Mike S Posted February 29, 2012 Posted February 29, 2012 Greetings fellow travelers of Historica, Recently I had the pleasure of meeting a Grelf and thinking it might interest you, I have recounted the experience here. Upon hearing that a Grelf had arrived in Barqa, I seized the opportunity and hurriedly sent a page to invite the Grelf to dine with me for lunch. I eagerly looked forward to my first conversation with a Grelf and hoped to learn a bit more about them. The Grelf's name was Yesil. We dined in a favorite coffe house I like to frequent, one of those outdoor ones that have begun to spring up all across the growing city of Barqa. We greeted each other as is the custom and sat at our prepared table for the meal. "I have begun writing a book on the inhabitants and locals of the greater Siccus Badlands," I began. "I was hoping that you could educate me on the history of Grelves so that I may describe your people more accurately in my book." "History of what Grelf wish you, for me, you to educate?" Yesil asked. "Well, I suppose your history would be a great place to start, if you do not mind," I replied. "Yesil mind, do not," Yesil stated. "Ask away and answer, Yesil shall." "Splendid!" The conversation was going well, I thought to myself. We were interupted by the coffee house host bringing us drinks. After the host had left us, I continued. "Let us start at the beginning. Where were you born?" "Matter does it, where born I was? Matters only that born I was and continue to live, I do," Yesil answered. I could not tell if my question had offended him for his tone and facial expression remained the same. "That it matters, is not the reason I asked." I subconsciously began to assemble my sentences like Yesil and realized it only after I had spoken. I did not want to appear condescending so I made a conscious effort to speak as I normally do. "I only asked because I am sure my readers will be curious to know where Grelves originate from. However, if you do not wish to talk about your childhood, I will not press you." "Childhood of mine, far in the past it is. Far in the past, best it is," he replied. "Perhaps then you would be inclined to share with me the secret of how Grelves are all so wealthy?" I plied a slightly different topic. "A secret it is not, and wonder do I as to why asked, is such a question. Long lives have Grelves lived. Logical it only is, that accumulated wealth have we." Once again Yesil's response was not what I had expected. I took a bite of food and washed it down with a swig of raspberry lemongrass juice, buying myself time to analyze the conversation and think of a line of conversation that would extract some information from Yesil without making him uncomfortable. Suddenly I realized that his is reply to my last question gave me a lead to a new question. "You say all you Grelves have lived long lives. May I ask how many years you have lived?" "Years, Grelves count do not, but when born I was, the Siccus Badlands, fields of grass and forest were." His answer was again vague but I had finally gained a new piece of information about the Grelves. They were old, very old indeed. And so this thought led me to my next question. "Having lived so long, you must have many generations of grandchildren," I queried. "Families, Grelves have not," was his reply but to my delight he continued without me having to ply him with another question. "For women Grelves, no more are." I choked on my food. I had been trying to avoid unpleasant topics yet I had inadvertently broached a topic that I was sure near the top of Yesil's list of unpleasant topics. I knew that for now I should end my quest into the Grelven past and turn the conversation to a lighter topic of the present day but I could not help myself. I had to ask one more question. "Do you mean that in all of Historica there is not one Grelven woman left?" I asked. "The day the fields of grass and forest to sand and dust were turned, lost all Grelven women were," was his reply. I quickly brought the conversation to the present times. For the remainder of our meal, we discussed the various Guilds of Historica, the growth of Barqa, and various other affairs currently taking place in Historica. We parted on a pleasant note and I assured Yesil that when my castle was completed, I would always have a room ready for him for whenever his travels brought him to Barqa. And so ended my interview with a Grelf Quote
mephistopheles Posted February 29, 2012 Posted February 29, 2012 I love the roofing you did there! The entire scene has really a great atmosphere. I instantly remembered a part of a story I read. Nice work! Quote
de Gothia Posted February 29, 2012 Posted February 29, 2012 Wow, such a clean build! The photo is excellent and that roof is brilliant! Love the curved side to the left! Great job! Quote
robuko Posted February 29, 2012 Posted February 29, 2012 A insightful discussion this was. Much impressed we are. Quote
Skalldyr Posted February 29, 2012 Posted February 29, 2012 The first picture looks like an optical illusion because of the roof. Very nice! Quote
