Vala nodded, taking the offered fabric and rolling them between her finger tips to feel the simple cotton's bland texture, as she watched Feyra work.
It seemed like an easy enough job: place the beads on the cloth, two at a time, fold them up, put another two on the strip, fold up some more, on an on until all ten beads were wrapped, then tie off with string. She nodded once more before pulling one piece of cloth off the others and laying on the table, keeping the others to her left hand side. "Ok I think I got this." A strip of pink peeked out of the sides of Vala's pursed lips as she worked: her brows furrowed as she stuck her tongue out in concentration.
Feyra had moved over, to give Vala some space to work, but was thankfully close enough for Vala to watch her work again. The glass beads were sturdy, no doubt about that, but they were still glass and Vala wasn't going to risk breaking anything. She picked out the ten plainest beads from the remaining lot - if she WAS going to break something might as well break a cheap one. She held them up to the light before getting to work. She smiled at the sight of the sweeping swirls of color within the clear glass. She put two red together and began wrapping them up. She looked over at Feyra to make sure she was wrapping them up the right way; she looked back down at hers; looked again and Feyra's; unraveled her attempt and tried again.
It took her a few tries to finally wrap it tight enough so the beads wouldn't have space to rattle, but Vala fist pumped in satisfaction when she finally got it right. Her glow of good cheer faltered when she picked up a single blue bead. It was a beautifully simple, single color bead, a deep sapphire blue that glittered before Vala's eyes, mocking her. She resisted the urge to crush it in her fist or throw it on the ground; her fingers shook from the effort. She managed to put it down, close to Feyra, hoping she would wrap it up before any more thoughts of Fois popped up and ruined the day. She hoped Feyra didn't notice her moment of weakness. She worked harder, faster, concentrating more on wrapping to help her forget.
When Vala had finished wrapping up three sets - thirty, simple and pretty, beads - she tried to start some friendly, albeit self-promoting oriented, conversation. "When did you learn how to make glass beads? Do you make vases, or any thing bigger? When did you know you were going to be a Glassblower? What's it like?" She stopped herself, realizing, in her eagerness, she hadn't given Feyra any time to actually answer her questions. She blushed again, feeling so silly and immature by the successful Avora.