15th of Summer, 515AV
4th Bell, Evening
The Ruby District
4th Bell, Evening
The Ruby District
Second in size only to the Mountain Ixam, the Plains Ixam are threatened only by creatures large or fast enough to challenge them; Glassbeaks being among the more common predators.
Mayra squinted at the words for a second, before bringing her nose out of the book on her lap to glance around. What were glassbeaks?Obviously they were a predator far larger than the massive reptiles she had encountered, but that was the only clue she got from the book. Placing the mouthpiece of her pipe between her lips, Mayra took a deeper drag, enjoying the sweet taste of tobacco. She let her eyes wander the busy district before her, taking a break from her tireless reading. She had found that, during her time in Endrykas, there were definitely districts among the tents. Grouping of the different colored tents was hard to miss when you walked through the city, although near the edges they tended to blend together. Each color represented something, although what it was, Mayra hadn't yet figured that out yet. Taking the moment to puff the last tendrils of flavor from her expiring pipe, Mayra watched the people around her. Directly in front of her there was a tent with two woman and a young boy in it. They seemed to be elbow deep in a thick muddy clay. Unlike the grey and dull clay of Kalea, this clay was a fresh copper brown from the Cyphrus soil, and the people in the open-air tent were artists, clearly.
Occasionally the oldest woman would take a wire and chop of a block of the clay, then it would only be a few chimes before a thick mug or bowl or plate had been formed from her expert fingers. She added it to a stack, and Mayra saw that she was making a dining set with the clay. The slightly younger woman beside her was carving more intricate designs on the side and the small boy was adjusting all the completed pieces on a wire grill that looked as if it should be over a fire, not resting on a table. Mayra assumed it must be moved to one once it is filled with clay statues, for hardening.
So they were potters. The red district had potters in it.
Don't get distracted, Mayra. The halfblood scolded herself, and turned her head down from the people watching. She sat cross legged on the top of a pile of wood. The quarter-logs had been cross-stacked to form a solid two meter tower, the top of which was wrapped in canvas, on which Mayra sat. She was elevated above the small square of tents this way, and so far no one seemed to mind her perched there. Just a girl, smoking and reading, nothing too noteworthy. But then again, Mayra quite enjoyed how easily she was ignored in this place. She was a foreigner and while it made it hard for her to function within this odd society, harder to understand it and be apart of it, it also made it easy to simply float on the metaphorical outskirts, as she had grown used to doing. the physical outskirts of the city had proven far too dangerous for the half-Chaktawe to want to brave again.
Plains Ixam travel the grasslands of Cyphrus, grazing on grass and leaves from low-hanging tree branches. They will stop for the females to lay eggs in--
And then the stack of wood on which Mayra perched was wobbling. In an instant, Mayra's book slammed shut and she was alert. Her own stance on the pile was carefully placed, since the wood was not really meant to be climbed. Mayra was not a terribly large person, thanks to her zith side, so it wasn't too hard of a feat for herself. But if anyone else was attempting to climb the stack as well, it would surely go down. The woodpile shook again, and Mayra risked the move to uncross her legs. She crawled to the side of the stack, shifting her pipe between hands so that she wouldn't drop it, where there was the most movement to peer over the side of her small tower.
"Oh, hello there little one." She grinned down at the golden mass of locks that had already half-way scaled the wood. At the ring of her voice, the small boy looked up and grinned at her as if this was a game. She merely smiled back, keeping her lips closed. The shocking green eyes looked familiar, but the half-breed couldn't put a name to them. He didn't respond to her, instead the toddler merely waved one hand about for an instant, a sudden glare of distress filling is features, as if she was ignoring him. He said a single unrecognizable word and then his hand danced about a little more. It took Mayra a few ticks to realize he was speaking to her in the odd way of the horse-people. "Oh, yeah. Hold on." She turned to place her book and pipe down, carefully placing her pipe between the two ridges of logs of wood so it would stay straight up. She was nearly done with it anyway, the flame had burnt out chimes ago, but any excess smoke could be worrisome.
Once she had secured her items from falling off the stack, Mayra flattened herself to her belly, and reached off the edge to offer her hand to the small child below her. She felt his tiny hands grasp hers and she glanced down to see him doing more hand-language to her and she braced herself to tug the reckless child up. He helped, walking up the stack of wood with his feet and scrambling to the top when he reached it, and he wasn't a very large toddler, he couldn't be more than four years old at most. It was not very far of a climb, but the child was tiny and Mayra not much larger herself, so together it was a small challenge. Once the child had steadied himself on the precarious stack of logs he giggled, which caused Mayra to giggle as well. He motioned something and said a strange word and Mayra could only shrug helplessly, unsure of how to tell such a small child that she couldn't understand him.
But in the midst of the toddlers animated fingers, she watched him bring his right hand to his forehead, a hooked finger to his brow. It was a familiar greeting, and suddenly she understood why the toddler looked so familiar. What was her luck to mead one of his pavilion?
"Dravite? Do you know Dravite?" She spoke the name to the boy, who had picked up her book now and was carelessly flipping through the pages. The two must be related somehow, since she remembered the horseman telling her that greetings were specific to each pavilion. He giggled again, as if her inability to understand him was amusing and nodded to her at recognition of the name. A grin spread across her lips for a second before she watched the child's green eyes go wide in fear. Quickly, the small golden haired toddler started laughing again and pointed to her teeth, finding yet another thing about her that was amusing to him. He rubbed his small fingers across his own pearly whites, where they had mostly all grown in for the first time, as if to point out that his were different. Mayra nodded, trying to be enthusiastic to keep up with the toddler's energy, still a little confused on how to interact with the toddler or whether he understood her at all. If she had known more about the strange hand-language she might have said he was babbling at her, judging from the snippets of foreign words that he giggled out every few ticks to accompany his hand-dance, but she wasn't quite sure.
She was trying to pretend to be attentive to the boy as she peeled her precious book from his grabby hands. It took a few tries of pointing to herself and saying her name, then pointing to him and saying nothing, for the boy to understand and reveal his name, Kyanite. After this, and after realizing she didn't understand him the child was content with treating her like an animal. He would touch her hair questioningly, probably wondering why it was a mane of frizz instead of neatly braided down like the rest of the horse-people. He waved at her eyes and at one point the child actually took her hand to examine her sharp nails, seemingly unaware of the predatory resemblance. At one point he tried to grab her now-cold pipe, but Mayra had taken it before he could grab it.
It had merely been a few chimes with Mayra trying desperately to tame the energetic toddler and just generally not really sure what to do with his sudden intrusion, when he exclaimed another unrecognizable pair of words. "Ruh Roh! Ruh Roh!" He repeated it twice, as if to catch someone's attention, dropping her book, which she caught and scrambled over to the other side of the wood pile, shaking the stack as he hobbled over. "Ruh Roh!"
"Oh! Oh-ok!" He stood at the edge of the pile and threw his hands up in a show of championship. Mayra found herself behind the child in an instant, delicate hands hovering behind his abdomen, prepared to catch him if he tumbled forward. "Step back now, littl'un, you're going to fall. C'mere." She tried to steal the toddler's attention again but he was more focused on someone weaving through the tents than the strange woman behind him, his hands waving wildly and random excited words breaking through the confident giggles. Children were mad.
Common | Tawna | Thoughts | PC/NPC Talking