Jonas and Alarion, Darius, and All The Gang
Jonas and Alarion
Mrs. Lyman graciously curtseys to Jonas and Alarion, and says, "I am in your debt, good sirs! I know that you will do all that is in your power to bring my Krado home to me."
Darius
Bocephus accepts the defiled crumpet greedily. "Wow, thanks, Mr. Constable Sir! Mmmmmm, I especially like that special sauce you added to that last one, it was even better that the first! Just the right hint of saltiness!" Bocephus winks indulgently at Darius.
All
Now the majority of the Constables pass out of the Lyman home. You see Darius conferring with Bocephus off to one side, and the grubby goblin has a worshipful expression on his dirty face as he is hungrily devouring the last of one of Mrs. Lyman's delicious crumpets. You also catch a glimpse of Andrew nearby in a field inspecting something, and then he straightens to his full height and heads back over toward the group. (ooc: Scotley still has a little unfinished business to complete with Andrew and his search, but I am assuming that Andrew will be rejoining the rest of you shortly.) You decide to just walk to Lyman's cartography shop, since it is, for Lauralie Summerhome anyway, such a pleasant day! You can't even see your breath when you exhale! You have a pleasant short walk to the shop, and you enjoy the quiet of the neighborhood that is quite rare in much of the 14th. With that, you arrive back outside of "FINDERS, KEEPERS," Krado Lyman's map-making establishment.
There is a man sweeping his walk outside of the bootmaker's shop next door to Krado's place. He sees your approach, and Moru Sen takes the opportunity to question him briefly: "Tell me, if you please, Sir, what do you know of the erstwhile cartographer in the shop adjacent to yours?" "Well," says the gentleman, "I know Krado only in passing, which is to say that I don't really know him at all. He is a very quiet sort, he keeps to himself mostly, but he has, recently, been more talkative. I think he has been working on some new project that interested him very much. He was pretty cagey about the whole thing, wouldn't tell me much about it, other than to say that he couldn't believe someone hadn't thought of it before."