56th of Spring, 511 AV “Where are the hats? What have you done with the hats?” Marius leaned over a hawker’s table, fanning himself coquettishly. The man, fearing perhaps that he was about to be kissed, leaned back on his rickety stool. “Um, over there,” he replied, gesturing toward the opposite end of the market. Marius raised an eyebrow, licked his lips, and promptly departed with a few words of thanks. A moment later, the stool toppled over with crash. “So much to do, so much to see.” Marius traipsed across the mostly deserted market, a small skip in his steps. He was excited about purchasing a new suit of finery, and perhaps a fancy hat or two. His own garments were looking a bit shabby. Upon arriving in this forlorn outpost, he’d discovered that its inhabitants were more concerned with functionality than style – a travesty that he’d suffered for far too long. It wasn’t just the people here lacked fashion sense, but the fact that since there was such a puny demand for nice things, the Zeltivan trading vessels rarely bothered with shipments of clothes and other baubles. Last night, a ship had docked whose cargo was rumored to include a few bales of the finery that Marius craved so desperately. “Where are they?” he seized a passing man by the collar, his manners forgotten. “What?” “My hats!” Marius wailed. “My preciou- look, a spider!” Momentarily distracted, he didn’t notice as the man broke away from his grip. “Where did he go?” Close to tears, not merely because of this desertion, but also because the spider had climbed out of his reach, he wrung his hands forlornly. And then he saw them. Monstrosities of silk and velvet, with enormous, looping satin bows, bunches of gaily colored feathers, and rich embroidery. Hats, the sign of cultured society in a world quickly running to tawdry excess. “Hatshatshatshatshats!” Wildly squealing with glee, Marius charged toward the shop, caring nothing for the unwary shoppers that were foolish enough to get in his way. |