Timestamp: 29 Autumn, 518 AV
A few days had passed since Aberdal’s sudden leaving. Zuhre couldn’t say that she blamed her for leaving- she had her reasons and they were valid enough, but something kept scratching at the inside of her heart, telling her that she could have done more to prevent her from having to leave.
She mulled this over in her head as she traipsed through the town, avoiding cracks and fractures in the ground as though there was some superstition attached to them. With her head cast down to see which cracks she should avoid, a wad of hair stuck in her face, almost drowning her in its sheer thickness. Zuhre grabbed the dirty blonde dread and threw it back over her shoulder, looking back up.
The day had a crispness to the air which bit at her cheeks as she walked through the town. Odd, she thought, being that autumn had only begun not more than several days ago.
She pondered, her head naturally falling back down towards the ground, if the Gods and Goddesses had made the seasons in order to cleanse the world. Were the leaves that brandished the trees always changing colour, until inevitably then fell? Were the trees not shedding their old selves and readying themselves to brute the force of the cold in order to replenish once spring had come round again? Was that not the same for people?
She instinctively reached up to her head, touching her temples with delicate, cold fingers. Her hair and her horns, during the nighttime, consequently changed colours as the seasons did. “Maybe I’m a visual representation of how people change throughout the years.”
Her contemplative and philosophical self chuckled, her crystalline blue eyes scanning the horizon until she found what it was she was looking for. Two stories made up the gradually decaying structure, as strips of brown gave way to the red that lay beneath.
Zuhre pushed on the wooden door, and stepped over the threshold, greetings of warmer air encompassing her.
Matthew, the head tattooist at the shop, stood hunched over a strip of animal’s skin, drawing, smudging, and redrawing intricate shapes and designs. Zuhre noticed his deep concentration; his brows were pulled inward and his lip was clenched between his teeth.
“Having fun?” Zuhre said, crossing the room to take a closer look at what it was he was drawing.
“Ye, a tribal tattoo for a pretty particular young man. He was specific as to what goes where, what doesn’t go where, and what colours everything should be. I’m trying to make sure everything fits together nicely. I don’t want to just slap it on him haphazardly, you know?”
She stifled a laugh. “You work too hard,” she told him, going over to the side of the room where her supplies were.
He stopped his working and looked up at Zuhre. “If I didn’t, I wouldn’t have much of a business, now would I?” His big toothy grin always made him look much younger than he truly was.
“Are you ready for today?”
Zuhre shrugged, organizing her needles. She placed the thickest of needles at the top of the table and the thinnest near the bottom. She categorized the colours of ink based on shade. She started with warmer colours- yellow, red, orange- and ended with the cooler colours- green, purple, blue- until they were lined up in a single file that stretched horizontally across the surface of the table.
“Hope ya are,” he whispered then. “Looks like you have your first client.”
Zuhre’s attention snapped to the front door as a wisp of cold air filled the store. There stood a tall man with an unkempt beard, his eyes harsh as he surveyed his surroundings, and beside him stood a slightly smaller woman with golden eyes. Golden eyes.
Zuhre cocked her head to the side. Her eyes, she saw, were large orbs that reminded her of the sun. Did she have aspects of Syna in her? She wondered, taking a band of fabric and tying her hair up into a tail behind her head.
“Hey,” Zuhre called out to the couple. “Here for a tat?”