We've been in Glasgow 3 and a half days now. On the first morning we found the first jeweler and negotiated the sale of the emeralds I had brought along, then gone to the port to seek a ship to bring us to Ireland. We had found the SweetSilver and made provisions to make passage on her when she left port in 4 days time.
After leaving the docks satisfied with the SweetSilver and Captain Methany, we stopped in a public house called The Three Feathers for a nice lunch. I had the Shepherd's Pie, and cea had a Ploughman's, a plate of cold meats and cheeses. We enjoyed sitting in front of the fire in the pub, just talking about the upcoming trip. I tried to reassure her that the passage across the channel would be uneventful in a ship the size of the SweetSilver. I knew that storms could come down from the North Sea with little warning, but I saw no need to worry her with such.
When the serving lass had asked us for the fifth time if there was anything else that we might require, we decided that she must want to clear the table and wanted us to either pay for something else or clear out. We chose the latter, and gathered our belongings and headed out into the afternoon hustle and bustle of Glasgow. I answered cea's unasked question and said, "No, you were never that impatient when serving at home in MacLaaran." She just smiled up at me and took hold of my arm as we walked towards the second jeweler.
It seemed to take longer than I had thought it would to locate the second jeweler. The shoppe was tucked down a side alley, dimly lit even in the afternoon light. The houses overhung the tiny alley so that not much natural light was able to filter down onto the grey cobblestones. cea clung tighter to my arm as we approached the door, and she whispered to me, "I don't like this place very much." I tried to calm her fears with a squeeze of her hand on my arm. I told her that it would be alright. I had been in places a lot darker than this before. She didn't look very convinced as we opened the door to the shoppe and a bell attached to the door rang... a black cat scampered across our path and out the open door. Again, cea squeezed my arm tighter. I patted her hand lightly and told her quietly that I didn't believe in any of those omens.
We appeared to be alone in the tiny establishment, but there were several fine looking pieces of jewelery on an assortment of headless busts behind the very old and worn wooden counter. This place lacked a lot of the polish of the first jeweler, and I was about to question whether we should even bother with this particular establishment when my eye caught sight of a ring in a small display case on a shelf behind the counter. Leaning across the counter to look closer it appeared to be a silver ring with a blue saphire set in it. The shoppe was dark owing to the lack of light from the alley outside, yet the blue stone seemed to reflect something. It didn't glow, just looked as if it were reflecting the noonday sun, which obviously it couldn't do inside this shoppe. At that moment a small man with a grey beard appeared behind us, and asked "Can I help you?" cea gave and audible "EEEEP!" and gripped my arm all the more tightly... I had to admit that I was a little startled myself, but smiling I told him that I was interested in talking with the owner.
The small man informed me that he was the proprietor of this shoppe, and asked again if he could help us. He asked if we were looking for an engagement ring perhaps? He had obviously looked at cea's fingers and seen no band, although I was sure his eyes took in the silver chain about her waist with the alternating rubies and opals, and no doubt the silver collar at her throat. cea smiled at his question and looked up into my eyes with the same question unasked but definitely going through her mind.
I informed him that I had something that I was looking to sell in fact. That brought a questioning look to his countenance and I assured him that it was all proper. I set the satchel on the old oak counter, and withdrew a smaller silver silk bag. The small man approached, now curious at what I might have in the bag. I emptied the contents onto the counter and he smiled. There on the counter were 6 medium sized stones, each one about the size of a small crab-apple. Each stone colorless, and clear, but rough, obviously uncut and unpolished. He asked if he might examine one, and I nodded agreement. Taking a small glass, like a tiny telescope, from his vest pocket he placed it over his right eye and held the stone before it, turning to face an oil lamp that was burning at the end of the counter. He made several satisfactory noises, though none of them were real words. Turning back to me and removing the glass from his eye he asked if the other stones were in similar condition. I assured him that they were all from the same source. At this he abruptly said, "I think this calls for some tea." and placing the stone from his hand back on the counter, he turned on his heel and disappeared through a set of curtains into the back of the shoppe.
cea looked at me and whispered, "tea?" I shrugged and placed the 6 stones back into the silver bag, and the bag back into the satchel. At that moment the small man appeared back through the curtains carrying a silver tray on which was a silver tea set, three china cups, and a plate of small scones. cea looked at me then back at the man obviously wondering if he kept tea in the back for all his customers. I had another idea running through my mind at the moment. The small man motioned us over to a small table and four chairs at the side of the shoppe. He set the tray down on the table. cea immediately started to reach for the set to serve, but I grabbed her arm. We were his guests and he wanted to play host. "Sit, sit" he said as he prepared the cups. "My dear, how do you take your tea?" cea answered "lemon, and milk please". "Ahh, yes" he said, and handed her the cup of tea on the far left, just as she had asked for it. "And you, good Sir?" I replied "Milk and honey, please", and he immediately handed me the cup on the right, taking the cup in the middle for himself. He sat himself down in one of the two remaining chairs and sipped his tea before continuing.
He then said, "So. A gentleman and his servant..." he looked at cea but continued, "...but surely more than just a servant as she clings to you as more than a Master, come to my shoppe this day. You come with 6 very nice diamonds which you intend to sell, or... perhaps something else?" I asked him about the silver ring with the saphire in it. He replied, "Ahhhhhh.... yes.... I wondered when you would get to that." Putting his teacup down he crossed the shoppe and withdrew the ring from its display case, bringing it across to us. "Perhaps you'd like to have a closer look at it?" he said with a bit of mirth in his eyes. I nodded and he placed it into my outstretched palm. I looked carefully at the runes embedded on the outer surface of the ring. Again the blue stone seems to reflect a light that was not present in the room. I turned it up, and read an inscription from the inner edge. The small man watched me closely as I did this, a small smile on his lips when I looked back to him... he knew that I could read the inscription.
I offered one of the diamonds for the ring. The small man sipped his tea and asked for three. I knew my offer of one was too low, and he knew that his suggestion of three was too high. We agreed on two diamonds for the ring, all the while cea looking at me incredulously. The small man then said, "Well that will leave you just 4 diamonds." I agreed and asked for 1000 gold sovereigns each. He looked disconcerted at that, and told me that he couldn't come up with that much, though he agreed that was a fair sum. He indicated that he could purchase 2 of the remaining 4 diamonds at that price. I asked how much time he would need, and he indicated 2 days. That worked well with our plans for leaving and I withdrew two of the diamonds from the silver bag inside my satchel and handed them to him while I kept the silver ring with the blue saphire. We finished our tea, thanked him for his hospitality, and left his shoppe, making our way out to the wider and lighter streets of Glasgow.
On the streets cea's questions started again... Yes I knew what I was doing... No I was not going to explain why I traded two "huge" (her word) diamonds for one silly ring... Yes I realized that 2000 gold sovereigns was a lot of money... Yes I had a plan for carrying all that money... No I did not think that I needed those guards of Tris's back now.
We walked the streets of Glasgow back to the Inn while her questions continued. The only way I managed to make them stop was to put my lips onto hers as soon as we were back in our room at the Inn. Then the questions stopped...