20 Searing 121
Sometimes Sivan got so used to the strange smells wafting about Master Jacun's shop and workshop that it wasn't until he was in the open air again that his senses cleared enough to register new things. There was the smell of hot sunlight on the paving stones. There was something sizzling on a grill nearby that made his stomach growl. There was the dust that meant it had been too long since there was rain. And there were myriad sounds that were more pleasing than drips and hisses and all the various things he had trained his leaf-shaped ears to count as alarums lest some delicate work be wasted for lack of attention.
But it was the end of the day and Master Jacun had told him he could do as he wished once he made the delivery to the runeforge, which worked out quite nicely for him. Glade had been quite busy in the alchemist's shop as well as at the forge, and so he had seen Torin a few times, but not nearly so often as either of them had planned. True to his word, he had kept several sheets of paper filled with plans for various simple clockwork projects. Whenever he saw Torin, he handed one over. Whenever Torin dropped by, Sivan quickly showed him a few ways to assemble the various pieces into something that worked. Worked was a a relative term. Turning a handle would make one toothed wheel turn another or similar. But Torin always seemed pleased to see the pieces he made come together like a puzzle. Sivan would roll his eyes and commiserate: "Practice makes perfect." And they would laugh.
His Common was better now. He still had a deplorable accent and would put emphasis on the wrong syllables or mess up the cadence of his words. Sometimes it sounded like he was trying to sing Common. Other times, it was just discordant and off. But while he had a strange way of saying things, he had gotten better at using words correctly and making his thoughts known. Of course, he was always patient with Torin's usage of Mythrasi, willing to correct pronunciation and add a few words to his vocabulary. It was nice that he cared to do so. Most people could get by with nothing more than Common, but it was a wide world out there and Kalzasi wasn't even its center.
"Good day, Timon," he said to the bored boy out front. "Regular things. I will take them in the back for you. Want to say hello to Torin."
"OK, Thiv," he said with a gap-toothed grin. The elf could do no wrong after bringing him a simple clockwork soldier, and even more so after he had shown him how to oil its gears and keep it clean so the exposed mechanism kept working.
"Oh, here." He pulled a little green candy wrapped in wax paper out of his pocket and handed it to the boy. "Tastes like sour apple. Will make your tongue and lips green for almost an hour. Can make funny faces then." He stuck his tongue out and went cross-eyed for a second.
"Thank you!" he crowed, already shoving it into his mouth.
Sivan didn't enter the forge proper, but he set the box down on a table where he would be seen when Torin emerged from the forge. It was close to where they stored several of the things in the box from what he understood, so it ought to be convenient. Knowing Torin got quite into his work, much as Sivan did. It was the end of the day. Perhaps Torin would come to share a meal with him, and perhaps he would want to see his home. If not, Sivan could just go. No harm, no foul.
It is wise to make friends, said the voice inside his head.
"I don't know if he thinks of me as a friend," Sivan muttered for the benefit of his aidolon. It could hear his thoughts, but he had trouble sometimes ordering his thoughts properly for an internal communication.