RavensDagger
Chapter Two Hundred ay-Three - Knight of the Feather Duster
“After you, ma’am,” I said as I opehe door before my friends.
Awen curtsied, as she had do every other door I opened for her, and Amaryllis rolled her eyes, also as she had been doing all m.
After leaving Caprica at the entrance of the library the day before, I had started practig my chivalry. That meant opening doors for dies, and helping them sit down, and also fighting monsters. So far I was two for three in the chivalry department, and I was sure we’d have to fight some sort of monster eventually.
“You know this isn’t going to work,” Amaryllis said.
“It probably won’t work,” I said. “Which doesn’t mean it will never work, just that it’s somewhat uo work. Unlikely isn’t impossible... ma’am.”
Amaryllis huffed a mighty huff. “Stop calling me ma’am.”
“I think it’s cute,” Awen said. “Broccoli’s not doing anything mean.”
“Opening doors and being courteous isn’t mean, no, but it’s annoying when it’s ing from Broccoli,” Amaryllis said. “Besides, I open my own doors, thank-you-very-much.”
“I would never imply that you ’t, ma’am,” I replied.
Awen giggled while Amaryllis fumed quietly.
I started practig chivalry the night before, and so far I hadn’t gotten a skill for it. But I did get a lot of i fun teasing Amaryllis by being too o her, so that lus. I figured I could keep it up for a little bit. Being chivalrous was basically being h extra steps, and that sounded just peachy to me.
“Are you going to open the door to the guild too?” Amaryllis asked some time ter as we arrived at the front of the Goldenalden Exploration Guild. The pce still looked as rough as it had the day before.
“I certainly will, my dy,” I said before bowing at the waist to Amaryllis.
She crossed her arms and pouted while Awen ughed o her. “You don’t know how to bow,” Awen said.
“I don’t?” I asked.
She shook her head, then smiled as I opehe door for her. “I’ll show you ter.”
“Please don’t,” Amaryllis said.
“Ah, hello!”
Reginald was standing in the lobby, along with a sylph that I didn’t reize but who was obviously some sort of journalist. He had a small cap on, with a feather stig out of it, and he had a notepad tucked into one of the pockets of his ink-stained coat. A bag sat by his feet, big and lumpy, with the fsh-bulb of a camera stig out of the top of it. The journalist nodded. “Hello,” he said.
“Hellinald,” Amaryllis said. “And hello Mister...”
“Yanick, I work for World Watcher Weekly,” the journalist said.
We had a quick round of handshaking and introdus, Reginald standing to the side and smiling the eime. “Yanick here will be running a small article on your journey all the way here. I was hoping that one of you could sit with him and ret the tale?”
“Ah, it ’t be me,” I said. “I promised I’d do some gardening and the pce up, remember?”
“Yes, of course,” Reginald said.
“Awen and I should be able to retell the story without issue,” Amaryllis said. “Should we do that here, or is there a more fortable pce to have this kind of discussion?”
“There’s a lounge room upstairs,” Reginald said. “I’ll guide you there in a moment. Captain Bunch, you’ll find all the tools you need in the shed out back.” He searched his pockets for a moment before handing me a keyring. And then, before I k, my friends were ushered up the stairs and I was left in the guild’s lobby with a keyring in hand.
“Uh, okay,” I said to the empty room.
Shrugging, I started to wander around. It didn’t take long to find a broom closet uhe stairs. I had ing magic, of course, but that didn’t mean that I didn’t want to swish a duster around as I worked.
And I couldn't swish-swish a duster around if I didn’t have a duster to swish-swish.
I started with the lobby, humming to myself even as I pushed ing magito the duster I wielded and into the air around me as an aura. That meant that the more time I spent around a er, the more my magic ate away at the dust and grime and cob-webs. Swishing the duster against the gss dispy cases and spider-webs only made it faster.
Of course, I made sure that there weren’t any poor spiders on the webs I was ing away, and when I did find one, I’d carefully coax it onto my hand, then go outside where I pced the nice spider o of grass o the guild.
Ohe lobby arkly and and smelled fresh, I moved through the guild, mostly keeping to the corridors until I found a to the back.
The yard there was rough, with the grass having gotten too tall and filled with weeds.
The shed at the very back was a bit run down, but still serviceable, though there was a small bee’s clumped onto one side of it.
I made sure not to disturb any of them as I fetched a few tools. There was a reel mower, stu the back, and some trowels and rakes and other tools. Most of them had a patina of rust, but a quispe and I figured they were perfectly usable, if in need of a bit of maintenance.
So I tugged out the tools I needed and got to work. The reel mower chewed through the grass with a whirl, especially after I pumped some magito it to make it run smoother, and then, ohe small wn was all trimmed up, I started to dig out the weeds one by one.
I was actually having quite a bit of fun! Gardening was a nice, quiet way to spend some time. I wished I had a friend to share the quiet with, but being alone for a little bit wasn’t so bad.
