OOCSorry this was so short! My power died in the middle of the post, so I lost it all, which drained all will to post, but I knew I still had to get something down, because you've all been waiting forevar, so... :/From her perch, Istril watched everything that went on throughout the shop with her curious glance. her eyes watched her sibling, her cousins, but they always seemed to find their way back to the curious human. There were so many of them in this city. It truly was a city of humans, and to a woman who had hardly seen them in her life, they were... bizarre. They were like her, she supposed, but taller. They were less blue, and their arms! They were not chosen by Izurdin like they were. Of course, she hadn't expected them to be, but it was just so odd, to see a person with two separate, skin-covered arms. So, it was with a fascinated gaze that she watched the human that lurked through the shop, hovering over one piece for a particularly long time. It was only when he shifted to the next piece that she revealed herself.
"Why do you drift away from the knife?" Istril asked curiously, cocking her head at the human. Her voice was cold, calculating, inquisitive. Silently, she pushed herself up off of the wall she was leaned against, approaching him with measured strides. It was almost laughable, seeing a woman that barely measured in at four feet, nine inches approaching you. She was no larger than a child. Without even glancing at it, she plucked the knife from the rack, carrying it along with her, removing it from its scabbard. "I am Istril Ironfist. Names are important for dealings. Tell me, human, what is yours?" As she said this, she motioned for him to follow her, leading him to the wooden counter top. "This blade, it has been... touched by Isur hands, shaped, crafted," she spoke slowly, searching for each and every word, looking up at him to see if he was following her. "Watch," she then demanded. With that, she pressed the flat side of the blade against the counter, pinning it there with her gem-like hand. Then, she started to push down on the handle with her other hand. What would break a normal knife, this one sustained, survived. As she displayed this strength, she was working on something entirely different, the next part of her display, if one wished to give it a name.
Res slowly leaked from the pores of her skin, mixing with the thin layer of sweat that covered her body. Slowly but surely, it began to build up, until a respectable amount had become hers to bend. "See?" she stated matter-of-factly. She turned to him, lifting the knife from the table for him to observe. As she did so, she rotated her body ever so slightly, so that she blocked his view of the counter behind her. It was at that point that she changed the Res. A little wiggle of her fingers lifted it slightly from the skin of her face, and an intense force of will, and intense focus, and intense thought shifted it into a thin gas, one that she slowly guided behind her with slow, but dexterous, movements of her hands. It was at that point that things got difficult. Shaping Res without looking at it was hard for her, but she did he best. She pictured the Res, the table in her minds eye, guiding the former until it rested in a ball just above the table. Silently, closing her eyes, she compacted the ball, pushing it together, shaping it, until it was a sphere-like lump of Res. It was at that point that she converted it. Another penetrating thought, another whole-hearted urging crafted the Res into the element she desired, Earth. A quiet thud could be heard from behind her as the rock collided with the table.
"Come, now, let me show you more," she said, taking the knife from his hands. She clutched the knife in her left hand, taking up the rock in her right. "See this?" she asked curiously. "Watch as it runs across the edge." With that, she demonstrated, pushing the Res-borne rock against the blade, running it up and down the length of the blade. She repeated the motion over and over for at least a full minute, at which point she set the stone back down on the counter and handed the knife back over to him. "See? No duller. Isurian craftsmanship is beyond compare. This knife will never fail you. Never. It is a good purchase." Her tone was cold. "The edge will never dull, the tool will never break. You can trust it with your life." She looked over her shoulder, at the three Isur by the entrance. "Now, excuse me, I must speak to my kin," she said simply, and with that, she was making her way over to them.
"No, no, she is here," she said simply to the question she caught a bit of as she approached. Back in her native tongue, she became a bit more conversational. That, of course, was not saying much. "Greetings, Maliken. I am pleased to see your journey was safe as well," a small nod was all she spared Maliken, aside from the greeting. "All three of you are out here, and you all ignore the customer. I aided him, though. He seems decent enough. Humans are odd, though. All of them. Even less balanced than those not yet made Weights."