out from the materials it was made from. Her hair clung to it from the static of the dryness in the air.

“Got any ideas?”
Image
Image
User avatar
Lenz
A Lost Survivor
 
Posts: 583
Words: 528134
Joined roleplay: August 16th, 2013, 9:04 pm
Location: Sunberth
Race: Human
Character sheet
Storyteller secrets
Scrapbook
Plotnotes

The Mystery of the Missing Silk Skirt

Postby Gad on April 7th, 2014, 4:22 am

The wizard rubbed the back of his neck when she began to grill him about backing out 'like everyone else'. Well, yeah, that was the general idea, but of course, he wouldn't let on. "Whaaat? No, I would never. That doesn't even make sense, why would I volunteer to help if I was going to do something like that?" He rubbed the back of his neck and offered a friendly grin. A fake friendly grin, but it'd serve it's purpose he'd hoped. That was before they duo wound their ways through the corridors. It was narrow turn after narrow turn but they managed to get near. When Gad caught up he squinted, and could see their mark in the distance. She had two, large associates. He was stalking up on Lenz just as she muttered his name. "Hm? Yeah I see her. Definitely looks like the one to me." He pressed his frame against a nearby corner, ducking behind it as he peaked out. One of the few advantages of so many twisting alleyways.

"Ideas? Yeah, turn around." He said cynically. He thought he felt Lenz's eyes on him, so without looking he said "Kidding." He stroked his chin. Well, what do to. He thought of a few plans. They could start a fight. That was the least palatable of all options. Being a Projectionist, Gad only risked limb for life, and sometimes the other way around. Basically, he wasn't interested in getting any broken bones, as that would remove his most useful ability from play. They could always bullshit their way through. Well, it was two men. Lenz wasn't ugly. It could work. However, the wizard defaulted to what he felt was the wisest decision when it came to possible danger, and that was to wait. "Hold on, let's see what they do." He knelt down and put a hand to shade his eyes, cutting down the glare. It was possible those men where her guards. Which would really confuse things. Firstly, because they could stab Gad or Lenz in the face if either sneezed in the wrong direction. Secondly; why bother stealing the skirt at all if you could afford guards? Not that it wasn't possible, or that it was even unlikely. Gad guessed there might be plenty of rich in Sunberth who got that way by being tight with a miza rather than clever with one. He mumbled to Lenz. "You hear what they're saying?"
Last edited by Gad on April 8th, 2014, 4:45 am, edited 1 time in total.
Retired.
Gad
Gone
 
Posts: 243
Words: 265579
Joined roleplay: January 27th, 2013, 2:07 am
Race: Ghost

The Mystery of the Missing Silk Skirt

Postby Lenz on April 8th, 2014, 2:59 am

Image
She was relieved to see that Gad had followed her. She had ran pretty fast, a great motivator enhancing the speed she rarely knew she had.

She had assumptions lingering throughout her mind, but nothing substantial. One idea was that those two men were her body guards; however, it was unlikely given that no one did things for free and the woman looked rather poor. Her hair was unkempt and her clothes were poorly maintained and often disheveled.

Why did Lenz seek to crafting her a silken skirt again? It was beyond the amount of common sense she held.

Another idea drifted in and out, hinting to ignite the light bulb of creativity that sometimes rose above her head. Perhaps they were her kin? Her brothers who helped her with thievery acts of which she wasn’t able to succeed in doing?

“I don’t know what they’re saying,” said Lenz. “But I think those men might be her brothers.” It was an honest opinion. Gad could take it or leave it, but she was still stuck with the problem of confronting her.

He hadn’t backed out yet, so he might still be willing to follow through and help her. Unless, the possibility had arisen, that he was only in it for potential monetary reward. That or he was plotting to steal the skirt once she had claimed it again.

She sighed inwardly. Sometimes she just hated people. She never meant to judge, but experience proved of worth in at least having the assumption stored in the back of the mind.

“I have an idea,” she announced, although frankly, she really didn’t. “Why don’t we flank them and then rush in and grab it unexpectedly.”

She shook her head, dismissing such an awful proposal and replacing it with another.

“How about you attempt to distract him?”

She glared at him for a second, taken aback by his defensive strategy of ‘wait and see’. But she didn’t argue. She watched as the woman whispered things to the taller man, more muscle filling up both his arms and legs. Soon she was done and had started walking away with the other man.

What were they doing? She had half a mind to outright oppose her aggressively, yet verbally, but the other half rejected this idea. What happened to the woman now was none of her business. It was the largest of the men who now held what she needed.

She glanced back at Gad and flitted her eyes over to the silk skirt, now draped across the brute’s forearm. “You wanna help?”


ooc :
Ugh, this was so poorly written. I didn't have much of a plot line after my last post. But... here you go!
Image
Image
User avatar
Lenz
A Lost Survivor
 
Posts: 583
Words: 528134
Joined roleplay: August 16th, 2013, 9:04 pm
Location: Sunberth
Race: Human
Character sheet
Storyteller secrets
Scrapbook
Plotnotes

Next

Who is online

Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 0 guests