Afternoon of Fall 1st, North Ravok Outpost:
It had barely been a full day since Ein had come back to the outpost, having brought Samara her supplies, escorting an old peddler nortwhard... and nearly finding his death on both errands. He was battered and tired something horrid, yet it was his gear that suffered worse than him, thankfully. Regardless, he had repairs to make, and though barely returned from the edge of exhaustion, he would find offers of work plentiful soon. Still, his armor needed patching up and his poleaxe might as well have been a crooked hammer in its current state. Its handle broken, blade and pike bent from the wounds they dug in the monstrous wolf that assailed him on his way from the city. He needed both repaired, and fast, if he was to journey southward again. Thus he made way for the Wulfstan Outfitters hut, naturally displeased with the prospect of having to spend coin on repairs between jobs.
On his way in he spotted a fellow departing from the shop, back hunched and in a sour mood. Likely another mercenary and customer. And the man's apparent attitude didn't help improve Ein's own expectations... and neither did the sight of an annoyed, fidgeting woman behind the stall once he'd entered the hut.
''Good day, welcome to--'', the girl was quick to hide her frustrated attitude, straighten her back and put on a modest smile once she'd spotted a new arrival, and quicker yet to reveal that same attitude again when she noticed the dumbfounded look on Einar's face. ''Did you come here for service or to gawk and annoy like the rest of you brazen oaf outsiders?''
Apparently one look at him was enough to tell he was not a Stryfer, petch, that he was nowhere from near Ravok. And one look was rather enough to tell Einar wasn't the only one having a busy day.
''Or did you expect a burly, bearded bastard standing behind the stall?''
Ah, so there was some personal offense taken today as well... Not that Ein cared or had anything to do with it. His briefly stunted glance was quickly replaced by a heartfelt, dismissive squint, shoulders rolling into a shrug, emphasizing the coat of plates he held bundled in one hand, and the two halves of a broken poleaxe in the other. It took but a couple of steps forward to place his damaged and ruined equipment before the woman.
''I couldn't care if you had nine beards, five pairs of tits and a prick in between each so long as you can fix those for me.'', he stated sternly with a perfectly straight face.
Now was the shopkeeper's turn to look dumbfounded, before chrotling a sudden and brief breath of laughter. Albeit that was quick to subside once her eyes fell on the ruined pleaxe, broken staff and bent steel.
''...How?'', she demanded, baffled at the sight.
''Isn't that part of your job to figure out?, petch do you mean 'How?', woman?
''No I mean... how in Rhysol's name did you petch it up like that?'', she corrected herself. ''Did you get drunk of your ass and keep hewing and stabbing away at a solid boulder for an entire night or something?'' It was a reasonable question, in all regards. A tough and robust wooden shaft and a thick hunk of iron shaped into three-way weaponized extentions was an instrument certainly more reliable and sturdy than say a sword, or even a spear, as spears oft had longer, flexible and thus less sturdy handles, albeit swords were more difficult and spears reasonably easier to craft.
WC: 607