Deltan shouldered his bulging pack, face flushed and slightly moist from lugging the heavy thing all the way to the Sunset Quarters from his previous room. It was a miracle he'd not been stabbed in the back for his things. Then again, he'd picked up a rather substantial half of a plank with a rusty nail driven through it. It wouldn't take much to drop the pack and allow the nail to make intimate acquaintance with someone's face, and his pack was just ratty enough that it seemed he didn't have anything worth getting hurt over. Deltan was beginning to pick up on the discretion one needed to survive in Sunberth. No fancy clothes for him.
The young man weaved his way through the cramped confines of the Sunset Quarters. It seemed like there were more doors lining the way than wall, almost. Were these all houses? They seemed more like closets. Even to Deltan, a man who had lived with his mother in an apartment that was by no means large, thought them small. Well, he hadn't much money, so he had to put up with it. He'd only be here a season, if he had any choice.
After asking a few people--mostly women and children he could corner to make them answer--Deltan located who he could ask about a room. Most of them pointed him to the orphanage. Pointed in the general direction, at least. In practice, he had to waylay some poor person every five minutes lest he lose his way. After close to two hours, the young man managed to make his way into the orphanage.
Quite abruptly, he was almost bowled over by a horde of children running in through the door after him. He kept an eye on his pockets, after two children both tried to clumsily pickpocket him at the same time...And a more adept third nearly got away with it. Still, his irritation was tempered somewhat. The ragged children were just being children. Deltan was quite convinced that the gods designed children specifically to cause havoc. Then, quite abruptly, all childish games ceased as a dour-looking woman walked into the room. They hastily scurried from the room, heads ducked.
As the woman--apparently this Jillene he'd heard about--approached Deltan, he noticed a few things at once. First, she was blind. Her eyes had the milky white that made it hard to believe she'd ever seen anything, and she had her hand on a little girl's shoulder. Apparently, the little girl was her guide for the moment. Likely not a permanent fixture, though, since the girl seems tense. Not scared, exactly, but wary. The woman was almost a foot shorter than Deltan, but she had a bearing that said she was very used to being obeyed. "Why are you here?" She inquired archly, back straight as she stared up at him.
Deltan, for his part, wasn't exactly intimidated. A little blind woman was hardly a threat, but he'd show her respect if she somehow maintained control over the entirety of the Sunset Quarters. "I need a room," he answered, pitching his tones as close to respectful as he could manage. He did respect her somewhat for being able to keep all these orphans in line, so there was no need for hypnotism.
It was half practice and half pity that made him meet Jillene's guide's eyes. The girl had big, brown eyes that watched him with only a little fear. Jillene was a guardian, so she was safe from harm while the woman was near. At a glance, it was obvious the girl was a skittish thing, scared of both him and Jillene, though the latter had somewhat proven herself. With a faint push of suggestion, Deltan tried to implant the idea of safety in the girl's mind in connection with the woman. The girl relaxed barely, but he doubted it would have a lasting effect. Besides, there was no way to know if she relaxed, since his own presence likely made her wary. Deltan knew that, among hypnotists, he was probably on the hamfisted side of things.
Abruptly, Deltan realized that Jillene was speaking, and he returned his attention to her. Those blind eyes were narrowed, almost as though she could see him. It was troublesome, but nothing unbearable. After listening to the prices, Deltan settled for a simple apartment at one and a half silver mizas per day. He paid ten days in advance, introducing himself in the process and getting a cool nod from Jillene in return. She didn't seem interested in anything he had to say, so he simply turned and left.
He risked a backward glance, and noticed that the girl was more relaxed around Jillene than she had been at first. Maybe he'd done some good, after all.
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