Shyke. It never bloody lasts.Few things were so sad to Konrad as an empty baccy pouch. Usually so full and brimming with scented, smoky life, that morning he groped towards his bedside table and found a limp little sack bereft of all but dusty fragments. The sellsword had groans into his pillow and rolled over, heels over his hands pressed to his eyes.
How was he expected to start the day
properly, without a good smoke first?
So it was that, a touch tetchier than usual (though who could know the difference?), he walked into the store he'd noticed plenty of times before, but never quite gotten around to visiting. His pouch had always seemed ample, after all, and he'd been so... occupied.
DING! Konrad winced as the sharp, happy sound jangled in his ear and gods, had he really had
that much to drink the night before? Honestly, growing old had no upsides as far as he could tell. His habitual frown deepened until the echoes had died away and then he cast his eyes about... and was impressed... until he saw the smiling face of the man behind the counter.
Too petching early for that shyke, too. “Afternoon, friend. Can I interest you in a bit o’ fire? It’ll change your life.”Kenash had presented plenty of grocers, shopkeepers, innkeepers, merchants and other self-employed businessman to Konrad, and he'd come to the same conclusion: bollocks, to the lot of 'em. Self-serving social-climbers whose smiles never reached their eyes, selling you dreams and spinning you a web of bullshyke so thick you could trip on it-
And there they'll be, with their hands in your pockets, which was all they petching care about.And yet, he didn't bare his teeth not snort like a contemptuous bull at the man's comment. For one thing, Konrad was struggling to see the pitch - the shallow, fraudulent, only-for-the-mizas strategy - behind the man's smile. His eyes sparkled and his words were sincere, as far as Konrad could tell. Plus...
"Bit o' fire", he thought, small smile spreading across the unmarred side of his face as he focused briefly on the djed pulsing through him, fingers seeming to crackle for a tick with his own fire-
"We'll see," he said, in that lilting Sunberth accent that still growled and chewed gravel as it spat out words. "Jus' lookin' fer now."
And he began to do just that. Pacing the shelves, all of it well-lit and spaced out. Jars and glass tubs and bottles carefully, lovingly labeled and... gods, there were even descriptions on some of them. Konrad peered down to examine one and then... he felt
it. That superlative feeling that you didn't have to be a Sunberth ganger to have, although such a life certainly amplified it. That ethereal tug and nameless "ahem?!" for attention that told you-
Someone's watching.Konrad paused, trying to think and assuming the worst, of course. His fingers ran across sword and kukri and remembered the dagger in his boot, eyes flashed to exits and wondered how fast he could be through the window-
Then he heard it, and blinked. Someone giggled. His head snapped around just in time to see a brunette bonnet of curls bob across the top of the counter and then vanish below it. Konrad's paranoia ratcheted down a little and he rolled his eyes, switching gears from "Killing Mode" to "Default Irritation".
Wonderful. Bastard has a petching sprog in here, too.