birds flying high, you know how I feel
sun in the sky, you know how I feel
sun in the sky, you know how I feel
Things have not gone as planned for you.
But then again, things haven't really been going as planned for anyone, have they? Lots of travelers have been waylaid here in Ok'Kotoll, and sure, you're running low on money and really miss your family and your aunt's house where you've been staying smells like korok dung and your prosthetic really needs a tune up, but plenty of people have it worse. The travel restrictions will lift soon, and you'll go home, and this will all be a funny story you tell about the time you thought you could make it in the capitol. Very silly, ha ha, who wants another drink?
That's what you think about as you sit at your stall, putting the final touches on a music box and humming tunelessly as you do. You're dressed as usual: a leather apron over a plaid shirt, sleeves rolled up to your elbows. Your metal left hand is disguised in a leather glove; your right is bare, nimble fingers swapping tools as you peer into the mechanisms that make the mechanical magic work.
The stall itself is in a corner of the metalworking district of the market, space you fought hard hard for and are rather inordinately proud of. The counter is cluttered with odds and ends, mostly metal figurines made animate by clever clockwork. It's a humble thing but brightly decorated, painted by your nephews and crowned with a hand-carved sign which reads:
and beneath it,
(So far today nobody has, but hey, it's only noon).
But then again, things haven't really been going as planned for anyone, have they? Lots of travelers have been waylaid here in Ok'Kotoll, and sure, you're running low on money and really miss your family and your aunt's house where you've been staying smells like korok dung and your prosthetic really needs a tune up, but plenty of people have it worse. The travel restrictions will lift soon, and you'll go home, and this will all be a funny story you tell about the time you thought you could make it in the capitol. Very silly, ha ha, who wants another drink?
That's what you think about as you sit at your stall, putting the final touches on a music box and humming tunelessly as you do. You're dressed as usual: a leather apron over a plaid shirt, sleeves rolled up to your elbows. Your metal left hand is disguised in a leather glove; your right is bare, nimble fingers swapping tools as you peer into the mechanisms that make the mechanical magic work.
The stall itself is in a corner of the metalworking district of the market, space you fought hard hard for and are rather inordinately proud of. The counter is cluttered with odds and ends, mostly metal figurines made animate by clever clockwork. It's a humble thing but brightly decorated, painted by your nephews and crowned with a hand-carved sign which reads:
Zero's Fun & Useful Items
and beneath it,
come by and ask us about our wares!
(So far today nobody has, but hey, it's only noon).
Zephyr
breeze driftin' on by, you know how I feel