•───────── Gloaming Hapertas ────────•
47th of Glade, 124th Year of the Age of Steel
The needle rose and fell by itself, with unearthly deliberation. It slowed almost imperceptibly each time it turned to bite into the sheer fabric below, then smoothly pulled the thread through the hole behind it. The silk bunched as the thread straightened, and the needle made minute adjustments to ensure that each new stitch was level with the last. Taken as a whole, the thread formed a great semi-circle over the unfinished garment. By the end, it would be a circle, and the anterior of a circle.
The project was arrayed across a table, half-cleared and half-cluttered with the debris of a dozen past works. Scraps and unused patches, bits of string and discarded half-used bobbins were scattered about the place- and quite deliberately, too. That had been his first master's advice to him, some twenty years' past. Even if you were a tidy person by nature, shoppers liked to see a bit of the chaos of creation on display. It brought them some sense of ease, to see the evidence of work rather than simply the finished products.
Most of the shop was given over to said products, of course. Hapertas catered to a particular market niche; the lower-class of Sol'Valen who nevertheless desired a suitable raiment for some fine occasion. Tables near the door displayed high-quality wear, ready to be sold with brief measurements and adjustment. Mannequins in the window and the show floor displayed some of the tailor's better works, painstaking pieces meant less to be sold per se and more to advertise the skill with which an outfit might be commissioned.
Filaurel had taken pains to display a variety of styles. Gowns of sheer brocade interwoven with stellar patterns clashed with simple shifts on the racks abutting the small dais and mirror upon which measurements were taken. Velvet pants with little decoration sat musting on a shelf alongside a sash bearing a dozen runes of fortune, painstakingly connected into a simple tableau showing one of the many glorious battles of lost antiquity. The tailor understood that while styles shifted quickly and mellifluously at the height of society, every denizen of Sol'Valen's great municipal district had some personal conception of beauty which might be a hundred years out of date.
Of the tailor himself, not much could be said. He sat quietly at his table, brows furrowed as he concentrated on the dress which was slowly constructing itself. His hands lay on the table, one atop the other, just as he'd left them- but there was no point in puppeteering himself when he was alone. A bead of sweat ran down the back of his neck, either from the long use of Kinetics or simply the stuffy heat. His skin itched, but he did not raise an arm to scratch it. He'd learned not to expend power on nuisances.
Still, it was distraction enough. The needle slipped, entering the dress at the wrong angle... and froze. Slowly, it withdrew itself, the elf's will pulling it back and straightening the fabric. He pursed his lips, then let out a sigh.
It was a small slip, but he'd nearly let it get by him. In theory, the use of the Rune ought to allow for far greater precision and speed than ever his mortal hands and arms, no matter how clever and quick they'd been. In practice, though? The body had its own memory, the muscles adopted and adapted to graceful patterns of movement until they could practically perform them abed. The mind had only true memory. Every project was a battle which required absolute concentration, more so than any of his old jaunts with Sol'Valen's army.
But he could handle that. The burden of absolute concentration was to be expected in any art which one hoped to master. No, rather, what he could not escape was the endless vigilance of his own mind, the gnawing doubt and worry that every slip of the needle augured not a passing moment of distraction, but instead-
"None of that." he told himself, firmly, exercising the few muscles which he could move without aid of magic. He returned his focus to the dress, which rose obligingly a few feet off the table, so he could inspect the stitching. Yes, everything seemed, still, on track.
Filaurel Len'Alen took a deep breath, and stared at the garment once more. The needle rose and fell.