Tamago listens to Hekasu's storytelling, spellbound.
After the ronin has finished, he bows again - if anything even deeper this time. "Thank you for the story, Lord Hekasu!" he says, promising to look after your horses well. can With that, the boy turns back to the stables and start furiously hunting through boxes, hoof picks and various other farrier's tools raining over his shoulder as he searches.
As Hekasu joins the others to enter the inn, he can see Tamago straighten up triumphantly, with a set of brushes for the horses' manes in his hand - before his shoulders slump as he sees the trail of debris on the floor behind him. Stuffing the brushes in his tunic pocket, he starts tidying up the tools, apologising for the delay over the stable door to Wildfire, who is watching him curiously.
The attendant introduces herself as Hatsue, welcomes you to Pleasant Mooring Inn, bowing again. She asks how she can help, and if the samurai are planning to eat at the inn, stay overnight, or both.
Inside, the inn feels surprisingly open.
The door emerges into one of the internal courtyards, which is floored with lacquered decking and covered with tables, those in the centre of the courtyard rather than its edges set below small awnings in case of bad weather.
Three sides of the courtyard - those on the external walls - have simple-looking but well maintained rooms running off the courtyard, or off a balcony on the floor above. The opposite side - the central part of the figure '8' building, which doesn't touch the external walls, is built on a rather grander scale. The ground floor closest to you looks to contain an office, a small shrine, and some small rooms of unidentifiable purpose, whilst the other is a well-appointed waiting room around a painted wooden staircase to the first floor. The whole of this first floor section has paper walls, painted and carved balconies and tapestries running along the wall facing the courtyard, suggesting it is suites intended for higher-ranking samurai.
The courtyard itself hardly packed but there are a dozen or so people in evidence, mostly peasants but with a handful of samurai in evidence as well.
Two of them, one a woman wearing a simple but well made kimono of reddish brown, and the other a man wearing the deep blood-red and elegant half-mask of a Scorpion courtier sit, debating with one another and a frustrated-looking merchant. The remainder are each sat alone at their respective tables, reading or enjoying their food. Two of them wear Crane colours whilst a third wears the deeper blue of the Crab. There are also several groups of prosperous-looking heimin, though not all have the look you associate with merchants. One table tucked discretely at the back has a full family sat at it, with children of varying ages sat between their parents and making a credible attempt on a huge bowl of smoked fish broth.