This was to be a cautious experiment.
He still didn't know how to talk too well, but wanted to give it a try. It was made further difficult by the necessity to concentrate upon retaining himself in the shape of a human. It was so much easier to simply look like a dog.
Moving towards the man behind the counter, the boy's baggy clothes hanging just barely onto his form, the skinny boy tapped on the stand of the merchant, who was currently moving an urn to the side.
The man put down the urn in a random position and piped up. "Yes, what do you need?"
The boy waved at him, and looked around to find something he wanted. Most of the items the man had were pieces of pottery all stacked upon each other in various positions and shapes. Some of them were skinny and tall, others fat and short, or any combination in between. One of them looked rather nice- it was short, only a little fat. It had a pleasant little lid, and was only partially baked such that it retained its form very well and yet was very soft to the touch- completely smooth all over. It was beautiful, came with a similar lid and was likely the merchant's most prized work.
The merchant swatted at the boy's hand and missed as the boy picked it up to look at it.
"You can't afford that! Put it down." The merchant was fuming slightly now, his impatience with the boy already hitting near the top.
The silver-haired teen ignored the man and looked at the urn. It would work wonderfully.
"What can I give to get?" asked the boy.
The merchant balked. "You can't even speak right," he said to insult the boy. "That urn is worth far more than you'll know your whole life, probably."
James shrugged and deposited the pile of gleaming, golden coins upon the table, then turned and promptly left with the urn. The merchant's anger melted and gave way to the delight of greed. He could buy a horse with this much money, let alone dozens of copies of that urn.
He made a mental note to try to make more of those urns again in the future.
The boy, on the other hand, made a mental note to never shop with such judgmental people again. He didn't like being treated like the wet scrapings off a boot.