It took less than a quarter of a bell until the tea house had filled to capacity. Much to Dariel's delight the obvious foreigner, absent the colorful robes that marked Zintila's people, was given wide berth. The places nearest to him were the last ones to be claimed before people moved to sharing tables with one another.
To his left he now had an elderly couple that would have been touching to most other people. Though their faces were marred by literally hundreds of wrinkles, their interaction bore none of the resentment and contempt born of a lifetime of familiarity. For Dariel, they held little interest once he'd surmised that the lack of ornament on their robes did nothing to hide the superior materials and craftsmanship. While there certainly lay deeper secrets hidden beneath the fine silks, those were for another kind of practice and another day.
The fellow to Dariel's right proved more interesting, and the young mage found himself distracted in his studies time and time again as he stole glances at what transpired at that table. A man in his best years, hale and fit as attested by the rock solid appearance of his neck, the rest of his physique hidden beyond layers upon layers of silk. The man's hair defied his age by remaining a luxuriant black despite the onset of wrinkles around his eyes. What was more interesting however was the way he was treated.
Not only had almost everyone he passed inclined their heads, not only had his tea arrived no sooner that he'd sat down, but now and then people would approach the man's table. They'd stay a respectful distance until he bade them approach, Dariel had to mentally chide himself for not having paid closer attention to the local argot before. Though he sat close enough to overhear what was being spoken of at the right-hand table, many words simply failed to parse for him. The waves of ambient sounds created by the faceless crowds and the often nasal or throaty local Lhavitian inflections did the rest. He might as well have sat in Ravok at the other end of the world. All he was certain of was that a good time was had by most visitors and always the host at the table. Laughter needed neither good diction nor a good dictionary.
Dariel himself was on his third cup. He'd changed from the spicy and energizing tea he'd had before to something flavored with petals from some kind of mountain flower. It was altogether different but just as fragrant and tasty. And popular. While not knowing what exactly it was, he remembered the scent of the tea from elsewhere. Many elsewheres in fact. This was what the potbelly at the Azure Market ladelled out, and what was apparently drunk in half a dozen shops he could immediately recall. Scents had a weird way of doing that; rekindling memories.
Adding a mental note to memorize the flower's name for reference and another one to condition himself to pay more attention to smells about him, Dariel finally returned to his actual purpose. After all, potential candidates now dangled all over like ripe fruit on a tree. He would just need to pluck one.
Elder male -- Elaborate robes, hunched, expression vague Color: Faded purple, occasionally stark white Make: Clouds Behavior: Roiling, drifting, occasionally shot through with 'lightning'
In chronic pain; adept at hiding it.
Young girl -- Impatient Color: Pink, red, yellow Make: Swirls Behavior: Flickering, spiralling, rapid hue changes
A certain sign of insanity.
"You should really take a piece of butter with your tea. It brings out the full aroma of the Keokina." The voice came from his right, cut right through Dariel's train of thoughts and his work and startled him enough to make break the tip of his pen on his page, leaving a rather unseemly charcoal stain. Irritated, the young man's head snapped about like the ball at the end of a morning star's chain, eyes narrowing even as they sought out the source of the disruption.
Of course it was his dear neighbor. Maybe he'd run out of clients to play host to at his table or maybe curiosity drove him. Or maybe, Dariel considered, maybe he was just a petching bastard who enjoyed this. Even as he whetted his tongue for a vicious lashing, Dariel had to remind himself to remain civil. Whoever the older man was, he was not unimportant in this city and he could not yet afford to make enemies.
When his gaze finally focussed on his right-hand neighbor, he was met with a defense that was simple as it was devastating. The gentleman displayed a smile that was as handsome as it seemed genuine and good-natured... not to mention disarming. Before he even knew that he was doing it, Dariel was smiling back and inclining his head low."I shall. Thank you, Master." |
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