Timestamp: Autumn 46, 518 AV
It felt like a cat scratching the inside of her wrist. The needle was injecting itself into her skin like a body piercing that didn’t quite stick through to the other side. Zuhre hit the back of the wooden handle with a dense rod, causing the needle attached to the handle to slip in and out of her flesh like that of a viper’s tongue. She had added a few more cerulean blue dots that had meshed into the other blue dots in the area.
Wiping at the surplus of ink, Zuhre scrutinized her work, looking to make sure the thin line of blue connected at the place where she had started and the place where she ended. A thin band stretched around her wrist, connecting at both ends, resembling that of a bracelet. The Ethaefal smiled, admiring her work before setting her tools down onto the table beside her.
“Thanks, Matthew,” she called over her shoulder. She had been allowed to leave early from work because the incoming train of new clients was near to none since they had opened. “I’m heading out for the day.”
Matthew, who was bent over his most recent project, hadn’t given Zuhre so much as a grunt as she walked out the front doors.
The day had slowly began to grow colder, she recognized, holding her arms close to her body. “I should have brought a coat with me to work today,” she mumbled under her breath, hastening her stride so that she could arrive back to her unit and be out of this wind quicker.
Thankfully, she didn’t live that far away from Funel’s Ink. It was only a few blocks before she was in more familiar territory.
She noticed the last remaining vegetation surviving steadily around the doors of an older building ahead of her. It wouldn’t be much longer before they would lose their leaves and return to their slumber during winter.
Her intention, upon returning back to her unit, would be to collect her notebook and coat and a couple sticks of charcoal, and venture out to a place one of her most recent client’s had told her about; a building on the edge of where the Noble District meets the Merchant’s Ring that houses stationary and books of all kinds. Zuhre’s ears had perked upon hearing this man’s description, for she had lately been wanting- nay- needing to learn more about her earthbound form as a Svefra.
Fortunately, her key slipped into the lock of her unit with ease, allowing her quick entry to where she snatched the materials she needed- her backpack, her coat- and left all within a few moments.
It had also felt like only mere moments before Zuhre was found standing in front of a quaint edifice with bright yellow paint broken by the whites of the doors and window frames.
The inside was just as quaint, she noted. Candles of various sizes and shapes were strewn about, lighting the room with a mystical glow. Hardwood floors covered the front half of the shop and a fabric material covered the back half. To her right stood a large counter made out of a hodgepodge of different stones that shimmered under the light of the candles. Behind the counter sat a middle aged man who wore glasses that made his eyes appear twice their normal size. What was most stunning was the large bird that rested on its makeshift perch, a perch crafted from several books.
“You don’t look like you belong here,” bellowed the man, rising from his seat. He placed his forefinger at the spot in between his glasses, pushing them up on his nose.
Zuhre looked down at what she was wearing. While her shirt had very few holes, if any, it was basic, poor even. The same could be said of her pants and shoes. Her backpack and the items inside were the only signs that proved she had any value to her name.
“Appearances aren’t everything,” she deadpanned. Biting her tongue, she wondered if that would cost her. Zuhre’s eyes strayed from the man, whom she proposed, owned the establishment. Only a handful of others populated the area around her. Upon noticing the staircase to her left, she assumed more people occupied the second floor.
“They might not,” the owner began, coming out from behind the counter. The bird made a sudden move, practically causing Zuhre to lose her balance out of surprise.
“But they more often than not give us a good understanding of who someone is.”
Zuhre brought her attention back to the man. His hair was slicked back against his head, doing nothing to frame his square shaped face. His eyes showed an attempt to discern more of the Ethaefal than was possible by the way they turned into slits and looked her up and down.
Zuhre felt a slight pang of disgust for how he was looking at her, like she nothing more than an object awaiting judgement. Was she to be labeled a pest or a pleasure to have in this establishment?
“Then I suppose you have some sterling excuse as to why you are here.” He stated, his tone inflicting a sense of inquiry upon Zuhre.
She cleared her throat, her tolerance of him draining as they continued to converse. “I have a reason rather than an excuse,” she began, hoisting up the strap of her backpack back onto her shoulder. “How can someone own many riches or hold such an esteemed level of intelligence without first starting somewhere? I come to obtain enlightenment, of which I am little to be blessed with. Alas, the little that I do have has not only gifted me with the knowledge of this place, but also of my ability to use it. Unlike most people, I know that I do not know everything. That’s why I have come. To learn.”
The man glared at her, studying her through his bifocals. “And the knowledge that you seek. Is it to help or to harm?”
Zuhre scoffed then. “Now I know from that closed door back there with the none-too-obvious sign validating it so that you have your own secrets. As do I. But if you must know, I seek to collect information that could help me.”
Considering her words, she elaborated. “Though I am aware that one's pleasure could be another’s pain. But as I’m sure you are aware, as scholarly as your appearance depicts you to be, that the definition of what is to help and what is to harm is very… personal.”
She wasn’t sure the owner was really regarding her anymore at this point, but her heart continued to fuel the connection to her brain.
“The same could be said about whether something is right or wrong. Some people view the greater good to be something that aids rather than impairs, but the term “greater” does not denote an absolute. Therefore, there will always be a byproduct of pain from the pleasure or wrong from the right.”
The man seemed satisfied that this woman was in fact, not some random slum from the streets seeking out trouble rather than theory. He nodded his head in approval, but his eyes never did resume their openness. As Zuhre walked away and up the staircase to her left, his eyes still remained in their thin slits.