Streets of Sunberth – Spring 3rd, Evening
Zandelia stalked the streets, her senses attuned to the ebb and flow of suspicion and rumor, gossip and intrigue. It had not been a fantastically successful day she had to admit to herself, her leads frittering away from her dampened fingers, the once fiery spark of her passion twisted into more the smouldering ashes of yesteryear’s fires. She hated how even the work she enjoyed had become tainted, hated herself more for the weaknesses that allowed such transformations. Still, it had not been a complete loss, her change of personality – for that is what it had been. She had lost the temerity of foolishness and instead cloaked herself with the doggedness of determination, the razor sharp teeth of tenacity. She was not as energetic an information gatherer now, but she was far more patient and systematic. She was having difficulty deciding which had been better as she splashed through the gutter water, a few unfortunate rats squashed underneath her boots.
Less success, but more truth. Which is better Zandelia? To know you know nothing, or to think you know something which is proven a lie? A pale reflection of reality she thought to herself as she let the last of the five notes she had accrued the day before slip into the puddles around her, there to disintegrate into nothingness.
“This town has been bled dry it seems. Nothing moves, nothing flows. What was here is now gone, taken by some invisible hand set against me. Bastard’s are better too” she kicked a torrent of water at a beggar whose anger at her temerity ceased as soon as he saw her weaponry. “But, one thing is true as my bones. Underdogs can always find somewhere soft to bite” she told herself with satisfaction. Fairytales were what kept her going at the moment, that and the fact she would not be killed off in everything but body. She refused.
She would have rather had her heart ceased first.
Still, she had not had high hopes. Her trails had been drunken rumors and hearsay, her lowest building blocks. A tip off that Daggerhand’s were moving valuables, a magic user she could have extorted for her silence, and so on. No, she had not expected much but had had nothing better to do with her time except drink, and drinking was too expensive these days – far too expensive. It was with a heavy sigh, her breath misting before her, that she cupped her hands to her mouth and blew some warmth into them. It was that action that shifted her hood just enough to see a head flitting back around a corner in anxiety. She kept still, her movements as natural as they had been moments before but her gaze was fixed upon the wall now. If she squinted her one remaining eye she could almost bring herself to believe there was a hint of cloak rippling out from its edge, the hint of another wander’s breath fragmenting into the air just after the horizon of brick and timber.
She tested the theory. Walking away now she carefully picked her way through the puddles so as to seem casual but make no sounds now connected with large movements of water – footsteps for example. Sure enough, a few moments later came the pitter patter of feet through the drainage.
Perhaps not so boring a night after all then Zandelia? she teased herself with as she increased her pace, rounded another corner…and waited.
The stalker approached, footsteps glaringly obvious and signaling two fatal character traits for Sunberth, impatience and inexperience. It was as he rounded the corner that he came face to face with Zandelia, eye glinting in the fading light and a smile upon her face to make the dead weep.
“Evening,” she hailed him with as she grabbed the front of his jerkin and pulled him forwards and sideways, slamming him into the wall with a crunch, “out for a stroll are we?” she asked stonily, smashing his back into the wall this time and rapping the back of their head smartly into the brick.
It was then that she got her first good look at is face, and how she could have wept.
Son of a… she thought to herself in mixed rage and surprise.