60th Summer, 515AV, the Patchwork Port: Wooden Wonders Workshop
In the lukewarm heat of mid morning, the streets were quiet. A solitary bird flapped overhead, perhaps a dove, and Karin breathed a soft breath as she turned her head to follow it's path. It gave a quiet, lazy coo. The sunlight streamed down upon her, warming the top of her head as she walked, and she could feel the faint heat from the paving stones radiating up. She was wearing simple brown clothes with her blonde hair brushed neat and straight down her back, occasional strands flowing past her face as she walked as briskly as usual.
Framing the streets, the walls of the city blended into obscurity, their monochrome hues absorbing any creativity. The strange things and illusions that Alvadas produced were not terribly unusual to Karin, she was most definitely used to it by now. She looked around as she walked, noticing the pudgy men on every square, boring street corner.
She gave one an idle glare as she went by, begrudging him... it or whatever, the flowery, colourful headdress it wore. They'd been around for a couple of days now, and every time she saw one, she begrudged them and their favourable treatment by the city and it's people. She wasn't really sure why, but well, since when did that stop her?
Her visit this morning was to the Patchwork Port. She'd been putting the visit off for days now, trying to come up with other things to do, other places to go, other reasons and excuses, but now she was sure that she'd done everything else that she could possibly do. Her reason, well... that was simple. She badly needed a job. Money, as it's often said makes the world go round. And Karin didn't have nearly enough for her many plans.
The plans she'd been making, they all needed a fair bit of money. In fact, ideally, the girl wanted to buy a casinor, but of course they were worth hundreds of mizas, mizas which she most certainly didn't have. However, even with all these problems, she didn't really want to go to the Port. The place being both her beacon and her warning. Most of her plans involved the place in one way or another, and she knew that going there would release a swarm of emotions, which meant that her walk there this morning was tinged with a little apprehension. Karin walked on.
The way down to the Port this morning was easy to find, as the city was being helpful for once. With only a few left and right turns along equally boring streets with equally decorated pudgy men (which Karin ignored), the girl soon managed to see the beginnings of the Port, the buildings piled on top of each other, in their various awkward shapes and sizes, bulging and squeezing and standing one on top of each other in their wonky fashion. There was a faint hustle and bustle sound which got louder as she got closer, the screeching of seagulls and hagglers alike and the sound of fish slapping down on decks.
There was the sound of the sea lapping softly against the various boats docked, and then there was the apprehension. Because there was access to everything she wanted in her life. It was all there, boats and fish and the briny, ozone smell of the ocean. But, and this was the worst part, she couldn't get out there, not properly.
For so long, she'd been swimming in and around the waters of Alvadas, so much so that she knew every nook and cranny and every beach and seaweed covered rock. But she'd never been able to go out any further, her arms had always given out on her, or something else needed her attention. She had no means of sailing on the open sea. It was all so frustrating! And thus, the fear. Walking here, after everything she'd discovered recently was like poking at a scab when she didn't want to bleed.
In the lukewarm heat of mid morning, the streets were quiet. A solitary bird flapped overhead, perhaps a dove, and Karin breathed a soft breath as she turned her head to follow it's path. It gave a quiet, lazy coo. The sunlight streamed down upon her, warming the top of her head as she walked, and she could feel the faint heat from the paving stones radiating up. She was wearing simple brown clothes with her blonde hair brushed neat and straight down her back, occasional strands flowing past her face as she walked as briskly as usual.
Framing the streets, the walls of the city blended into obscurity, their monochrome hues absorbing any creativity. The strange things and illusions that Alvadas produced were not terribly unusual to Karin, she was most definitely used to it by now. She looked around as she walked, noticing the pudgy men on every square, boring street corner.
She gave one an idle glare as she went by, begrudging him... it or whatever, the flowery, colourful headdress it wore. They'd been around for a couple of days now, and every time she saw one, she begrudged them and their favourable treatment by the city and it's people. She wasn't really sure why, but well, since when did that stop her?
Her visit this morning was to the Patchwork Port. She'd been putting the visit off for days now, trying to come up with other things to do, other places to go, other reasons and excuses, but now she was sure that she'd done everything else that she could possibly do. Her reason, well... that was simple. She badly needed a job. Money, as it's often said makes the world go round. And Karin didn't have nearly enough for her many plans.
The plans she'd been making, they all needed a fair bit of money. In fact, ideally, the girl wanted to buy a casinor, but of course they were worth hundreds of mizas, mizas which she most certainly didn't have. However, even with all these problems, she didn't really want to go to the Port. The place being both her beacon and her warning. Most of her plans involved the place in one way or another, and she knew that going there would release a swarm of emotions, which meant that her walk there this morning was tinged with a little apprehension. Karin walked on.
The way down to the Port this morning was easy to find, as the city was being helpful for once. With only a few left and right turns along equally boring streets with equally decorated pudgy men (which Karin ignored), the girl soon managed to see the beginnings of the Port, the buildings piled on top of each other, in their various awkward shapes and sizes, bulging and squeezing and standing one on top of each other in their wonky fashion. There was a faint hustle and bustle sound which got louder as she got closer, the screeching of seagulls and hagglers alike and the sound of fish slapping down on decks.
There was the sound of the sea lapping softly against the various boats docked, and then there was the apprehension. Because there was access to everything she wanted in her life. It was all there, boats and fish and the briny, ozone smell of the ocean. But, and this was the worst part, she couldn't get out there, not properly.
For so long, she'd been swimming in and around the waters of Alvadas, so much so that she knew every nook and cranny and every beach and seaweed covered rock. But she'd never been able to go out any further, her arms had always given out on her, or something else needed her attention. She had no means of sailing on the open sea. It was all so frustrating! And thus, the fear. Walking here, after everything she'd discovered recently was like poking at a scab when she didn't want to bleed.
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