The sign was crooked. Sun-bleached. Half a corner torn off like so goat thought it was edible.
It was nailed to the post at the crossroad, just above head height, so I had to stand on my tiptoes to read it. Sweat already pricking at my neck. Not from the heat.
From the words.
Big block letters again. My kind. That was the only rcy.
I squinted. Licked my lips. Traced the first one.
“Duh…” I whispered. “D…A…N…”
A long pause.
“Densers,” I mumbled.
“Dancers,” said a passing farr without even slowing down.
I scowled after him. “Was getting there.”
Refocused. Next line.
“Wa…waaaa…” I hissed through my teeth. “Want…ed. Dancers wanted.”
My finger slid down the board. Next line. Smaller letters. Less rcy.
“Foorr… eve…even…”
“Evenings,” ca a voice.
I didn’t even turn. “If one more peasant corrects , I swear I’ll bite.”
“Calm down,” the dragon said, appearing beside like a judgntal stormcloud. “I was just helping.”
“You can help by letting finish before my pride dies of blood loss.”
He tilted his head. “You were on...?”
I jabbed the word. “Evenings. Got it. Evenings and—what’s that? Dan…c…ing and drink…servin’?”
“Serving,” he said.
“Sa difference,” I muttered. “And what’s that squiggly one?”
He leaned in. “Auditions.”
I blinked. “Oh. I thought that said ‘addictions.’”
“Understandable,” he said dryly. “Given your history.”
I stuck my tongue out at him and went back to the last line.
“In…in…quire…”
“Inquire,” he said, rubbing his snout. “At the inn.”
“I was going to say that.”
“You said ‘in-quar.’”
“I was going to fix it!”
He gave a long look.
I stared back up at the sign. Read the whole thing again, under my breath, slowly, lips moving, finger tracing every letter like it owed money.
Dancers wanted. Evenings. Dancing and drink serving. Inquire at the inn.
“I could do that,” I muttered.
The dragon raised a brow. “You planning to audition with or without the ability to read your own job description?”
I flipped my hair. “I can read enough. Letters. Curves. Intent. And I’ve got the hips for it.”
He snorted. “Just don’t sign the contract backwards this ti.”
“I like my S backwards,” I said proudly. “It’s my signature.”
“It’s a cri against orthography.”
“It’s flair,” I sniffed.
I gave the signpost a little pat. “Besides. Who needs perfect reading when you’ve got perfect form?”
Then I turned and strutted toward the inn.
Backwards S and all.
User Comments
0 comments from readers