I moved around to the front and started to tend to the pnts around the guild’s entrance.
It was quiet out. People were at work, and those who weren’t were usually older sylph moving past in a hurry, clearly quite busy, or younger sylph that looked like they were sc the city, looking for some fun trouble to get up to. I had a few gawkers; I guess a bun doing gardening work in an armoured dress wasn’t all that on a sight in Goldenalden. No oerrupted though, except for some kids that ran off ughing when I made silly faces and wiggled my ears at them.
The flowers at the front of the guild were in dire need of some love. They were still strong, with good roots holding them in pce, but they were being choked out by some meddling weeds.
I tugged the weeds out ahem to the side. They could be mulched up ter and used as fertilizer, maybe.
Gardening - D-34%
Not bad!Ohe flowers were given a bit of spad some water, they had a better ce of growing big and strong. I ed up the flower boxes, then got to ing the front of the guild. It was tricky to get to the higher parts. I could only jump so high, after all, and flinging balls at the windows and facade was only so effective at taking off the grime and dirt caked onto the bricks.
I was just trying to figure out a way to get to the very top of the building--maybe I could hang off the edge?--when the front door opened and Awen stuck her head out. “Oh, there you are,” she said.
“Heya,” I said. “Is everything going well?”
She nodded. ‘Yes, for the most part. The journalist is doh the interview, I think. He wants to take a picture, and we want you to be there.”
“Oh, sure,” I said. I patted down my knees, a bit of ing magic taking care of any dirt stue and washing out the grime under my fiips. “I’m ready!”
“Great,” Awen said. “We’re waiting upstairs, in the lounge.”
“We’re going to take a picture there?” I asked.
“I guess,” Awen said. “e on?”
I nodded and followed after her. It was nice seeing the lobby without any dust in it, the few loose items reanized, and the room smelling much more fresh than it had before. There was just something very satisfying about a room that was entirely .
“It looks nice,” Awen said. “Did you do everything?”
“No, just the lobby, and a few of the little open spaces around. Mostly I spent my time outside. I didn’t get Reginald’s permission to do all the other little rooms. Though I did bst a bunch of ing magito the washrooms, so those should be too.”
“I think he’ll be happy,” Awen said with a nod.
I hoped so too! And maybe it would help the guild get a few more members if they saw that it was nid inside and out.
We climbed up to the sed floor, then moved over to the lounge where I darted ahead of Awen and opehe door for her. “M’dy,” I said.
Awen ughed. “That’s awful. But thanks.”
Reginald looked like he was in a much better mood, with a big grin on and enough energy p off of him that he couldn’t stay still. The journalist, meanwhile, just looked fused. He was staring at his notepad, as if not quite believing what was written there.
Amaryllis was seated, all prim and proper, on the biggest lounge chair in the room. One leg carefully crossed over the other and an aura of smugness s it was almost physical wafting off of her.
“Uh oh,” I said.
“It’s not... that bad?” Awen said, likely guessing at some of what I was thinking.
I cleared my throat. “Ah, I’m here,” I said.
“Oh! Wonderful!” Reginald said. “We just wanted a photo, for the neer. I’m certaiicle will be that much more impressive with an image to go with it.”
“Sure,” I said.
The journalist set aside his notebook and started to fiddle with his camera, something that seemed to require a lot of his attention. Meanwhile, Reginald got the three of us to stand clether. I got to be in the middle, because I was the tallest, with Amaryllis to my right and Awen to my left.
“I kind ret ning my captain’s hat,” I said.
“It would be a bit ostentatious,” Amaryllis said. “Best to look somewhat humble, as a trast to the story itself.”
“That sounds surprisingly w, ing from you,” I said.
Amaryllis grinned. “Now now, I said nothing but the truth.”
“She didn’t lie,” Awen ceded. “But, ah, I think Amaryllis said the truth in an iing way?”
“That sounds like something she would do,” I said.
“I’m literally standing right o you,” Amaryllis said.
I gri her. “I know. I feel you. Your feathers are nid soft today. Have you been doing something special with them?”
She gave me an unamused look. “You’re a moron. Also, no, but the temperature here is mreeable than I expected. Feathers tend to be somewhat more temperamental than hair or fur, I think. At least when it es to things like humidity and pressure.”
That was iing. “.”
“Ah, yes, could everyone squeeze in a little closer?” the journalist asked. “Mister Reginald, yourself as well.”
Reginald stepped to the side so that he was o Awen. Close, but not so close that he was actually toug her. “Like so?” he asked.
The journalist nodded. “That’s great. Is this anyone’s first photograph?”
Amaryllis was the only oo nod. She blihen looked at me. “You’ve been in photos?”
“Plenty?” I said.
“Oh. Well, I haven’t.”
“Just blink a lot after the fsh,” I said.
“Alright everyohe journalist said. “Look into the lens here, that’s right.”
“And say cheeeese!” I said as the pan exploded with a bright burst of light.
***
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