яσвιи яє∂вяєαѕт (
birdsbirdsbirds) wrote in
psychoshenanigans2017-09-12 08:51 pm
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Skeleton City // PSL
They call it the "Market", and it's always buzzing like a hive. The vast caverns are warmed by the hundreds of bodies all hauling, shouting, pitching, laughing, exchanging things from one hand to another. Even more people stroll up above, their voices lost in the tangle of bridges made of stone and wood and metal. The place is lit by dozens of electric signs, spilling brightwarm colors where the hanging lanterns cannot reach.
There is a lot to look at. One person seems to trade a bolt of rich red cloth for some nails and hinges. One man is trying very hard to convince another that the chicken he is holding is worth at least three bags of grainmeal. And then there is whatever Phalanx is holding, which they most certainly did not trade for, and it most certainly leads to someone reaching out over their stall table and grabbing them harshly by the arm.
"Hey, you little theif!" Says an irate, heavy-set woman, "What do you think you're doing?"
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They don't see whatever problem Robin seems to be seeing, here.
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Though he says this with half a laugh again, which doesn't really sell his argument.
"Come on, put your pins away."
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They don't unthread the needle or undo any of the work that they're still in the middle of, but they do tuck the needle safely into their sleeve beside to the others.
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With their tool tucked away, Robin stands up again, pleased that they're moving in the right direction again.
"I promise that you can go back to sewing once we're done at the market."
He will hold a hand down to them, hoping that the direction is simple enough for them to know to take it and join him up here in the world of people who aren't sitting in the dirt.
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Instead of arguing, Phalanx takes Robin's hand and follows him up onto their feet.
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He also gives their hood a polite little tug, just to keep any color-changing or face-morphing away from the eyes of casual passers-by.
"Good. We're going to get you a skirt next, I think that'll be easier."
Still holding their hand, he begins leading again, pulling them along the streets formed by the rows and tents.
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So, as they're lead on toward their next destination, Phalanx starts reaching for some of the bundled-up cloth that Robin is carrying.
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"You want these?" He assumes, shifting a little so Phalanx can at least take the wraps from him. The blanket is something he's inclined to hold onto a little longer.
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Robin can get a glimpse of how the creature might have ended up in the tangled maze that he'd originally found them in, as Phalanx begins wrapping the cloth around their arms, tucking it under and tying it around their coat sleeves as they go.
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Speaking of that, Robin takes them around a corner and down another row of people selling bottles, vegetables, one even seems to specialize in live amphibians. But Robin seems to be leading Phalanx directly towards a misshapen tent that's more... a piece of old tarp draped over a bent metal frame, with pointy bits sticking out where pointy bits probably shouldn't be.
There's a small woman sitting at the corner of this construction, cross-legged on the ground, hunched over a metal drum. Her clothes are ragged, but fairly well-constructed and utilitarian. Her face is painted in strips of stark black and white, making it hard to guess her exact age, but she looks mean--and she also looks mostly preoccupied with the steady, surprisingly complicated succession of quick beats she's striking on her drum with some kind of double-ended stick.
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It's only when they're getting quite close to the ramshackle tent that anything changes, and it's that their feet begin to drag once they get a good look at the frightening woman and her drum.
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"What's up?"
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"What, she scaring you?" He ends the question with a tiny smirk, even if he doesn't mean to.
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Yeah, she might be scaring them.
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"Don't worry, I know her. She's going to let us in."
He takes a couple of tentative steps in her direction again, giving Phalanx's hand a small tug to suggest they follow him too.
"I'll do the talking. You'll be fine."
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"Hey friend," Robin asks her, "How's business?"
When he asks, her drumming abruptly stops, the last couple of notes falling off to silence as two narrow, distrusting green eyes dart up at Robin, and then up at the weird, pale person standing behind him.
"...Business is booming," she replies. Her voice is slow and raspy, does nothing to inform of her actual age, "Looks like you found a friend."
"Sure did," he reaches into his coat pocket and pulls out a crumpled pack of cigarettes, immediately offering her two of them out of the box in what seems like a very practiced, natural gesture.
Her eyes flash down to the offered trade, barely a second before she reaches out to snatch them up, putting one unlit between her lips and the other into a hidden pocket somewhere on her person.
That seems to be the end of their exchange, as Robin stands back up again.
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It's not a bad surprise. If anything, Phalanx seems somewhat relieved, shoulders leveling out--so, maybe the drum was even scarier than the woman herself.
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"Follow me," Robin says, even though he doesn't have to. He takes their hand again, leading them around the side of the tent and in through an opening that reveals the chaotic innards of this makeshift tent.
Calling them a tailor or a clothier would be doing a disservice to those fine, upstanding industries. At first glance, this appears to be the interior of a garbage pile, with things sitting in unsorted mounds and bits of fabric and metal and ancient, warping plastics hanging off of rusty nails hammered along the questionably-stable frames of the structure.
There are some candles burning here and there, placed on little shelves and bits of furniture that may or may not actually be for sale. There's also an impressive mound of fabric scraps in one corner that sort of topples over onto a mattress that is also half-covered in blankets, making it hard to tell if that is part of the store or if it is just where someone sleeps at night.
It's dim in here, despite the candlelight, and the air is stuffy and warm... But it smells surprisingly good in here, like a dark tea or some kind of herbal remedy, directly contrasting the confusion around them.
Standing in the middle of this, leaning on a stool and blatantly yawning, is a pale, thin man in what is unmistakably a long, black dress with a high collar. His hair is cropped short and dyed this sort of muddy red color. When he notices the both of them there, he turns, revealing both dramatic eye makeup and the fact that half of his lips are missing.
The left side of his lips, specifically. There is a slit where his mouth still appears to open, but but it doesn't seem like that half moves very much when he talks.
"Ah!" is his startled reply, "Robin, I wasn't expecting anyone in here this early..."
What little sluggishness was left quickly disappears in the face of curiosity, as this stranger leans back to get a look at whoever Robin has dragged in behind him. "And who is this?"
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They don't look quite as spooked as when they'd spotted the drum-playing woman, but there's apparently something about this person that is causing some anxiety in them as well.
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"This is Phalanx," Robin introduces them with a casual, sweeping gesture, "I've only just met him myself."
The man looks back and forth between the two of them, half his mouth curling into a smirk--or perhaps a smile, as it is a little hard to tell the intent behind his expression while half of his face is not emoting at all.
"It's nice to meet you, Phalanx," the stranger says, playfully, finally settling his attention on the pale figure again, "What brings both of you to the Argent Stone?"
Both of the man's eyes are technically brown, but the one on the strange side of his face has a strange pale blotch over part of his iris; it looks almost like a bleach stain. His ear is subtly wrong-shaped as well on that side, with his hair cut much closer to the scalp. Whatever happened to him is scarred into the entire left side of his face in ways that are hard to quantify or immediately parse, partly because of many years of healing, and partly from a significant amount of makeup.
Robin, not quite ready to let Phalanx talk yet, gets in a few words right after the shopkeeper asks his question-- "They talk like they've got a touch of night sickness, so don't be surprised if they start picking up things that aren't theirs."
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And they immediately play nicely into Robin's explanation--starting their usual search for words but only coming up with recent ones from the air. "A touch of--a touch."
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The man's smile fades as he starts to look between them again.
"You don't know?" He asks, "Robin, are you bringing a spider into my nest?"
"I paid our fare," is Robin's response. Something about this prompts him to reach over and take Phalanx's hand again, which the man clearly notices. "I just want to know if you've heard of anything like this person in one of your deeper circles."
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