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wolfs_daughter ([personal profile] wolfs_daughter) wrote in [community profile] birthright_rpg2013-07-30 11:21 pm
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Window Shopping

Echo was surprised to find a New Age type shop in a place like Searchlight, and she studied the facade of the building for a few minutes before twisting the doorknob to let herself in. It would probably be as dusty and rundown as everything else around here, but she'd been on a furniture run that morning and wanted to try something non-intense like browsing to celebrate. At least now she had a couch, second-hand though it might be. Tomorrow, she'd focus on getting more dishes.

Compared to the glare of the mid-afternoon sun, the store seemed very dim, and the hybrid glanced at the metal shelves before taking a few more steps inside. Maybe she could afford something simple, like a candle or a protection crystal. She was spiritual rather than religious, but she did believe that there were forces at work in the world that she didn't understand. Did they do Tarot readings here? She'd never tried that.

There was a counter near what seemed to be the center of the shop, and Echo checked her pockets to make sure she had some cash on hand. She was going to have to see about that job sooner rather than later. She could always wire home for money, but she wanted to be independent. Her parents had agreed that she could skip college for a year or so if she could pay her own way, and she didn't want to burden them if she could foot her own bills.

They didn't even seem to sell books here, but books in places like this tended to be a little dear. But she needed other things besides books, anyway. Like home furnishings. Maybe if she made nice with the proprietor, they could direct her to someone who was hiring. The brunette looked down at her clothes. At least she looked presentable, since she'd taken a shower after helping to wrestle the couch into the trailer.

The counter was glassed in, so she was reluctant to knock on it to get the attention of whoever ran the place. She gingerly rapped one knuckle on the wooden partition that held the glass in place, then tucked that hand into her pocket. "Hello?"
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[personal profile] emmyclaire 2013-07-31 11:35 pm (UTC)(link)
Emmeline moved swiftly from bin to bin of dried herb and spice, plucking leaves, stems, and petals of what she needed and carrying them over to the mortar and pestle she kept behind the main counter. They were too dry to become a paste without any liquid introduced, but that's not what Emmeline was going for as she ground the plants down into manageable broken pieces beneath the polished granite of her pestle.

"You'll need an infuser for this since its not bagged," she said, speaking more to herself than her customer as the scent of peppermint began to fill the air. "I don't sell those here, unfortunately, but you might just tie the tea off in a coffee filter and toss it into the pot."

She glanced up and offered a friendly smile. "Echo. That's an unusual name. Lovely, though," she went on, pouring the newly crushed tea mixture into a plastic bag. "I've been to Seattle. I rather liked the rain. But it didn't feel right to stay... didn't feel right until I found this little place, as it happens."

She held the bag of tea aloft. "Here you are. On the house," Emmeline told her, eyes crinkling at the corners as she smiled. "Your mother is right, home grown is always better than what you'd find in most stores. Luckily I grow this all myself, so you get the best of both worlds."

"I don't live in the trailer park," Emmeline went on. "I've had a house built out on Hobson street. I've never been fond of the more temporary structures. Sometimes difficult to create a safe space."
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[personal profile] emmyclaire 2013-08-01 02:35 am (UTC)(link)
Emmeline frowned to herself, pondering Echo's question while she used her slim arms to brace herself and hop backwards to sit atop the counter, bare feet swinging.

"Finding work in Searchlight, that may be a bit tricky," she mused. "We've mostly bars and the like around here, diners too. Have you done waitressing? I'd tried it once myself but I never did develop a knack for it."

She reached for a bowl of little wire angels that sat on the counter top and pulled one out, twist and untwisting its wings as she sat, still swinging her feet.

"I've been here long enough to know that no one is likely to hire you if they don't think you'll be staying put for a while," she added, brushing a lock of her hair behind her ear before returning to twist the little wire angel wings. "Having a place of your own already will probably be a boon to your search."
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[personal profile] emmyclaire 2013-08-04 05:52 am (UTC)(link)
"I can't guarantee that you'll find something, but I can tell you this," Emmeline intoned. "This town, for all of its quiet emptiness on the surface? It has a habit of holding on to people who should stay. I mean, here I am, for you to talk to. And I could have landed just about anywhere, the way I was traveling!"

She smiled as Echo spoke on her artistic side; Emmeline considered herself an artist of sorts, conjuring up something from nothing, mixing together strange bits and pieces of what was never there before. She reached out and took the girl's hands in her own, pressing the wire angel into Echo's palm.

"An artist, I should have known, with these hands," she said, still smiling. She concentrated deep within herself, pulling at her most buried sensations of peace and calm, and directed it to flow through her hands as best as she could. Emmeline was not an empath, but even she could see the girl seemed skittish. She only hoped the girl could share even a little bit of the peace she had found.

"I did make the angels, yes," she went on, letting go of Echo's hands after a moment. "Ordered the wrong wire for beadwork, had to find something to do with it." She paused and laughed. "Perhaps I should make some devils to go alongside them!"
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[personal profile] emmyclaire 2013-08-06 06:22 am (UTC)(link)
"There's no cost for the angel," Emmeline told her. "I'm no artist, its just something I fiddled with on my own. I never charge anyone for them. Take it, keep it, it's no trouble."

Her eyes went a fraction wider for a moment, a soft tugging at the back of her mind grabbing her attention. Clearing her throat, Emmeline wiped her hands on her skirt and slipped behind the counter, pulling a battered notebook from beneath the register.

"Tell you what," she said. "You take the tea and the angel -- and that tea is only for when you're ready to sleep, mind, otherwise it'll leave you too drowsy and open -- and come back in a few days. I'll start putting together a little totem bag for you, and speak to my supplier about a dreamcatcher," she went on, writing herself notes on what supplies she would need and who she needed to call. "Then you can tell me how the tea worked out for you. How does that sound?"