Continued from here.
Spring 16, 516 AV
Fortune tellers seemed to be in very high demand in Alvadas, Lucas decided as yet another person approached him. He was surprised that they didn’t have competetive fortune telling here, fortune telling tourneys and similar stuff just like they had tourneys with horses and real weapons in Syliras. Maybe he would suggest to Okana that they’d have a competitition sometimes, although he wasn’t sure how the winner would be determined. Would the fortune teller that came up with the craziest prediction win?
He pondered the issue for a few moments before he took a closer look at his newest client. This time he was facing what seemed to be a human woman (although you could never be completely sure in the City of Illusions), a little younger and a bit shorter than him. She was quite pretty with her heart shaped face, her purple eyes and her black hair with purple highlights.
Lucas didn’t have any highlights in his hair. He wasn’t wearing his natural orange-red Inarta hair either that day. For a few days he’d been dying his hair blue, to match the colour of his eyes. His appearance, including the strange, moving tattoo on his left arm, was a little unusual, to put it mildly, but the smile he gave Micah was radiant and genuine.
„Yes, fortune“, he confirmed and gestured for her to enter the tent. „Right here.“ He pointed at the carpet that covered the inside of the tent. It was the only piece of furniture. There was no table, and there were no chairs either. Lucas‘ tools, cards, a crystal ball and a bowl with bones that were covered with complicated carvings, were lying in the middle of the carpet, together with a few old drawings, paints and brushes of his.
Lucas took his swordbelt off and put it aside, and then he sat down on the carpet and gestured for Micah to do the same. Sitting was more comfortable than standing after all.
„You don’t know a lot of Common, do you?“ he asked. „I speak a little Nari and Arumenic as well, so we could try that if you want. Or we can attempt sign language. So where do you come from? And how can I help you?“ He realized that he’d probably talked much too quickly for her to understand him, so he added, „Sorry, I’ll try to speak more slowly.“
Spring 16, 516 AV
Fortune tellers seemed to be in very high demand in Alvadas, Lucas decided as yet another person approached him. He was surprised that they didn’t have competetive fortune telling here, fortune telling tourneys and similar stuff just like they had tourneys with horses and real weapons in Syliras. Maybe he would suggest to Okana that they’d have a competitition sometimes, although he wasn’t sure how the winner would be determined. Would the fortune teller that came up with the craziest prediction win?
He pondered the issue for a few moments before he took a closer look at his newest client. This time he was facing what seemed to be a human woman (although you could never be completely sure in the City of Illusions), a little younger and a bit shorter than him. She was quite pretty with her heart shaped face, her purple eyes and her black hair with purple highlights.
Lucas didn’t have any highlights in his hair. He wasn’t wearing his natural orange-red Inarta hair either that day. For a few days he’d been dying his hair blue, to match the colour of his eyes. His appearance, including the strange, moving tattoo on his left arm, was a little unusual, to put it mildly, but the smile he gave Micah was radiant and genuine.
„Yes, fortune“, he confirmed and gestured for her to enter the tent. „Right here.“ He pointed at the carpet that covered the inside of the tent. It was the only piece of furniture. There was no table, and there were no chairs either. Lucas‘ tools, cards, a crystal ball and a bowl with bones that were covered with complicated carvings, were lying in the middle of the carpet, together with a few old drawings, paints and brushes of his.
Lucas took his swordbelt off and put it aside, and then he sat down on the carpet and gestured for Micah to do the same. Sitting was more comfortable than standing after all.
„You don’t know a lot of Common, do you?“ he asked. „I speak a little Nari and Arumenic as well, so we could try that if you want. Or we can attempt sign language. So where do you come from? And how can I help you?“ He realized that he’d probably talked much too quickly for her to understand him, so he added, „Sorry, I’ll try to speak more slowly.“