
I like to think that, having spent as long in my profession as I have, that I am quite adept at reading the expressions of others. A peddler, and especially a dubious one, must have a sound understanding of every twitch and quirk of a person's face. And the Seeker in front of me is quite twitchy and quirky indeed! From the lift of a well-arched eyebrow to the narrowing of her heterochromatic eyes, and the upward twitch of her lip to the folding together of her arms, I can see it all quite well: She wants it. She needs it. She will do anything for -Â
"No, that's quite all right, thank you. I'd much prefer real gold."
On the other hand, body language is a lie and it can quite often be misleading, and anybody who thinks otherwise is an absolute fool. I do not see any irony in this statement. One thing I do know, however, is that there are times and places to press a customer, and this is not one of them. This comes from verbal rather than physical language, whether their words express interest in seeing just how far I'll go (the answer is always "very far") to make a sale or whether they express an interest in seeing my backside as I retreat to another corner of the tavern. Here, the answer is clearly the latter.
I smile and I bow, and I say what, in some variation, I always say. "But of course, madam. If you find you require any goods like those that I offer, please, don't settle for anything less than Verad Bellveil, Ul'dah's Premier Distributor of the Dubious!" I do not give her an opportunity for a parting shot beyond a wave and a nod as I turn on my heel and march to another part of the railing.
It's a busy night in the Quicksand for pretty much anybody except me. Momodi is clearly making her rent's worth of coin, and Miss Foxheart does the same in tips. I catch her eye and we offer a smile and a wave to each other as we pass, but there's no time for conversation on either end. Even now, a high, hoarse voice calls out for another round, and she has to dash towards a table I can't see in the bustle.
Ah, Miss Foxheart. Some days I envy your profession. The leers and the stress and the infrequent declarations of love must be a frustrating thing, to be sure, but nobody has ever tipped a dubious peddler. And in my current circumstances, I would be very much appreciative of a tip.
Once I find a spare space on the rail next to a pair of sniping Midlanders - one male, the other female, their barbs of such a tone and content that it suggests this is how they say they love each other - I place my hand on the railing and lean out over the crowd. My situation is a curious one, I think, and not one I ever suspected would happen, could happen, but happen it has.Â
In short, I believe I am losing my edge. This has been the fifth night in a row that I have attempted to peddle my wares without even the slightest hint of success. My usual standards of imitation fool's gold and defective treasure maps never sold any more than sporadically, but even my hottest items like my supply of plot devices have gone untouched and unpurchased over the past few suns. This is a fairly new development - during the incident with the relics, I was more than able to make a few sales from time to time, when I was not hiding in my house. Now, though, I find I am hard-pressed. It is as if the No-Eyed Man left a curse on me on his funeral pyre; a laughable concept, to be sure, but I take laughable concepts quite seriously. They are my stock and trade.
There is no existential or financial threat in this, as my circumstances have left me comfortably well-off. In selling control of my estate to the Shroudwolf, I am free of the expenses of rent - beyond the occasional outrageous tale at their regular story circles - and taxation. My income is supplemented by my dividends from Vesper Bay, ensuring maintenance of a well-off, if dubious, quality of life. There is no real need to do what I usually do.
That, I think, is the problem. Gone are the days of making a rug in Pearl Lane my office and struggling day by day to ensure that I can live to see the next. Gone are the days of scraping and scrounging and setting aside every gil I had to pay the Debt. There is no more Debt to pay, after all, and no more cause to scrape and scrounge. Gone, too, are the problem of the relics from my life, and in its place is control of an entire company with a number of employees. There are people who look up to me. And what isn't there to admire? But there are too many people who look up to me.
In short, I have become distressingly respectable. And we can't very well have that. So we must return to the basics, to the core of my identity, to my essential and primal dubiousness. Otherwise, I may as well hang up my beard and get a stall on the Exchange to sell respectable goods like any other respectable merchant in the city.
A stall. I suppress a shudder at the thought, and scan the crowd again. Tonight, I will make a sale. I will get in touch with my inner dubiousness, and I will rekindle what has been lost over moons of good fortune. But who shall receive my pitch?
Who should Verad annoy next?
1. There's a dark-clad Elezen woman lurking by the bar. For a moment I suspect the conspicuously brooding fashion is an affectation, but she seems to have an understated demeanor which takes it quite seriously. The earnestly depressed are always good targets; they never quite know how to react.
2. A trio of adventurers - two Miqo'te, one of either clan, and a Sea Wolf - are bickering over something I can't quite hear. I don't typically like interrupting groups, but their conversation seems heated without being private. Mayhaps I can redirect their energies to something more lucrative.
3. There's a Highlander fellow with no shirt on conspicuously sharpening his axe near one wall. It's a policy of mine to avoid selling to lone men - they have, in my experience, proven to be the most hostile to my pitches and my wares, to the point of violence in some cases. But desperate times call for desperate measures.
