The market of Geltreis teemed with humanity. As morning stretched into the afternoon, the centerpiece of the city came to be occupied not only by its live-in army of workers and managers but also by the swarms of travelers that came to the mountain pass for business or pleasure. No matter what gate of the city they came in through, they all seemed to find their way to its market. Ringed by taverns and inns, it was an excellent place to stop and that was by no coincidence. Foreigners were a difficult mark in Geltreis, the riders and walkers alike all came differently wrapped but they were sure to find themselves at home amongst the similarly dissimilar locals. For the moment, the only way to tell the two classes apart was that one was primary still riding into town. Carriages came and went from the market all day long, carrying newcomers and returning patrons from the countryside. East and west didn't matter, for just a moment, at street level, Arcarti citizens and those with enough money to travel from the west came to the city for their first taste of travel. None to exotic to either culture, it did sit on the border, and to many of them it was still a suitable journey.
The sky was clear for the day, a rare and unspeakably welcomed sight to the snow blanketed city. It was only getting to be midday, and already the snow glistened with signs of melt. It was a good temperature for a walk, and that opportunity had even the most sedentary rich locals up and about, adding the colors of their regalia to to the crowds. The only blemish on the weather was a low, steady wind from the east. It promised storms from the shore, the ever present rains over Arcartus' capital and coast that occasionally blew inland to pelt the rest of the region. It was never known for certainty when they would arrive, the encroaching lines of clouds could scarcely be observed from within the mountains. Eventually, however, the rainstorms would climb the mountains to smother Geltreis in snow. While the going was good, however, the city would bustle as much as any trade port.
While it was bustling, she wanted to make her move. Karcine Beffelet was one of the many faces amongst the crowd. She had spent a few hours in the market, cruising inconspicuously through the stalls in her coat and studying the people she could find in the middle of town. Her own footfalls were indistinct from the milling bodies around her, her own thoughts nearly lost in the noise of gathered people. The conversations were colorful, a mixed racket of haggling and greeting in too many accents. It would be too difficult to be picked from the crowd, or so she consoled herself. Meanwhile, she tried to pick people out from the crowd. Her eyes swept back and forth, a scythe for commoners as she hoped to find someone with the distinctive look of a mercenary amongst the bounty of the market. She had been at it for too long, even if the day was still young. The feeling of going nowhere was just as tiresome as the feelings brought on by walking everywhere the marketplace had to offer. She had other reasons to give up her quest, more and more it seemed that the city guard was in her peripheral vision. She wasn't so deluded as to believe they cared or were looking, but it wouldn't do to take the chance. More likely, they were making their daily rounds now that the business day was well underway. Wherever she saw them, the muted blue of their uniforms seemed to pop from within the crowds. It may have just been the fear attributed to their colors. It always only a glimpse, and then she was jostled and bumped around in the tide of people to start searching again. The crowd provided safety, but it was also constricting. A person could only suffer under so many elbows before the masses became stifling and Karcine sought an end to her confinement.
With a few gentle elbow prods of her own, and some softly spoken apologies, she broke free to the edge of the crowd. The storefronts and inns that surrounded the marketplace faced her, spaced by the busy roadway occupied by parked carriages. People were less densely packed here, peacefully occupying tables and benches while the more energetic were already participating in the melee behind her. Joining the people enjoying their morning tea and the paper was a tempting proposition, but she turned her back on it. Looking back into the crowd, she could see even less than before. She decided to walk alongside the street, circling the marketplace for one last glimpse over not the people, but the carriages they had come in. The symbols adorning them were sometimes familiar to her, companies that ferried people across the heartlands or simply those that trusted their business with a merchant based in Geltreis. It stood to her logic at least that if there was a group come to town that she had an interest in pursuing, she could start at a much more easily located asset of theirs. Like a carriage bearing their emblem. The green clad woman slowly made her orbit, walking just beyond the bounds of the crowd and displaying a peculiar affinity for the vehicles lining the roadways.
The sky was clear for the day, a rare and unspeakably welcomed sight to the snow blanketed city. It was only getting to be midday, and already the snow glistened with signs of melt. It was a good temperature for a walk, and that opportunity had even the most sedentary rich locals up and about, adding the colors of their regalia to to the crowds. The only blemish on the weather was a low, steady wind from the east. It promised storms from the shore, the ever present rains over Arcartus' capital and coast that occasionally blew inland to pelt the rest of the region. It was never known for certainty when they would arrive, the encroaching lines of clouds could scarcely be observed from within the mountains. Eventually, however, the rainstorms would climb the mountains to smother Geltreis in snow. While the going was good, however, the city would bustle as much as any trade port.
While it was bustling, she wanted to make her move. Karcine Beffelet was one of the many faces amongst the crowd. She had spent a few hours in the market, cruising inconspicuously through the stalls in her coat and studying the people she could find in the middle of town. Her own footfalls were indistinct from the milling bodies around her, her own thoughts nearly lost in the noise of gathered people. The conversations were colorful, a mixed racket of haggling and greeting in too many accents. It would be too difficult to be picked from the crowd, or so she consoled herself. Meanwhile, she tried to pick people out from the crowd. Her eyes swept back and forth, a scythe for commoners as she hoped to find someone with the distinctive look of a mercenary amongst the bounty of the market. She had been at it for too long, even if the day was still young. The feeling of going nowhere was just as tiresome as the feelings brought on by walking everywhere the marketplace had to offer. She had other reasons to give up her quest, more and more it seemed that the city guard was in her peripheral vision. She wasn't so deluded as to believe they cared or were looking, but it wouldn't do to take the chance. More likely, they were making their daily rounds now that the business day was well underway. Wherever she saw them, the muted blue of their uniforms seemed to pop from within the crowds. It may have just been the fear attributed to their colors. It always only a glimpse, and then she was jostled and bumped around in the tide of people to start searching again. The crowd provided safety, but it was also constricting. A person could only suffer under so many elbows before the masses became stifling and Karcine sought an end to her confinement.
With a few gentle elbow prods of her own, and some softly spoken apologies, she broke free to the edge of the crowd. The storefronts and inns that surrounded the marketplace faced her, spaced by the busy roadway occupied by parked carriages. People were less densely packed here, peacefully occupying tables and benches while the more energetic were already participating in the melee behind her. Joining the people enjoying their morning tea and the paper was a tempting proposition, but she turned her back on it. Looking back into the crowd, she could see even less than before. She decided to walk alongside the street, circling the marketplace for one last glimpse over not the people, but the carriages they had come in. The symbols adorning them were sometimes familiar to her, companies that ferried people across the heartlands or simply those that trusted their business with a merchant based in Geltreis. It stood to her logic at least that if there was a group come to town that she had an interest in pursuing, she could start at a much more easily located asset of theirs. Like a carriage bearing their emblem. The green clad woman slowly made her orbit, walking just beyond the bounds of the crowd and displaying a peculiar affinity for the vehicles lining the roadways.