The Quill's Rest
Summer 3, 516AV
Summer 3, 516AV
Kestral sat with her head in her hands. It was a quite day at the shop. There were a few strangling writers sitting silently at the tables, not even one had ordered a drink. A cooling cup of Kelp Tea sat next to her elbow. She had taken a few sips in boredom but otherwise left it to its own devices. The scribe herself watched with envy as one lanky black haired young man sat hunched over a piece of parchment, seemingly deep in a story that was flowing from his mind to his paper. Kestral would be doing the same seeing as she had no customers needing a scribe, yet unfortunately the young girl was having a bit of writer's block being stuck in a wooden building all day. Being surrounded by the success of other writers before her did not help but to deepen her disappointment in herself. She grabbed her journal out from under the counter where she currently had it hidden from view and tapped at it with her feathered quill, yearning for some sign of an idea to come burst out of the end like a rainbow from a storm cloud. Yet nothing came so she just sighed, placed the book back out of sight and rested her head in her hands once more.
She was just beginning to stare off into space thinking about the docks. A place she loved to sit by and people watch. She always seemed to gather some inspiration from the water, boats, fishermen. She was rudely jolted out of her mind when the door to the Quill's Rest burst open rather off theme for the quiet thinking place. A young man, looking just a bit older, although much more ragged and out of breath, than Kestral, stumbled in as he juggled what looked like dozens of scrolls tucked inside his enclosed arms. Seeing a customer the scribe straightened up and put on a smile for the man who seemed to ignore her silent greeting as he staggered up to the counter and dropped all the scrolls, a few tumbling onto the ground, in front of her. He bent quickly to retrieve them and then, when he saw Kestral's smiling face, put on a quick greeting grin before quickly telling her his situation.
"I wrote a story, but it's everywhere. I'm a bit of a mess you see. Sorry. Anyway I need it to be put together into a book. Sorry. I've numbered all the pages, but they are kind of everywhere... Sorry. How much would that cost me?" The boy rambled and Kestral just intently listened. She had seen writers like this before and was happy to say that she was a rather neat one compared to others like this.
"It's 5 Gold Mizas a page, sir." She stated simply and began straightening his scrolls into a pile. She bent below the counter and brought back up a large basket which she then filed the papers into. She would have to find the first page somewhere in there once she started. She was very thankful he had numbered them. That was more than most people did anyway.
"Right... Right. Ok, yeah that's fine. Do I pay or now... Or later? I think there are 47 pages. Maybe more... How much is that?" The man put up his fingers and began counting. Kestral did not know the number, math was never her strong point and she knew she would have to do the numbers on paper later but there was no use doing it now.
"You'll pay after I finish copying the pages. There will be a little extra fee for putting them together in a book, 10 Mizas a believe. I will give you a total when you come back. 7 days should be long enough for me to work through this." At least she hoped. "So come back on the 10th. If I am not done by that day I can give you a more direct estimate then."
The man nodded, continuing to bob his head for a few ticks longer than she thought was needed. "Right... Right. Ok. The 10th. That's fine." The man looked around at the shop. "I... I think I'm just going to sit down for a little while. Can I get a tea?" Kestral looked over at her boss who was in charge of the only food item they held. He nodded and turned his back to the man, towards the tea pot. The writer left Kestral then to take the tea from her boss and then picked an empty table near the door, stared straight into the wood grains of the table and sipped his tea absently.
The scribe rolled her eyes, grabbed the basket full of scrolls and retreated to the back room where her writing table waited. On the shelves near her she grabbed a small stack of parchment, a bottle of black ink and a shop owned quill. Kestral never used her own supplies for work related writings. Placing these tools on the writing table she turned to the basket and began to shuffle through the pages, looking at each page number and trying to organize them into numbered order.
This took a good ten bells before she managed to order the 38 pages (the man had over-counted somehow) placed them with the second page up, the first page already in front of her, with a paperweight atop them to keep the papers from going anywhere. She placed the basket under the table and out of her way and she pulled one blank parchment from it's pile and placed it directly to the right of the mans title page, or page 1.