"No, that's quite all right, thank you. I'd much prefer real gold."
On the other hand, body language is a lie and it can quite often be misleading, and anybody who thinks otherwise is an absolute fool. I do not see any irony in this statement. One thing I do know, however, is that there are times and places to press a customer, and this is not one of them. This comes from verbal rather than physical language, whether their words express interest in seeing just how far I'll go (the answer is always "very far") to make a sale or whether they express an interest in seeing my backside as I retreat to another corner of the tavern. Here, the answer is clearly the latter.
I smile and I bow, and I say what, in some variation, I always say. "But of course, madam. If you find you require any goods like those that I offer, please, don't settle for anything less than Verad Bellveil, Ul'dah's Premier Distributor of the Dubious!" I do not give her an opportunity for a parting shot beyond a wave and a nod as I turn on my heel and march to another part of the railing.
It's a busy night in the Quicksand for pretty much anybody except me. Momodi is clearly making her rent's worth of coin, and Miss Foxheart does the same in tips. I catch her eye and we offer a smile and a wave to each other as we pass, but there's no time for conversation on either end. Even now, a high, hoarse voice calls out for another round, and she has to dash towards a table I can't see in the bustle.
Ah, Miss Foxheart. Some days I envy your profession. The leers and the stress and the infrequent declarations of love must be a frustrating thing, to be sure, but nobody has ever tipped a dubious peddler. And in my current circumstances, I would be very much appreciative of a tip.
Once I find a spare space on the rail next to a pair of sniping Midlanders - one male, the other female, their barbs of such a tone and content that it suggests this is how they say they love each other - I place my hand on the railing and lean out over the crowd. My situation is a curious one, I think, and not one I ever suspected would happen, could happen, but happen it has.Â
In short, I believe I am losing my edge. This has been the fifth night in a row that I have attempted to peddle my wares without even the slightest hint of success. My usual standards of imitation fool's gold and defective treasure maps never sold any more than sporadically, but even my hottest items like my supply of plot devices have gone untouched and unpurchased over the past few suns. This is a fairly new development - during the incident with the relics, I was more than able to make a few sales from time to time, when I was not hiding in my house. Now, though, I find I am hard-pressed. It is as if the No-Eyed Man left a curse on me on his funeral pyre; a laughable concept, to be sure, but I take laughable concepts quite seriously. They are my stock and trade.
There is no existential or financial threat in this, as my circumstances have left me comfortably well-off. In selling control of my estate to the Shroudwolf, I am free of the expenses of rent - beyond the occasional outrageous tale at their regular story circles - and taxation. My income is supplemented by my dividends from Vesper Bay, ensuring maintenance of a well-off, if dubious, quality of life. There is no real need to do what I usually do.
That, I think, is the problem. Gone are the days of making a rug in Pearl Lane my office and struggling day by day to ensure that I can live to see the next. Gone are the days of scraping and scrounging and setting aside every gil I had to pay the Debt. There is no more Debt to pay, after all, and no more cause to scrape and scrounge. Gone, too, are the problem of the relics from my life, and in its place is control of an entire company with a number of employees. There are people who look up to me. And what isn't there to admire? But there are too many people who look up to me.
In short, I have become distressingly respectable. And we can't very well have that. So we must return to the basics, to the core of my identity, to my essential and primal dubiousness. Otherwise, I may as well hang up my beard and get a stall on the Exchange to sell respectable goods like any other respectable merchant in the city.
A stall. I suppress a shudder at the thought, and scan the crowd again. Tonight, I will make a sale. I will get in touch with my inner dubiousness, and I will rekindle what has been lost over moons of good fortune. But who shall receive my pitch?
Who should Verad annoy next?
1. There's a dark-clad Elezen woman lurking by the bar. For a moment I suspect the conspicuously brooding fashion is an affectation, but she seems to have an understated demeanor which takes it quite seriously. The earnestly depressed are always good targets; they never quite know how to react.
2. A trio of adventurers - two Miqo'te, one of either clan, and a Sea Wolf - are bickering over something I can't quite hear. I don't typically like interrupting groups, but their conversation seems heated without being private. Mayhaps I can redirect their energies to something more lucrative.
3. There's a Highlander fellow with no shirt on conspicuously sharpening his axe near one wall. It's a policy of mine to avoid selling to lone men - they have, in my experience, proven to be the most hostile to my pitches and my wares, to the point of violence in some cases. But desperate times call for desperate measures.
Verad Bellveil's Profile | The Case of the Ransacked Rug | Verad's Fate Sheet
Current Fate-14 Storyline:Â Merchant, Marine
Current Fate-14 Storyline:Â Merchant, Marine