Timestamp: 81st of fall 514 AV
The Svefra menace was in full swing. they had all but taken over the docks. The Quay’s dock was perhaps the only place left safe to moor a ship, and that dock was more suitable for a dinghy. Shai, ever the opportunist, had perched herself on a rooftop overlooking an alleyway, two streets down from the Fish.
Leaning back against the slant-roof, the spider was focusing mostly on the embroidery hoop between her ashen fingers. She pulled the thread threw on another cross-stitch. No one could ever say the Symenestra had bulky hands but it was still more difficult now with adult digits than it had been as a child.
Cursing beneath her breath, she brought the fabric closer to her face. With careful precision she pushed the back end of the needle back through the same weave in the fabric. The stitch had been too long. Huffing, Shai re-did the stitch a little shorter.
Chell was resting on the edge of the eaves. The little Irylid was looking out for them. This particular alleyway seemed to be especially attractive to the Svefra paying street walkers for their time and flesh. It was close enough to the Fish that the ale could be returned to with ease but far enough that their little faked squeals of pleasure couldn’t be easily heard.
Shai figured they were paying the women somehow. She wouldn’t rob the women, that was just a tinge too malicious for the thief’s tastes, but those sea-drunk sailors? They were fair game. Something had brought them to Sunberth and it was Shai’s opinion that they had already been there too long. This cadre of seafarers had already interrupted her own trade, the merchants were taking new paths to the warehouses to avoid them. The spider had carefully staked out each merchant’s preferred route and now it was all ruined. The drunk sods might as well make up the difference to her, even if it meant she would be stealing like a common mugger all night.
Mark noted. Chell messaged her telepathically.
Shai set the hoop down on the roof and slunk through Leth’s brazen light to scoop up her familiar. Laying flat on her belly the night leather armored thief watched below. Immediately her experience told her something wasn’t quite right. The woman didn’t look like any street walker the spider had ever seen. Amethyst eyes peeking over the ledge, she waited on a burglar’s endless patience for a sign that she could intervene to her benefit.
The Svefra menace was in full swing. they had all but taken over the docks. The Quay’s dock was perhaps the only place left safe to moor a ship, and that dock was more suitable for a dinghy. Shai, ever the opportunist, had perched herself on a rooftop overlooking an alleyway, two streets down from the Fish.
Leaning back against the slant-roof, the spider was focusing mostly on the embroidery hoop between her ashen fingers. She pulled the thread threw on another cross-stitch. No one could ever say the Symenestra had bulky hands but it was still more difficult now with adult digits than it had been as a child.
Cursing beneath her breath, she brought the fabric closer to her face. With careful precision she pushed the back end of the needle back through the same weave in the fabric. The stitch had been too long. Huffing, Shai re-did the stitch a little shorter.
Chell was resting on the edge of the eaves. The little Irylid was looking out for them. This particular alleyway seemed to be especially attractive to the Svefra paying street walkers for their time and flesh. It was close enough to the Fish that the ale could be returned to with ease but far enough that their little faked squeals of pleasure couldn’t be easily heard.
Shai figured they were paying the women somehow. She wouldn’t rob the women, that was just a tinge too malicious for the thief’s tastes, but those sea-drunk sailors? They were fair game. Something had brought them to Sunberth and it was Shai’s opinion that they had already been there too long. This cadre of seafarers had already interrupted her own trade, the merchants were taking new paths to the warehouses to avoid them. The spider had carefully staked out each merchant’s preferred route and now it was all ruined. The drunk sods might as well make up the difference to her, even if it meant she would be stealing like a common mugger all night.
Mark noted. Chell messaged her telepathically.
Shai set the hoop down on the roof and slunk through Leth’s brazen light to scoop up her familiar. Laying flat on her belly the night leather armored thief watched below. Immediately her experience told her something wasn’t quite right. The woman didn’t look like any street walker the spider had ever seen. Amethyst eyes peeking over the ledge, she waited on a burglar’s endless patience for a sign that she could intervene to her benefit.