Almost forgetting she paused, then started to scribble on the blank page some numbers. She dipped her quill in the ink and began to write a bunch of 5s on the paper, vertically down the left side of the page, so she could add up the price of all the pages.
Once she had figured out the price, an even 200gm in fact, she folded that paper up, let it fall into the basket under the table, pulled another fresh blank parchment and began to copy the first page of this man's story
She was just beginning to stare off into space thinking about the docks. A place she loved to sit by and people watch. She always seemed to gather some inspiration from the water, boats, fishermen. She was rudely jolted out of her mind when the door to the Quill's Rest burst open rather off theme for the quiet thinking place. A young man, looking just a bit older, although much more ragged and out of breath, than Kestral, stumbled in as he juggled what looked like dozens of scrolls tucked inside his enclosed arms. Seeing a customer the scribe straightened up and put on a smile for the man who seemed to ignore her silent greeting as he staggered up to the counter and dropped all the scrolls, a few tumbling onto the ground, in front of her. He bent quickly to retrieve them and then, when he saw Kestral's smiling face, put on a quick greeting grin before quickly telling her his situation.
"I wrote a story, but it's everywhere. I'm a bit of a mess you see. Sorry. Anyway I need it to be put together into a book. Sorry. I've numbered all the pages, but they are kind of everywhere... Sorry. How much would that cost me?" The boy rambled and Kestral just intently listened. She had seen writers like this before and was happy to say that she was a rather neat one compared to others like this.
"It's 5 Gold Mizas a page, sir." She stated simply and began straightening his scrolls into a pile. She bent below the counter and brought back up a large basket which she then filed the papers into. She would have to find the first page somewhere in there once she started. She was very thankful he had numbered them. That was more than most people did anyway.
"Right... Right. Ok, yeah that's fine. Do I pay or now... Or later? I think there are 47 pages. Maybe more... How much is that?" The man put up his fingers and began counting. Kestral did not know the number, math was never her strong point and she knew she would have to do the numbers on paper later but there was no use doing it now.
"You'll pay after I finish copying the pages. There will be a little extra fee for putting them together in a book, 10 Mizas a believe. I will give you a total when you come back. 7 days should be long enough for me to work through this." At least she hoped. "So come back on the 10th. If I am not done by that day I can give you a more direct estimate then."
The man nodded, continuing to bob his head for a few ticks longer than she thought was needed. "Right... Right. Ok. The 10th. That's fine." The man looked around at the shop. "I... I think I'm just going to sit down for a little while. Can I get a tea?" Kestral looked over at her boss who was in charge of the only food item they held. He nodded and turned his back to the man, towards the tea pot. The writer left Kestral then to take the tea from her boss and then picked an empty table near the door, stared straight into the wood grains of the table and sipped his tea absently.
The scribe rolled her eyes, grabbed the basket full of scrolls and retreated to the back room where her writing table waited. On the shelves near her she grabbed a small stack of parchment, a bottle of black ink and a shop owned quill. Kestral never used her own supplies for work related writings. Placing these tools on the writing table she turned to the basket and began to shuffle through the pages, looking at each page number and trying to organize them into numbered order.
This took a good ten bells before she managed to order the 38 pages (the man had over-counted somehow) placed them with the second page up, the first page already in front of her, with a paperweight atop them to keep the papers from going anywhere. She placed the basket under the table and out of her way and she pulled one blank parchment from it's pile and placed it directly to the right of the mans title page, or page 1.
Almost forgetting she paused, then started to scribble on the blank page some numbers. She dipped her quill in the ink and began to write a bunch of 5s on the paper, vertically down the left side of the page, so she could add up the price of all the pages.
Math :
Once she had figured out the price, an even 200gm in fact, she folded that paper up, let it fall into the basket under the table, pulled another fresh blank parchment and began to copy the first page of this man's story