And finally, the smallest—but most intimate—section of their stall was the toy and paraphernalia store led by Luis.
Most of the clients, naturally, were kids.
Although levels of aborigines were higher, especially in cities, people generally started to 'fight outside the walls' after the age of 12. So the children they saw now were all in their level 1s or, at most, 2s, a consistent level among children unless they came from those big families.
This meant that the laughter and smiles were genuinely from children. What was even lovelier was that there were children who had trained early, but they were pulled back to what acting genuinely like a child by their products.
It gave this stall much more meaning.
Furthermore, everything looked so fun that a lot of grown men and women acted like they were children as well.