Precocious
Posted: Wed Sep 04, 2024 6:16 pm
Precocious
21st of Searing, 124th Year of the Age of Steel
Sivan had told Torin some things about the master who had taught him artificing, the eccentric elf who had taken him and an Awoken out of Sol'Valen to go on a sort of adventure in his twilight years rather than rest on his well-earned laurels in Silfanore or even Inokova, where Makers were most highly esteemed. More than anything else, they were now riding on Tavári'nar Val'Gwairil's coattails back into Sol'Valen. The dearly departed Maker had family, of course, be he had left behind a workshop run by three old students: Tavárinoikos.
The building was historic, albeit with improvements and embellishments made by the Makers who worked there. It held a place of honor in the Dýolon Courtyard in the inner Amforéon.
Someday, perhaps, they would move on and form their own workshops, leaving this place to their students or to other students of the Master. All three were artificers, of course, but had other, complementary specialties. It was the Master Maker who was the most competent runeforger who came to find Torin, her dark face pinched.
"Apprentice Kilvin," she said in perhaps overly careful Mythrasi—he wasn't, after all, a native speaker. But slow or quick, her voice made music of his name, elevating it out of the village muck into which he had been born. "Set your work aside now. You must attend upon a... A special client, yes?" She waited for him to translate the Mythrasi in his head and answer in the affirmative. They were Makers, so they didn't require quick thinking so long as the results would astound.
While he had never seen her rushed—though it was barely three weeks he had spent learning here—she did seem a touch out of sorts. More than casual, passive scans with his Semblance were frowned upon, but he could sense that something out of the ordinary was happening. She led him quickly to one of the private showrooms and, turning to inspect him before opening the door, she sighed as if long-suffering, and thumbed away a bit of ink from his cheek.
"Remember," she said, speaking to him as if he were a child, though perhaps his grasp of the language didn't equip him to take offense, "you are here because the last apprentice of the Master vouched for you. Now you will have to make a good impression for all of us and our proud lineage." She paused as if she had volumes to say, but there wasn't time. "Come."
Inside was a striking elven woman, tall, with impossibly red hair and eyes that just might have been brightened magically; surely no one was born with eyes like that. They were visible, only partially shrouded by a clever creation of clockwork and magic that hovered over her hand.
"Ahh," said the Maker. "The perpetual motion engine. Hm, that is just a working title. Ma'am, this is the Kalzasern apprentice, Torin Kilvin. Apprentice, this is Her Royal Highness the Princess Ékhidna Sol'Eilran."
"Thank you, Maker," she said in a rich contralto. "You may leave us."
There was a pause, then a quick, "Yes, ma'am." She gave a meaningful look to Torin, and then disappeared.