RP Honey and Dust

UmbraSight

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Music carried by a cooling autumn wind settled down into the quiet nooks and crooks of Arachridge, the winding jaunty melody of a herdy-gurdy ambling almost in time with the thumps of Spring’s cart as she guided it down a row of lean-together shacks. When she closed her eyes and listened, Spring could almost hear the distant hum of a violin whispering sweetly as its notes escaped crooked alleyways. The smells also drifted with the music, though she could only really smell them while her eyes were closed. The pleasant snap of spice and smoke, the nip of onion and wild garlic, gone the moment she opened her eyes, though the hunger was slower to leave her.

The sun had almost reached its apex by the time Spring had guided her cart off the rough cut stone of a lower residential district and onto the well worn cobble of the Mercher’s Quarter. She turned to an inn her father and her had used many a year, and by the time she had her horse and cart quartered the sun had found its apex. There was merchandise on that cart she would need to move, but that was a tomorrow sort of problem, instead Spring slid into her room for as long as it took to wash her face in the basin and exchange her traveling leather for an airy silken blue dress that would catch the air with a satisfying amount of swish when dancing. She also only took enough coin to cover the evening’s expenses from her purse, lest she tempt the nimble fingers of a pickpurse by looking like the frivolous sort of rich.

With a wave to the kindly woman who ran the inn, Spring was back onto the street and letting herself be pulled along by the bustle of the crowd.

The Merchant’s Rowe was choked by silks and stalls, the shops that normally lined the street usurped for the week by a clot of craftspeople from near and far all come to tempt a coin in exchange for a piece of work. Glittering jewelry with stones of polished rock and glass to one side, a pile of Lady Dawn carved from wood sat atop a barrel for catching rainwater, and, the one Spring found amusing, a watchmaker who had dared to block easy passage into a clockmaker’s shop with his sprawling rug. There were other fascinations on display, Merchant’s Rowe was a long street after all, but Spring was letting her stomach draw her instead to the Old Town Square.

Here many of the offical entertainers gathered, a collection of musicians sitting on the edge of a fountain, a puppet show that had claimed the stage set for the evening’s dance, a weaver who sat with her fat and happy spiders demonstrating the process needed to produce a fine finger of silk, and to Spring’s great joy stalls of young men frying skewers of meat and vegetables. She purchased one that had just enough char to wet the appetite and Spring was off again, down to the Mozaic Plaza in the lower town where the unoffical entertainers gathered, for she had long ago learned that during the day their performances were far superior to those gathered in the Square.

A great old tree sat in the heart of the plaza, its roots disturbing the mosaic depicting the Gods of the Unseason, and its branches decorated with ribbons of silk that flared like fire in the wind. Here Spring found a place to sit and eat, with a good view of a storyteller’s booth. She plucked off a piece of carrot from her skewer and relaxed back against the twisted old tree to watch.
 
Corrys Wesfeld patrolled the main square of Arachridge, determined to do his name proud. It wasn't really a name anyone expected anything of - that was reserved for fancy people with fancy heritages, and he wasn't one of them. It was the sort of name that came with growing up on a farm with more attention to planting and hoeing and harvest than to spelling, which some of the other lads he'd trained with had been quick to point out. He'd always found letters something of a jumble, anyway. He knew which ones they were on their own, it was just that when they got together, they got mixed up into a muddle, a bit like sheep. Still, it was his name, and he was determined to do proud by it, like the sunset over the gold wheat his pa was so proud of, or the way his ma said the name she'd given him, a chorus all on its own.

They might be here, somewhere, he thought. He'd not seen them since the last harvest festival - the twenty miles was too far to go for anything but a big event like this, and he'd been on his own since he'd joined the militia. He knew they wished him well, though, just like they did all their children who'd fledged off. There were still a few of them at home, and his eldest sister was starting her own brood already. His niece had a pumpkin here on display - not so big as the one Old Jiri raised, but no one's ever was, and hers was a fine showing for seven years and a half.

