The party takes some time to enjoy the fair, each member gravitating to some aspect that particularly appeals to them.
Zangua and Mordred head toward the cookfires, buying bread and roasted meat and sweet wine to start with. There are, as well, tarts and cakes made with tree fruits and squashes and nuts, golden ales, and so on. The townsfolk are friendly and in good spirits, introducing themselves freely, offering welcome to Folderey (the town's name), and showing no particular fear of Mordred, although it's hard to say if his pretense of being costumed is the reason for that.
Domarc soon finds himself joining a trio of musicians: a man with a long salt-and-pepper beard who plays a low-tone bone flute, a dwarf woman (not of the humanoid race, but a human of unusually short stature) with an elaborate timbrel, and a young, long-haired man with a lyre. Domarc finds that he improvises quite well and quite naturally with them, though he knows none of the tunes in their repertoire, and is given much free food and drink from appreciative fairgoers between songs.
Leth spends some time eating with Zangua and Mordred and watching Domarc play, then wanders over to the vendor stalls where various crafts and trinkets and goods are being sold. There's a trembling man with gray-hued skin selling fancy, colorful felt caps, an old woman and her three large adult sons whose shelves are filled with hundreds upon hundreds of clay idols of all the myriad gods of Bload, a perfumer who offers to create a unique signature scent for Leth, never to be smelled anywhere else in all the Werld, for a mere five pieces of silver, a maker of tin and copper housewares who sings as he hammers his wares into shape, and much more.
Felor, meanwhile, finds himself drawn to the wooden figure. A child offers him a small round pumpkin and tells him to throw it into the figure's head. Felor tosses it up and lands it right on top, knocking a few other gourds loose to fall into the hay below. The child is terribly excited at Felor's success, jumping and cheering loudly; when he calms down he explains that Felor will have good fortune in the next year. "If you're a child, it means you'll grow a full inch," he says solemnly. "If you're a man grown, it means you'll have a baby. If you're old, it means you get another year of life. So you're going to have a baby next year because you got a punkin in the Bridegroom of Semla's head."
Would anybody like to take any specific actions, ask any questions, or investigate any other parts of the fair?