20th day of Summer, 515 AV
8th bell of the evening
The cards and the small accompanying book seemed to glare out at her from the table where they sat. The card box held her new deck, the acquisition of which had been both exciting and sorrowful. Replacing a deck so well loved as her previous one, familiar and imbued with her energy so that she knew the cards and they knew her as well. It was like losing a friend, but the edges had frayed, the images faded, and though they might have served her, they no longer reassured others that what the Konti said was based on her cards.
So with a heavy heart she had bid farewell to the old deck, setting them aflame with a prayer to Avalis and a nod to Syna. Hot ashes rose from the flames, floating off into the endless sky around the peaks that she called home.
Parting with them had been difficult, but finding a new deck, that was worse. None of the decks in Lhavit had been anything like the decks in Mura, the images, the names, all of them different, unfamiliar. She would have to learn an entirely new system, not just new cards. It was quite the deterrent for Tanell, which is how she found herself staring at the cards from across the room.
They had been pretty cards, when she finally found them, delicate purple on the backs, fading to white in the middles. They had been passed over for the most part, no touch of others lingered on their paper. The other side of the cards had been entrancing, locking her gaze as she looked upon them seeking every detail. Despite the lack of familiar imagery, she had connected with the cards, their beauty, the vivid depictions, she had known almost the instant she touched them that they must be hers.
Yet, still they sat untouched upon her table, awaiting her favor, and, although it was slow in coming, it did eventually arrive, the out of place deck a constant reminder that she needed to see them, to begin to know them.
A daunting task indeed, but one she needed face, sooner rather than later. If she did no work this season, she would be quite troubled in the season to come, and most who came to her wanted their future read, not their past, so she needed to turn to her cards and learn what knowledge they might depart.
Folding under the pressure she mounted upon herself, she tucked her self in at the table, shifting her chair until she could see out the window she sat beside. There, a view of the day to accompany her work, though perhaps she should have gone outside, where she might attract a customer with her work.
She wasn't really skilled enough to do a read on the fly with new cards anyway, so it didn't really matter, although she did have a few women who came by with more regularity, they would surely allow her the time she would need to read new cards.
They would know well enough by her open door that she was more than happy to read for them, hopefully word would spread, though she should probably make her home more distinct, for those that were referred to her. 'The house with the open door' wasn't really a great distinction, especially not when the season was so warm.
She forced her attention to return to the task at hand, her cards and her welfare required her attention. It was worthy even of a prayer to her the mother who had marked her with favor.
"I search for you, mother, in this ever shifting world. I seek your guidance as I approach a new task. The fortunes of others are unclear to me, for while your gift allows me to seek their past, often others seek to behold their future. It is your sight that guides me, your strength that forges a path. So I ask you to lend me your strength and your sight as I attempt to follow in your footsteps. May we always find what we seek, mother." The prayer was simple, and not dissimilar from the prayer she offered before doing a reading for another.
It was a good prayer, though, an offering to the one who had marked her, to her father's wife, to her mother. Though they were far now from the first Konti, they were all born through the union of Laviku and Avalis.
Her attention shifted back to the work she ignored, the deck and the book, calling her name, haunting her with their presence as they awaited her exploration. It was not easy, but as she reached for them her excitement grew. They really were lovely cards, and the book had been a kind gift from the shopkeeper when Tanell had mentioned the vast difference between the Konti tarot and the Lhavitian tarot. She reached for that first, a reading of the information, or at least a glance at the introduction to the cards was likely to help a great deal.
The book was in common, but Tanell felt sure that her grasp of the language, especially such as she used so frequently with her customers, would be easily deciphered.
8th bell of the evening
The cards and the small accompanying book seemed to glare out at her from the table where they sat. The card box held her new deck, the acquisition of which had been both exciting and sorrowful. Replacing a deck so well loved as her previous one, familiar and imbued with her energy so that she knew the cards and they knew her as well. It was like losing a friend, but the edges had frayed, the images faded, and though they might have served her, they no longer reassured others that what the Konti said was based on her cards.
So with a heavy heart she had bid farewell to the old deck, setting them aflame with a prayer to Avalis and a nod to Syna. Hot ashes rose from the flames, floating off into the endless sky around the peaks that she called home.
Parting with them had been difficult, but finding a new deck, that was worse. None of the decks in Lhavit had been anything like the decks in Mura, the images, the names, all of them different, unfamiliar. She would have to learn an entirely new system, not just new cards. It was quite the deterrent for Tanell, which is how she found herself staring at the cards from across the room.
They had been pretty cards, when she finally found them, delicate purple on the backs, fading to white in the middles. They had been passed over for the most part, no touch of others lingered on their paper. The other side of the cards had been entrancing, locking her gaze as she looked upon them seeking every detail. Despite the lack of familiar imagery, she had connected with the cards, their beauty, the vivid depictions, she had known almost the instant she touched them that they must be hers.
Yet, still they sat untouched upon her table, awaiting her favor, and, although it was slow in coming, it did eventually arrive, the out of place deck a constant reminder that she needed to see them, to begin to know them.
A daunting task indeed, but one she needed face, sooner rather than later. If she did no work this season, she would be quite troubled in the season to come, and most who came to her wanted their future read, not their past, so she needed to turn to her cards and learn what knowledge they might depart.
Folding under the pressure she mounted upon herself, she tucked her self in at the table, shifting her chair until she could see out the window she sat beside. There, a view of the day to accompany her work, though perhaps she should have gone outside, where she might attract a customer with her work.
She wasn't really skilled enough to do a read on the fly with new cards anyway, so it didn't really matter, although she did have a few women who came by with more regularity, they would surely allow her the time she would need to read new cards.
They would know well enough by her open door that she was more than happy to read for them, hopefully word would spread, though she should probably make her home more distinct, for those that were referred to her. 'The house with the open door' wasn't really a great distinction, especially not when the season was so warm.
She forced her attention to return to the task at hand, her cards and her welfare required her attention. It was worthy even of a prayer to her the mother who had marked her with favor.
"I search for you, mother, in this ever shifting world. I seek your guidance as I approach a new task. The fortunes of others are unclear to me, for while your gift allows me to seek their past, often others seek to behold their future. It is your sight that guides me, your strength that forges a path. So I ask you to lend me your strength and your sight as I attempt to follow in your footsteps. May we always find what we seek, mother." The prayer was simple, and not dissimilar from the prayer she offered before doing a reading for another.
It was a good prayer, though, an offering to the one who had marked her, to her father's wife, to her mother. Though they were far now from the first Konti, they were all born through the union of Laviku and Avalis.
Her attention shifted back to the work she ignored, the deck and the book, calling her name, haunting her with their presence as they awaited her exploration. It was not easy, but as she reached for them her excitement grew. They really were lovely cards, and the book had been a kind gift from the shopkeeper when Tanell had mentioned the vast difference between the Konti tarot and the Lhavitian tarot. She reached for that first, a reading of the information, or at least a glance at the introduction to the cards was likely to help a great deal.
The book was in common, but Tanell felt sure that her grasp of the language, especially such as she used so frequently with her customers, would be easily deciphered.