27 Vhalar 716
It was no secret that the Dust Quarter tended to get the rough end of the deal, and as the poorest part of the city, it hadn't seen nearly enough builders after the shadow attacks with most of the construction companies taking their business to areas that could pay more. Wendell had seen two men walk off the job in the last three days in favour of the working in the Glass Quarter. Money, however, did not drive the man who worked because he liked to stay busy and build things with his hands. He made plenty of gold working at The Hound which allowed him to take on less hours in his second job without feeling too much of a sting on his pocket.“The coin is just too good, Wendy, you can't expect us to stay here,” Mothet shrugged. “Why do you want to help these good for nothing bums anyway? You think any of them would lift a finger for you?”
“Come on Moth, I can't finish a roof by myself.”
“I'm sorry, Wen, maybe once the work runs out in the Glass Quarter.”
He watched the man walk away towards the gates that led out of the Dust Quarter and threw his hammer down from the roof. What was the point. A woman appeared from inside the house and held out a glass of water to him as he climbed down the ladder. “Everything okay?”
“No,” Wendell grumbled, he always had been a softie when it came to the underdogs. “My team hasn't shown up for work, there goes the last of it,” he pointed before thanking the woman.
“Is there anything I could do to help?”
Wendell wiped his mouth with the back of his hand and raised it to scratch his head. “Not unless you're strong enough to hand those tiles up to me,” he gestured to the wooden roof tiles.
“If it gets me a roof,” she smiled.
Wendell went back up the ladder and waited while the woman passed up a handful of tiles, lifting what she could under one arm to climb the ladder while he held it sturdy from the top. He started at the edge of the roof near the bottom, working his way up so that the tiles overlapped and would keep out rainwater. Wendell looked around for his hammer, having forgotten already that he had thrown it down after his last coworker had walked off the job.
“Excuse me,” he called out to a passerby, “would you mind throwing that hammer up to me?”


