2nd of Glade, 4623
Just outside of Malevin, in Westjorik, two men, one younger and one older, were scrambling to fix a wagon used to haul goods in the rich farmlands of Westjorik. The younger was clearing away what seemed to be wooden spokes and thin strips of snapped flat steel while the elderly of the two were pulling the axle out from the hoisted wagon. Once the pair had cleared the debris, the elder lifted a new axle and slid it into place while the younger carried a new wheel and slid it onto the axle. The elder gentleman, wearing tattered brown trousers that came only to his knee, wore a pair of wool socks, grey with a pair of leather shoes, a bit frayed but quite functional on his feet. He wore a plain white shirt to his upper half with a slight v-line at the neck and suspenders. The younger of the pair wore similar clothes; only his trousers were black, as were his shoes.
Once the boxing for the wheel was in place and fastened, the wheel was made sure to spin without impediments, and they quickly moved over to the second rear wheel and replaced it in a much similar fashion. Only when the older man and younger did both would the elderly of the pair wipe his brow and give a breath out before nodding towards the wagon. “Alright, you can set ‘er down there.” Slowly, the wagon was lowered, careful of the new axle and wheels to ensure it could wear the weight of the emptied cart. When it was deemed entirely safe, the wagon was released, and both of the men moved around to the backside of the wagon and purveyed their thanks to someone.
Behind the wagon stood a nearly seven-foot-tall hulk of a man. For the moment, his biceps were relaxing from having lifted a wagon, as it seemed he had raised and held the wagon up by himself without help. “Thank ye for helpin’ out again, your Lordship.” The big blonde waved a hand and offered a contained chuckle as he turned, wiping his hands off with a couple of quick swiping pats to his palms and fingers.
“Do not mention it, Sers. You have been kind enough to me in the past. I would never think twice about helping someone who needs aid.”
Just about then, a woman of similar age to the older gentleman was dressed in more homely attire. Her brown dress had patches and an apron stained with green and brown spots, but she had the kindest face with the rosiest cheeks. ”Oh, Lord Edevane, you always show up and have the mightiest hands to help us poor souls.” Her husband nearly rolled his eyes hard enough for them to pop out of his head, and the Griscian laughed once more, flashing teeth with a charming smile.
“What can I say? Your family always has what I need; it is the freshest I have ever seen. I would never think of straying to anyone else ever again.”
The older woman let out a noise of surprise and whimsy, and her husband offered out his hand as did what would appear to be his son. ”Our gratitude again. We know we cannot offer you much, but…” Once Ford shook the man’s hand and then his son’s, he shook his head and regarded the three of them together.
“I am not interested in making a coin off of you. Coming across your family while I travel to Malevin is always a pleasure and brightens my day.”
Turning to the woman, who was handing over a giant bushel of something that she wrapped in what seemed to be butcher’s paper with twine tied around it, and a smaller bundle in a white cloth with a light green tie around it, Ford took the items from her and set them aside as he took her hand in his and the poor old woman blushed. The Griscian always found it comical when he received specific reactions, and the woman, loyal as can be to her husband, never failed to blush whenever Ford greeted her or bid her farewell. Taking her hand in his, he raised it to his lips as he knelt and kissed the back of her hand.
Giddy with excitement, she paused when she noticed a ring on a particular finger, and she gasped. Snatching her hand away from his, for an older woman, she was quick. Her hands slapped to his chiseled, beard-lined jawline and pulled him closer with surprising strength. The blonde’s brows rose in question, and she squidged his cheeks forward, forcing his lips to pucker out like a fish, and she leaned closer. Her husband immediately tried to move closer and remove her death grip on his face, and their son felt his heart sink entirely from his body.
”Is he treating you right? Does he take care of you? You are in no trouble after that business, right?”
In the background, as the older man tried to pull her off, Ford’s face remained softer, even smiling, as comical as it may have looked. ”Ge’off him! He’s a Lord, and you can’t just… You have your own ring! Look at that! It’s none of your business!”
“He is what has always been missing from my life. He completes me in ways I can not explain, and I assume he would say something like that about me instead. Something about saving one another. It’s really boring and dramatic.”
Ford felt her hands loosen in strength for a split second and lifted his own to take hers into them. It seemed enough to quell the woman’s sudden attack, and she nodded to him.
“A Kyng throwing a temper tantrum is nothing compared to what we can handle.”
Ford offered this above a whisper and stood up, releasing the woman’s hands.
”My apologies Lord Edevane. Please do–”
The Griscian offered a final chuckle and shook his head to the family patriarch.
“It was the most motherly thing that has happened to me since childhood. I would never dare to have someone so genuine held accountable for being human.”
Gathering the bushel and smaller bundle, he placed them in a cloth-draped half dome with two leather straps. Eventually, waving to the pair and their son as he began walking off into the farmlands of Westjorik, Ford was seemingly alone, save for the items he was carrying. Aside from that, he wore a collared shirt, half buttoned and light blue, with a pair of dark brown slacks and boots. The deep, blue-eyed blonde began traveling South, taking his time as he passed by various farmlands and fields of lavender. Which, if anyone was close enough to smell, was the larger bushel, with a sweeter aroma of chamomile as well.
The smile remained on his face even as he walked. He could still feel her hands on his face and the look of concern on her visage. Having seen many people, having seen many faces. That family, though, were souls he would never be able to forget.