Oh, You Sweet Summer Child.
Her mouth agape the girl set her bag on one of the chairs at the table, but she didn't sit. Instead she walked around the room, peering past each door as she moved from floorboard to floorboard and letting out a soft, impressed whistle. Her turn around the room ended as she came up behind Lyra and peered up at what she was doing, eyes flicking between her hands and face while a curious smile crept up into her lips. The woman's work was positively fascinating. She'd heard of inlaid gems before through Marina, but seeing them in person... it was an entirely novel experience that quickened her heart with excitement. She couldn't wait to start learning magic.
"Do you know anyone who can teach me magic?" She asked, only then returning to the table and listening to what should have been a command. She stretched her feet out in front of her and began to unwrap the bandage as told. As the gentle fabric came off her hand she winced lightly and poked at the cut, clicking her tongue against the roof of her mouth. It was odd, really. The bleeding had stopped and seemed content to stay inside her veins, but the pain still radiated throughout her palm.
She looked up at the vial as it was placed in front of her. Was this the ointment? Or was it medicine? Was she supposed to drink it? The girl picked it up with her uninjured left hand, brought it to her nose, and sniffed lightly. But she instantly recoiled and her faced contorted into one of disgust.
"I'm not supposed to drink this, am I?" She asked. Truth be told she'd only ever used basic ointments as a kid whenever she got scraped up. But even that was rare, as most of the time 'a little bit of dirt will do the trick' had always been the go-to remedy. She hadn't ever scarred from that sort of fix, and so she figured it had always worked. But she'd also never had her hand sliced open before.
The girl sniffed it once more, then peered into it with one closed eye and sneered at it's strange color and texture. "It looks like a soup made out of grass." She stated, peering up at the woman from her seat and suddenly laughing out loud as she imagined the cold woman foraging for grass like a horse in pasture.
31st of Frost, 120
Fawn chuffed at her, eyebrow raised. "I'm not that little." She said, raising her head up as if to demonstrate just how 'not little' she was. It didn't help her case, as she still stood much shorter than the mage in front of her even with her voluminous hair giving her at least another inch or two. The mage, by contrast was tall, elegant, and even with the snake perched on her shoulder still drew the farmgirls curiosity and interest. If Fawn had a tail it would have been wagging as she followed Lyra through the shop once more. This time, though, behind the desk. She watched in awe as magic woven into the building itself allowed them up a flight of stairs and up to a mysteriously simple dwelling.
Her mouth agape the girl set her bag on one of the chairs at the table, but she didn't sit. Instead she walked around the room, peering past each door as she moved from floorboard to floorboard and letting out a soft, impressed whistle. Her turn around the room ended as she came up behind Lyra and peered up at what she was doing, eyes flicking between her hands and face while a curious smile crept up into her lips. The woman's work was positively fascinating. She'd heard of inlaid gems before through Marina, but seeing them in person... it was an entirely novel experience that quickened her heart with excitement. She couldn't wait to start learning magic.
"Do you know anyone who can teach me magic?" She asked, only then returning to the table and listening to what should have been a command. She stretched her feet out in front of her and began to unwrap the bandage as told. As the gentle fabric came off her hand she winced lightly and poked at the cut, clicking her tongue against the roof of her mouth. It was odd, really. The bleeding had stopped and seemed content to stay inside her veins, but the pain still radiated throughout her palm.
She looked up at the vial as it was placed in front of her. Was this the ointment? Or was it medicine? Was she supposed to drink it? The girl picked it up with her uninjured left hand, brought it to her nose, and sniffed lightly. But she instantly recoiled and her faced contorted into one of disgust.
"I'm not supposed to drink this, am I?" She asked. Truth be told she'd only ever used basic ointments as a kid whenever she got scraped up. But even that was rare, as most of the time 'a little bit of dirt will do the trick' had always been the go-to remedy. She hadn't ever scarred from that sort of fix, and so she figured it had always worked. But she'd also never had her hand sliced open before.
The girl sniffed it once more, then peered into it with one closed eye and sneered at it's strange color and texture. "It looks like a soup made out of grass." She stated, peering up at the woman from her seat and suddenly laughing out loud as she imagined the cold woman foraging for grass like a horse in pasture.