16th of Fall, 518AV
To the stables, they needed her in the stables today. The half Chaktawe was slightly peeved with the assignment, she couldn’t complain about it, but she knew it was a joke played on her. By in the stables, they meant shoveling shit. Shoveling shit with the Dek.
Black eyes glided across the line of stalls to the only other occupant in this section of the stables, while the horses were out on grass. He worked much slower than her, he was ancient, and when she first glanced him, missing two limbs. Or at least half of two limbs. From the elbow down, his arms fell into stumps, obvious signs of stitch work that had been scarring over for years. She hadn’t gotten a close look, but based on the way he shoveled, there ought to be oddly placed callouses along his inner arms where he managed his work. He was whistling to himself, although she sometime caught sounds of a Nari word, and the half-Eypharian wondered if he was whistling or singing, she could hardly tell with the strange language.
Of course she wasn’t doing the Dek work, he was shoveling shit, and she was laying out fresh bedding for the horses, using the pick to spread it out evenly over the flooring, and then a watering can to settle any dust. It was a simple enough task, and was immediately evident that the half-limbed man was unable to do it, as it required a dexterity he simply didn’t possess.
Still, it was just her and him, and the mixed blood couldn’t help the suspicious feeling that she was put there because she wasn’t respected as an outsider. Even this Dek wouldn’t look her in the eye, she was so foreign. Not only did she not possess the wicked red hair of this human clan, but her skin was dark and shimmering, her eyes a soulless black, and her feet too large and calloused to make wearing shoes comfortable.
Setting the rake down, she grabbed the watering can and began haphazardly slinging it over the dust and wood shavings that now made up the fresh box floor. She loved horses, she truly did, and she was perhaps extra salty because she was not with the actual animals on this work assignment. The water settled the shavings and dust well enough in a few chimes so that she could move on to the next stall. She was catching up with the Dek. Although she had more work to do in each stall, he was slower, and it didn’t take her much time to reach him, she was now in the stall next to him. He still had four stalls to go, before they reached the stalls which were occupied. Perfect.