He kept walking, trying to remember what was supposed to be in the town square and what was odd, just in case it mattered later. Most folks were just here to enjoy the festival, but there were always some who'd take advantage, one way or another. It was hard to remember everything, though, with something new out the corner of his eye every moment and all the sounds from the little shows or performances or singers hoping for coin. Scents, too, pushed their way through the crowd, reminding him that he'd been on his feet since dawn and it'd been a fair time since he'd eaten anything. He slowed his steps at the stall of one of the vendors, exchanging a small coin for a promising looking skewer, holding it in his left hand like he'd been taught so he could still draw with his right and biting off a bit of hot pork, chewing it slowly before starting in on the chunk of turnip that'd been beneath it.

It couldn't have been a prettier day for it, really. He just hoped it kept that way.
 
There were two places performers went around here, come fair-time. Those who had writs of patronage, or widespread audience, or well-off blood, they set up their venues in the Old Town Square. It was a bit of a prestige, to perform there - front and center amidst the festivities, where most of the eyes - and coins - were found. It was also, unfortunately, a prattling wish-wash of posh posers, and Ainsley Brooke wanted little to do with it.

It wasn't the fact that she doubtless couldn't step one foot on the main stage without being stopped, no. It wasn't that such a place had more guards about. It was the ridiculousness of it all! They weren't real performers, they were -

They were -

Dogs on leashes! Yes! Barking on command for a bit of extra pay. She wanted nothing of it. Wanted nothing of their fat purses, and their titles and their roaring crowds and their - well. Alright. Maybe she was a little jealous of it all. But down here in the Mozaic Plaza, things were simpler. Her audience tended to be children, and children didn't have much in way of coin, but children also laughed at any little joke and were amazed by the simplest of spells. She liked children. They made a good crowd.

And, well, if she could nab a bit from their parents' purses when they weren't looking, that was good too.

"An' so the brave Ser - what was yer name, my good sir in the front? Billy! Ah - so the Brave Ser Billy, he went ridin' out on that falltide eve, the time just before the air grows chilly and ye've got to wear yer proper wools! He rode out in search of tha rumored princess."

Ainsley's eyes scanned the crowd. The kids were all rapt - of course they were. They saw a little paper knight riding proper on a little paper horse and their little minds spun circles. But there was another watcher, here - a woman leaning on a nearby tree. At first, Ainsley thought her one of the parents. She had an old look about her - or did she? No, no, of course she didn't, she seemed young, early twenties at most. Why did she think she looked older? Trick of the shadows, likely. No, she was young, and by her clothes and the chain about her neck she seemed a tad bit wealthier than the usual crowd.

"Ye there, miss! By the tree. Ye look like yer noddin' off, an' just before the best part!" Ainsley grinned a wide, sharp toothed grin from beneath her wide brimmed hat. "Maybe bein' a volunteer will help keep yer eyes open, hm? Whatcha say, sirs an' ladies?"
 
The storyteller’s performance was cute, it was a simple story of a brave knight facing down impossible odds, but the children were enraptured. No true mystery why they were so excited, even Spring was impressed by the touch of enchantment that the storyteller had impressed upon her paper puppets. Try as she had over the years, Spring had never managed such finesse with the arcane arts, a thought that carried with it a feeling of heaviness that settled itself into her bones. How long had it been since she had even attempted even one of the basic skills that all hedge witches began with?

Spring’s head bobbed up as the storyteller called for her attention. She smiled sheepishly at first before she realized she was being asked to participate. What part would she be? The princess, that’s right. That seemed quite the ask, the princess seemed like she should be a rather important part of a story and she was no teller of tales. Still, the children had turned to look at her expectantly and begin to apply the children’s sort of peer pressure. Spring wilted quickly under a chorus of ‘please.’ She sighed, well if she was going to make a fool of herself, no point in doing it by halves.

She sighed once, for herself, before she set her shoulders and straightened her back as her father taught her to do when visiting the court of the River Lord, and walked to the stage in her best dignified manner. The mostly-eaten skewer lessened the effect somewhat, but there was only so much she could do.

You’ve asked for my help?” Spring said, doing her best to sound like someone who hadn’t been drifting off.
 
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