Gabe Posted February 29, 2012 Posted February 29, 2012 The first picture looks like an optical illusion because of the roof. Very nice! Agreed, the stacked tiles in the roof and the angle of the shot is mindbending. Lovely build and the conversation is fun to read. Perhaps the Grelven women ran off with the Entwives? Quote
CptMugwash Posted February 29, 2012 Posted February 29, 2012 Fantastic moc and great story, love it Quote
NiceMarmot Posted February 29, 2012 Posted February 29, 2012 Agreed, the stacked tiles in the roof and the angle of the shot is mindbending. Lovely build and the conversation is fun to read. Perhaps the Grelven women ran off with the Entwives? Yes, I agree about the roof. First thing I thought was -- jeez that must have been a long tedious build placing all those tiles like that! Really nice clean design. Although I must say that the interview was not terribly informative! Those grelves sure play things close to the chest. Maybe you can discover some more information about them hidden in ancient documents in the Petraea Library. Quote
Mike S Posted February 29, 2012 Author Posted February 29, 2012 I love the roofing you did there! The entire scene has really a great atmosphere. I instantly remembered a part of a story I read. Nice work! Thanks! I'm curious as to what story? NiceMarmot Yes, I agree about the roof. First thing I thought was -- jeez that must have been a long tedious build placing all those tiles like that!Really nice clean design. Although I must say that the interview was not terribly informative! Those grelves sure play things close to the chest. Maybe you can discover some more information about them hidden in ancient documents in the Petraea Library. Thanks! It really didn't take as long as I thought it would to line the tiles up... And those Grelves, yes they are not very informative. Perhaps they may open up a bit if they get to know you beter... we will see. CptMugwash Fantastic moc and great story, love it Glad you liked it! Gabe Agreed, the stacked tiles in the roof and the angle of the shot is mindbending. Lovely build and the conversation is fun to read. Perhaps the Grelven women ran off with the Entwives? Thanks! Yes, the Entwives influenced my story a bit. However, (spoiler alert) there is more hope for the Grelven women than the Entwives. Skalldyr The first picture looks like an optical illusion because of the roof. Very nice! Thanks! I originally had a flat tiled roof but wasn't satisfied. As I was running out of time because I wanted to post this yesterday, I happened to open a BL order and found the tiles I had ordered on a whim to bulk up the order. I may experiment and flip the tiles over and see how that looks as the roof is supposed to be a rain catcher- note the big barrel in the left corner. robuko A insightful discussion this was. Much impressed we are. Thanks robuko! de Gothia Wow, such a clean build! The photo is excellent and that roof is brilliant! Love the curved side to the left! Great job! Thanks! I'm still working on my photo skills. Quote
Jakon Posted February 29, 2012 Posted February 29, 2012 Very nice story Mikel! I've been watching your stories since you joined, and this one is just great, allthough, he doesn't tell very much. Quote
Mike S Posted March 1, 2012 Author Posted March 1, 2012 Very nice story Mikel! I've been watching your stories since you joined, and this one is just great, allthough, he doesn't tell very much. Thanks Jakon! Maybe next time I shall offer him a little wine in hopes that he will open up a bit more. Not sure if that works on Grelves though... Quote
NiceMarmot Posted March 1, 2012 Posted March 1, 2012 Thanks Jakon! Maybe next time I shall offer him a little wine in hopes that he will open up a bit more. Not sure if that works on Grelves though... I've heard that sour milk does the job on Grelves. I'm dating myself with that one; there was some old TV show or movie where aliens arrive on earth and they get drunk on sour milk. Can't remember what it was... Quote
Mike S Posted March 1, 2012 Author Posted March 1, 2012 (edited) I've heard that sour milk does the job on Grelves. I'm dating myself with that one; there was some old TV show or movie where aliens arrive on earth and they get drunk on sour milk. Can't remember what it was... Sounds like something to try... But I'm not sure that offering sour milk to a guest would score me any favor points. Maybe I could use camel's milk as a test first to see how they react to the taste? EDIT: Could a mod possibly fix my post Title? I had a bad headache when I posted it so I didn't type it exactly the way I wanted to. It was supposed to read: A Coffee House in Barqa - Kaliphlin Free Build An interview with a Grelf Also I am still not sure how to use multi quote to reply... Edited March 1, 2012 by Mikel Kalores Quote
Kayne Posted March 2, 2012 Posted March 2, 2012 (edited) This is very cool Mikel, I started laughing immediately when I read the way Yesil speaks like another little green man I've seen! Edited March 2, 2012 by Kayne Quote
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