511 AV, Season of Spring, Day 4 Kit did her best to keep smiling, to keep moving. There was a subtle difference between doing what was good and what other people thought was good. An acrobat knew how impressive another was, magicians too, and musicians, and blacksmiths and everything that required even the littlest inkling of skill. But Kit was not trying to impress someone who knew what she was doing; she was trying to impress people who didn't.
"Alright," she said, clapping a foreign girl on the shoulder and said. "Stay there," she said, and the poor girl could only nod; excited, frightened.
The only way to impress people who didn't know how to do what she did was to make it seem effortless to her, and difficult for them. She smiled to her crowd . . . and when she was small Kit had imagined that it would be quite a large crowd indeed, but she had been wrong. There were a little over a dozen watching, full of morbid curiosity.
One of them was a sneering young man whose eyes combed over her until she felt like nothing short of a long trip to the bathhouse could wipe her clean. And she knew from the way he looked at her that he would either give more than most or nothing. Such was the way things were, and she could not afford to be choosy.
So instead of scowling at him she smiled, or tried to smile. She turned her eyes to the others and spread that smile to each of the members of her little audience. They weren't much, and they weren't her choice, but they were hers.
Her clothes looked like the splattered canvas of a colorblind painter, little splashes of green, yellow red and blue. Her tunic, her breeches. Even the ribbon in her hair was colorful. A bright yellow.
She knelt down and pressed one foot back, exaggerating the preparation for a run. Her eyes kept turning to the audience, flicking over them, scanning for a reaction. One seemed legitimately interested, the rest careless. But people were stopping by to see what the fuss was about, and the setup told the story for them. Wandered toward her, and they stayed.
Kit circled the girl, slowly, always keeping to the same distance. In her small audience, the girl in the flowered dress had her hands over her mouth in silent worry and fascination.
She turned to them and grinned. "Another volunteer?" Kit didn't wait for an answer. "You, in the blue" she said, beckoning him to come forward. She could feel the questions rising up in them. Two? They thought, and it drew them closer to her. She looked out and saw their breathless faces.
It was not so hard as that, not really, but she had made them expect that she could do only one. And now she was doing more.
Kit surprised them all again; she held out a hand toward the nearest member of the audience and motioned for them to come forward. Three? She had them now, Kit knew; had them eating out of the palm of her hand. But this was not her first trick, though it might be her last. Her legs ached, but Kit could not allow herself to doubt. To doubt was to let herself think that she might fail, and to think that would scatter her audience like a house of leaves in wind.
She lined all three of them beside each other and walked behind them. Kit gently pushed at the first's back until they were leaning over, and the second, and the third as well. A little rail of backs. "Stay there," she said and wandered backward one step, two steps, three steps, four, seven, eight . . .
Then she ran. Speed was important; if she couldn't get fast enough, she would crash on top of her volunteers and hurt herself as well as them.
She bounced up off the ground at an angle, and tucked herself into a ball. Kit sailed over her three volunteers, and turned around once in the air. She landed running on the other side, and as soon as she had started it was over, her heart drumming away inside her chest.
Kit ran back and twined her grip around the nearest volunteer's hand, bowing, and taking him and the other two with them. The audience clapped; there was even one cheer. She grinned a jaunty grin, grabbed her broad-brimmed hat off the ground and toured the audience. Kit had dreamed of people eager, dropping their mizas into her hat, with her never needing to tour them and badger them.
It was not so, but looking at their smiles, she almost fooled herself into thinking that it was. |
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