by Nayt on Wed Mar 11, 2009 4:48 pm
Tabris was extraordinarily tactful and charismatic--and that most of all, too. He spoke with confidence and serene joy, professional yet casual enough to smile. Genuinely, perhaps? It seemed so. He wasn't elated or jumping for joy, nothing of the sort, just casually smiling as he spoke, and never once allowing his tone to depress into something sobering. It was all hopeful, yet never too hopeful to allow anyone to label an unrealistic optimist. No, he came off as a realistic optimist. He wasn't setting his hopes too high, but he had hopes to set--realistic, believable hopes, ideas that actually could become a reality, ideas that were for the best of the town.
No expansion was needed, not territorially. But people could be happier if they didn't have to work fifty hours a week to support themselves. The working class was happy as is, but they could be happier, and Tabris appealed to them. If there was foreign traffic that sought the goods their little Paradise had to offer, then shopkeepers and working class employees wouldn't have to stress themselves so much. An economic influx could allow people to make more without destroying the economy--and they weren't such a massive colony of people that they actually had to worry about inflation, and that, Tabris had insisted quite respectfully, was why they didn't really need to expand the borders of their town.
But his ideas were only part of his speech. It was a means of letting the town know that he was here to do good things. That, of course, was a means to emphasize the introduction: he was young, yes. He was very young, barely over twenty years old. He was young and he had good, feasible ideas. Tabris had admitted that he was filling big shoes, but he openly hoped to serve the town as well as the former mayor, and regardless of how obviously he seemed, even those that would've saw him as just a foreigner or a freak for how he appeared were convinced, or at least close to convinced, that Tabris could do well.
A foreigner, after all, already had foreign relations.
"Thank you for your time," Tabris concluded at the end of his speech, "I would like to hold a public forum within the next couple of days--to personally meet all of you, individually, I hope! But for now, I'd like not to occupy too much of your time during this day of festivities."
And with that, he bowed his head ever so slightly and stepped down, down to join the former mayor and his daughter, who may have quite possibly been amongst the few not convinced about Tabris--perhaps, perhaps. No one could tell everything about a person, after all.
Serj coughed awkwardly. He wasn't listening to Tabris's speech in the slightest. As a militiaman, he'd already heard it. They were long since informed about this change in mayors, had already met Tabris, and heard everything he had to say. The militia now had the purpose of keeping the peace. If something went down that required militia support, like Celestine making too much of a scene, or anyone in the crowd making a drunken scene at all, they were there to put it down. That was the drawback to being in the militia around this time of the year. They didn't participate in the festivities; they had to be watching at all times.
Earlier, Serj had just taken a smoke break. Oddly enough, the cigarette he was smoking was still perfectly fine. It hadn't suffered any nicotine loss; it hadn't even diminished in length or required any semblance of ash reduction, and truth be told, it had almost been ten minutes since he lit the thing.
"You know, I wasn't going to say it earlier," Serj remarked, presumably speaking to no one in particular--no one but himself? At least to those that weren't listening to him, that is . . . "But eavesdropping is pretty rude. And it's especially disconcerting to be followed."
Of course, the person he wanted to hear it would--because he knew well enough that only one other person was actually listening to him. Everyone else around him had disregarded it, treating his statement as just another murmur in a crowd full of people whispering amongst themselves.