Gulliver Ingold
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- Messages
- 22
- Character Biography
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"Thank you for staying open, Mister Ingold. I am so sorry for keeping you." The well-dressed man sounded grateful, abashed, and awash with relief as he clutched a lustrous, moonlit bouquet. The large lilies glimmered with a pearlescent sheen and rested in a bed of white yarrow so pale the flowers almost seemed translucent. "I'm a complete idiot, if you hadn't still been here my boss would h-"
"Shh, shh. Nonsense. I can be rather forgetful, myself. These things happen," Gulliver soothed with a hand on the man's upper arm, gently escorting him past rows of carefully cultivated, vigorous blooms towards the door. His lips were curled into one of those empathetic smiles that crinkled the corners of his pale eyes. "I am just glad you caught me before I locked up. Perhaps it was fate that I let time get away with me tonight." He allowed a soft laugh to escape his lips. "And please, call me Gulliver."
"Well, Mister-... Gulliver," the man corrected himself, the smile on his lips genuine but shaky, likely still running on the adrenaline from when he first realized his blunder. Working for some of the business moguls in town could be high stress work with powerful consequences awaiting mistakes. "I won't keep you any longer... and I will remember your gracious assistance. You enjoy the rest of your night." The man dawdled a moment longer outside the door, as if wondering if he should say anything more, before he finally turned and scurried off to the carriage waiting to take him back into the Inner City.
The fact that Gulliver's shop was even in the Outer City was entirely by choice. He could afford to set up in the Inner City, and likely would be quite welcomed as his arrangements were often in high demand for those large, ostentatious events, but he far preferred where he was. Close to the hardworking, who appreciated a free flower to take home to their spouse. Close to where the urchins crept in from the slums in hope of a bit of coin or sustenance. Away from the noisy bustle of the markets where people were in too much of a hurry to really stop and appreciate true beauty. The wealthy could afford to travel to him, and perhaps it was a bit of pettiness and pride on his part that he wanted to make them travel to him. He knew that they would.
Gulliver lingered outside his door, staring into the Allirian night long after the clop of hooves pulling the carriage had passed from hearing, letting vague thought flit around in his clever-but-nebulous little head. Letting time get away from him again, as it were. It was a crisp and clear night, and the silvery luminescence was particularly kind upon the pallor of the half-fae man. Like moonlight on undisturbed snow.
Kiros Rahnel
"Shh, shh. Nonsense. I can be rather forgetful, myself. These things happen," Gulliver soothed with a hand on the man's upper arm, gently escorting him past rows of carefully cultivated, vigorous blooms towards the door. His lips were curled into one of those empathetic smiles that crinkled the corners of his pale eyes. "I am just glad you caught me before I locked up. Perhaps it was fate that I let time get away with me tonight." He allowed a soft laugh to escape his lips. "And please, call me Gulliver."
"Well, Mister-... Gulliver," the man corrected himself, the smile on his lips genuine but shaky, likely still running on the adrenaline from when he first realized his blunder. Working for some of the business moguls in town could be high stress work with powerful consequences awaiting mistakes. "I won't keep you any longer... and I will remember your gracious assistance. You enjoy the rest of your night." The man dawdled a moment longer outside the door, as if wondering if he should say anything more, before he finally turned and scurried off to the carriage waiting to take him back into the Inner City.
The fact that Gulliver's shop was even in the Outer City was entirely by choice. He could afford to set up in the Inner City, and likely would be quite welcomed as his arrangements were often in high demand for those large, ostentatious events, but he far preferred where he was. Close to the hardworking, who appreciated a free flower to take home to their spouse. Close to where the urchins crept in from the slums in hope of a bit of coin or sustenance. Away from the noisy bustle of the markets where people were in too much of a hurry to really stop and appreciate true beauty. The wealthy could afford to travel to him, and perhaps it was a bit of pettiness and pride on his part that he wanted to make them travel to him. He knew that they would.
Gulliver lingered outside his door, staring into the Allirian night long after the clop of hooves pulling the carriage had passed from hearing, letting vague thought flit around in his clever-but-nebulous little head. Letting time get away from him again, as it were. It was a crisp and clear night, and the silvery luminescence was particularly kind upon the pallor of the half-fae man. Like moonlight on undisturbed snow.
Kiros Rahnel