The beady eyes kept watching Lilette with a squinted gaze, until she mentioned the name
Yldore. That caused the eyes to flare open like twin beetles in pools of milk, before they narrowed again with suspicion.
"That so?" A harsh cackle followed.
"Nay, not me. I be--"
"Master Marsh!"
The figure behind the door grumbled and closed it again, though his shouted conversation could be heard through the timber.
"Aye, my lady?"
"Who is at the door?"
"Don't know. Some abbess dressed to butcher sinners or summin'. Lilette's the name."
A contemplative pause followed.
"Let her in, post haste. She is to be afforded all due courtesy, Master Marsh. And be certain to let her know she is welcome beyond our threshold."
With that, the door ripped open. Behind it, a dwarf in a scarlet coat, his squat width nearly equalling the span of his modest height, bowed and scraped with whipped courtesy. Both his receding dark hair and beard were cropped short, bearing to mind a mangy wolverine nearly shaven bald. Pearls of sweat glistened on his exposed brow, and below the fancy coat, a thick breastplate glinted, only engorging his compact frame at the chest, leaving two stubs for legs to titter below them. The dwarf bore more resemblance to a cannon ball dressed in fine velvet than a dignified footman.
"Ah, please, enter, Mistress Lilette, enter! I invite you in. Or is it Sister? Eh, I get the terms mixed up, but please! Come on in, come in." The dwarf scrambled into a lavish foyer, eagerly beckoning Lilette all the while. A hefty axe nearly equal his height leaned against the wall near the door, and he quickly stowed it behind a curtain and closed the door behind her, attempting to distract his guest with unctuous smiles, hand running repeatedly over his remaining hair.
"My sincerest, deepest apologies, ma'em. Had no inkling - none whatsoever! Durn Marsh, at your service. Times be mischevious these days, you understand. All sorts come knocking these days, you understand."
Once the eye wandered past the huffing and sycophantic dwarf, it would find a different world altogether from the outside. The foyer combined that rare quality of high aesthetics with opulence, presenting a generous tapestry of deep purple curtains, blood crimson carpets, rosy scarlet tablecloths, a chandelier of white crystals instead of candles and walls of the darkest wood, nearly rivalling midnight black. Tasteful but sombre armoires and tables holding aloft lavish display cases crowded the space. Behind most of these displays could be found an ensemble of various artefacts, many curious and ancient, most of which seemed to end in sharp blades. A winding stairway of black iron, exposed to the open room, led up to the next floor. An assortment of doors fanned from this foyer to other chambers.
"May I, ah, may I take your calle--cloak, I mean, cloak?"
Durn Marsh's extended hand froze when light footsteps rattled down the iron stairway, followed by the sensuous whisper of a long dress, brushing against these stark steps. The top half of a figure remained in shadow from the burning witchlights set in ornate lamps and the chandelier, exposing only a black, velvet glove on the railing and a long, frilled dress of the finest dark satin.
"Master Marsh. You should know at this point to ask for hats and gloves, first."
"Ah! Oh! Aye! That's right! Anything else the mistress desires relieved?"
Whether or not Durn received items from Lilette, he would soon sweep out of the room and through a nearby door with another command:
"Prepare the parlour for two, if you please." Once the footman was out of sight, the voice from the stairway would curl out to Lilette:
"I hope you can forgive any unintended rudeness on the part of my footman. Good help is so very hard to find, these days."
Lilette Blackbriar