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A young woman from The Watch named Ash had invited him to her pavilion for a lesson in pottery. Dravite, of course, had his reservations about the invite; what in the world would he need to learn pottery for? "It will just be a small group," she had assured him, "some of my mother's friends and family members." Being a man of his word, and finding it difficult to say no any young enterpriser, Dravite struggled to come up with a just excuse for skipping the lesson and so, on the afternoon of the 21st, he found himself sat amongst the members of the Stormsong pavilion; a few of their friends and young, eager craftspeople drifting in to attend.
"Dravite, you made it!" Ash smiled and set a ball of muck down on the stone plate in front of him; when the horse lord looked around, he realised that everyone attending the lesson had the same sort of setup laid out before them.
"I told you I'd be here," he smiled, promises, interest, questions, he then signed, "what is this?" He didn't notice the newcomer that took a seat on one of the mats beside him, eyes fixed on the muck.
"It's a mix of clay and grog," Ash explained, "This is what we will be using this afternoon."
He knew what clay was, something he liked to lather over his shoulders to protect his skin from sunburn in the summer, but the word grog went right over his head, "what is grog?" He then inquired.
"Grog is old pots and pieces that didn't work out, so we smash them up and grind them down to a fine dust between two stones so that we can reuse everything; just wait, my mother Jade will explain everything when the lesson begins."
Dravite smiled, not the man but the boy, who wanted to get his hands dirty and suddenly found the prospect of pottery a lot more interesting, "when do we start?"
"Soon," Ash giggled, "hold your horses!"
He laughed, "all right."
"If you want you can start kneading the clay?"
"Kneading?"
"Yes like this," the girl demonstrated, working the mix of clay and grog with her hands; pushing it down against the flat stone to fold it and work it again.
Good, Dravite signed, believing he was capable of the basic task Ash had set him.
Ash flicked her dark hair back over her shoulder and continued handing out the mud-like mixture to everyone in attendance before she sat down beside her mother, Jade, a tall, thin woman with green eyes and long black hair kept in a neat braid that snaked down over left shoulder. Her eyebrows were thin, the edges of her eyes sharp, almost serpent-like, and her nose was long and elegant.
Dravite sat with his legs folded, all bare feet, legs and chest leather-clad. He had managed to tame his unruly hair back off his face with a dark, thin strap of hide which kept all but one or two dreadlocks under control. His eyes were a soft grey colour, sometimes mistaken for blue in the sunlight, with lips his mother always told him were wasted on a man. The clay was cold to touch, this was the first thing he noticed, wet and slick, though the more he toyed with it the drier it seemed to become; perhaps that was what the pot of water to his right was for, he wondered.
The horse lord flattened and folded the clay, manipulating it shape and size against the flat stone, using his palms to gather it back up into the ball-like shape it had been presented to him in. As he played with the clay he noticed the redhead to his left and offered a warm smile, "you got roped into this too, huh?" The man grinned; all white teeth that seemed odd, if not extremely lucky for a man that worked with so many horses to possess, "I'm Dravite," he offered, "Blackwater," of the Diamond Clan, his hand gestures added, working for The Watch.
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31 Fall, 515 AV
Evening
Endrykas
Evening
Endrykas
A young woman from The Watch named Ash had invited him to her pavilion for a lesson in pottery. Dravite, of course, had his reservations about the invite; what in the world would he need to learn pottery for? "It will just be a small group," she had assured him, "some of my mother's friends and family members." Being a man of his word, and finding it difficult to say no any young enterpriser, Dravite struggled to come up with a just excuse for skipping the lesson and so, on the afternoon of the 21st, he found himself sat amongst the members of the Stormsong pavilion; a few of their friends and young, eager craftspeople drifting in to attend.
"Dravite, you made it!" Ash smiled and set a ball of muck down on the stone plate in front of him; when the horse lord looked around, he realised that everyone attending the lesson had the same sort of setup laid out before them.
"I told you I'd be here," he smiled, promises, interest, questions, he then signed, "what is this?" He didn't notice the newcomer that took a seat on one of the mats beside him, eyes fixed on the muck.
"It's a mix of clay and grog," Ash explained, "This is what we will be using this afternoon."
He knew what clay was, something he liked to lather over his shoulders to protect his skin from sunburn in the summer, but the word grog went right over his head, "what is grog?" He then inquired.
"Grog is old pots and pieces that didn't work out, so we smash them up and grind them down to a fine dust between two stones so that we can reuse everything; just wait, my mother Jade will explain everything when the lesson begins."
Dravite smiled, not the man but the boy, who wanted to get his hands dirty and suddenly found the prospect of pottery a lot more interesting, "when do we start?"
"Soon," Ash giggled, "hold your horses!"
He laughed, "all right."
"If you want you can start kneading the clay?"
"Kneading?"
"Yes like this," the girl demonstrated, working the mix of clay and grog with her hands; pushing it down against the flat stone to fold it and work it again.
Good, Dravite signed, believing he was capable of the basic task Ash had set him.
Ash flicked her dark hair back over her shoulder and continued handing out the mud-like mixture to everyone in attendance before she sat down beside her mother, Jade, a tall, thin woman with green eyes and long black hair kept in a neat braid that snaked down over left shoulder. Her eyebrows were thin, the edges of her eyes sharp, almost serpent-like, and her nose was long and elegant.
Dravite sat with his legs folded, all bare feet, legs and chest leather-clad. He had managed to tame his unruly hair back off his face with a dark, thin strap of hide which kept all but one or two dreadlocks under control. His eyes were a soft grey colour, sometimes mistaken for blue in the sunlight, with lips his mother always told him were wasted on a man. The clay was cold to touch, this was the first thing he noticed, wet and slick, though the more he toyed with it the drier it seemed to become; perhaps that was what the pot of water to his right was for, he wondered.
The horse lord flattened and folded the clay, manipulating it shape and size against the flat stone, using his palms to gather it back up into the ball-like shape it had been presented to him in. As he played with the clay he noticed the redhead to his left and offered a warm smile, "you got roped into this too, huh?" The man grinned; all white teeth that seemed odd, if not extremely lucky for a man that worked with so many horses to possess, "I'm Dravite," he offered, "Blackwater," of the Diamond Clan, his hand gestures added, working for The Watch.
.
.
.