The Master's hopeful smile shifted seamlessly to one of relief. Â He nodded to V'aleera, "It is a pleasure to meet you at last. Â My apprentice tells me that you have met his sister? Â I hope that you have found her well. Â She used to be a common sight around here, its been rather quiet without her."
As the woman stepped back, Dunois' gaze shifted to the other smith. Â His white eyebrows furrowed with an expression of confusion and surprise.
"Ah..." he interjected in Ishgardian with a sudden smile, "Not a child!" he laughed with a quiet heartiness. Â Extending his hand to Chachanji he turned to heavily accented common, "A pleasure, Monsieur. Â It has been long since I have known many of your people. Â Welcome to our humble shop."
He turned back to his papers, tapping the stack straight before raising himself from the stool with some effort. Â
"If I understand correctly, it is not just a favor, but an exchange of favors. Â But you are welcome nonetheless!"
The master of the shop stood  heads above the other two and politely ushered them from the small office, up a few of wooden stairs to the shop floor itself.  The shop was of moderate size, with a heavy and worn planked floor, tiled over near the forge itself.  Huge wooden beams of considerable age held up the heavy slate and metal roof over their heads, the trusses supported by two sets of paired heavy poles along the center-line of the shop.  Work stations lined the wall, each a workbench several feet long with its own set of tools.  One large wooden table dominated the left-hand side of the room as they entered, covered with completed and in-progress works.  In other times these may have been rows of bladed weapons, but at this time they consisted mostly of building materials.  Bucket after bucket of nails, a crate of heavy steel door hinges, and all variety of iron work for construction. Â
On the right half was the large forge, fired by coal and fed by an auto-bellows that clicked and ground between the steady "whooshes" of blown air.  In front of the forges sat a set of anvils, and a variety of tools.  It appeared enough for at least two smiths to be working simultaneously on the same project.  Osvald, the smith's apprentice, approaching master status himself, had his back turned to the group as  they entered.  He and a young boy of twelve or thirteen busied themselves shoveling coal from the exterior hopper into the forge. Â
Osvald could be described as a mountain of a Highlander. Â Chachanji, viewing him from behind, may well have mistook him for a Roegadyn. Â His broad chest supported massive shoulders that bore the weight of his trade, and the massive arms that would have terrified opponents in either the Blood Sands or the Grind Stone were they not put to more productive use at the Forge. Â
His head was covered by a hooded cap, a pair of goggles apparently lifted to rest on top of the cap. Â He emptied a shovelful of coal that must have weighed more than twice that of the Lalafel himself into the forge, while the boy's contribution of small shovelfuls seemed entirely an afterthought by comparison.
"Osvald, our guest smith has arrived!" The Master hollered over the din of the working shop. Â The highlander began to turn, his square-jawed and chiseled face turning toward them with a stoic emotionless belied by the sharpness of blue eyes that shone out of the dark grime that covered tho portion of his face not normally protected by the goggles. Â Despite their glaring differences, the family resemblance to his sister could not be missed by the observant Lalafel.
As the woman stepped back, Dunois' gaze shifted to the other smith. Â His white eyebrows furrowed with an expression of confusion and surprise.
"Ah..." he interjected in Ishgardian with a sudden smile, "Not a child!" he laughed with a quiet heartiness. Â Extending his hand to Chachanji he turned to heavily accented common, "A pleasure, Monsieur. Â It has been long since I have known many of your people. Â Welcome to our humble shop."
He turned back to his papers, tapping the stack straight before raising himself from the stool with some effort. Â
"If I understand correctly, it is not just a favor, but an exchange of favors. Â But you are welcome nonetheless!"
The master of the shop stood  heads above the other two and politely ushered them from the small office, up a few of wooden stairs to the shop floor itself.  The shop was of moderate size, with a heavy and worn planked floor, tiled over near the forge itself.  Huge wooden beams of considerable age held up the heavy slate and metal roof over their heads, the trusses supported by two sets of paired heavy poles along the center-line of the shop.  Work stations lined the wall, each a workbench several feet long with its own set of tools.  One large wooden table dominated the left-hand side of the room as they entered, covered with completed and in-progress works.  In other times these may have been rows of bladed weapons, but at this time they consisted mostly of building materials.  Bucket after bucket of nails, a crate of heavy steel door hinges, and all variety of iron work for construction. Â
On the right half was the large forge, fired by coal and fed by an auto-bellows that clicked and ground between the steady "whooshes" of blown air.  In front of the forges sat a set of anvils, and a variety of tools.  It appeared enough for at least two smiths to be working simultaneously on the same project.  Osvald, the smith's apprentice, approaching master status himself, had his back turned to the group as  they entered.  He and a young boy of twelve or thirteen busied themselves shoveling coal from the exterior hopper into the forge. Â
Osvald could be described as a mountain of a Highlander. Â Chachanji, viewing him from behind, may well have mistook him for a Roegadyn. Â His broad chest supported massive shoulders that bore the weight of his trade, and the massive arms that would have terrified opponents in either the Blood Sands or the Grind Stone were they not put to more productive use at the Forge. Â
His head was covered by a hooded cap, a pair of goggles apparently lifted to rest on top of the cap. Â He emptied a shovelful of coal that must have weighed more than twice that of the Lalafel himself into the forge, while the boy's contribution of small shovelfuls seemed entirely an afterthought by comparison.
"Osvald, our guest smith has arrived!" The Master hollered over the din of the working shop. Â The highlander began to turn, his square-jawed and chiseled face turning toward them with a stoic emotionless belied by the sharpness of blue eyes that shone out of the dark grime that covered tho portion of his face not normally protected by the goggles. Â Despite their glaring differences, the family resemblance to his sister could not be missed by the observant Lalafel.