Crime wasn't a huge problem in Zeltiva. At least, Tock didn't tend to see it day by day. Sure, there were occasional muggings, like in any city. There was probably a murder or two here and there, though word of it never reached Tock's ears. It was quite different from being back home (was it even 'home' anymore?) in Sunberth. Back there, you couldn't go a day without hearing about a murder or something worse. Tock had simply gotten used to it, as a little girl, when she would walk down the street to pick up her Da's hooch and have to be stepping around a body or something. Lots of times it could have just been a drunkard lying facedown in the gutter, but she had never been fool enough to stop and find out.
For a long time, her Sunberth upbringing had led her to mind her own business and not get involved in other people's trouble. She still believed that it was best to leave everyone else alone, and have them leave her alone. At least, she
told herself that was what she believed. Her actions to date were starting to contradict that view.
Such as how much time she had been spending at the infirmary lately. Mostly she was there visiting Mikey, her 'little wizard.' She had met him a few weeks ago, when she was
putting on a puppet show. She hated kids. She
really hated kids. She never wanted to get knocked up and spew one out. But despite this, she kept going back to see the little monster.
It was probably because he was so damn
evil. Every time she left, he looked up at her with these big brown eyes and this quivering lip and asked her, "When are you gonna come see me again?" She swore he had to be using some kind of hypnotism on her, because it never failed to bring this horrible tightness to her chest and make her promise to come back again real soon.
If the nurses there were right, she wouldn't be visiting him much longer. Which for some reason only made her keep coming back more often.
Tonight, she had stopped by to see the manipulative little bastard, and brought Bitey along to show him. Mikey was fascinated with her magic, and kept making her promise that she would teach him magic as soon as he got better. It was a promise she truly wanted to keep, but she knew she wouldn't get to. So instead she was trying to fill his life with as much magic as possible. She'd snuck Bitey into the infirmary in her backpack, since she doubted the nurses would be pleased with her bringing the eighteen inch long wooden spider in there. They made a fuss when she brought her magic
puppets, as if
they could hurt anyone (okay, they
could, but no one needed to know that).
"Is he gonna bite me?" Mikey asked, eagerly yet fearfully reaching out to pet the adorable abomination of nature.
"Not if'n yer gentle," she assured him. She had learned in her studies of spiders, before she made Bitey, that they rarely bit anyone unless provoked. Bitey himself never bit anyone unless he felt threatened.
She let the sick little tyke play with Bitey a bit longer, until she could tell he was getting too tired. Automatons never got tired. That was part of why she preferred them.
"Gotta get goin'," she told Mikey. "I done gots work in the mornin', an' I's bloody tired..." She faked a yawn. Whenever she tried to tell Mikey that HE needed to rest, he tried to act brave and pretend he felt fine. The little lie of claiming she was the tired one made it easier.
"When are you--?" he asked.
"Tomorrow," she promised, cutting him off before he could finish the evil guilt trip routine. "Awright?"
He nodded, and Tock scooped Bitey up and slid him into her backpack. He struggled a bit, until she made shushing noises to soothe him and calm him down. She turned to leave, and then heard Mikey's strained voice behind her ask, "Tock?"
She stopped, her back to him, and closed her eyes. She knew that tone. He was going to ask her to do something she didn't want to do, and she was going to say yes anyway, because that was how the evil little twerp worked.
When she didn't answer after a moment, he asked again, "Tock?"
"Aye," she replied, reluctantly turning around.
"Can you maybe bring my Uncle to see me?" he asked, giving her those
damned big eyes.
She frowned and asked, "Ain't 'e been ta see ya?" In the past few weeks she'd learned that Mikey's parents were dead, and his Uncle had been raising him.
"Not for awhile," he replied. "He works a lot... And I think he was getting sick, too. Last time he was here..." he trailed off, but the look on his face said it all. Tock knew that look. She'd worn it herself when her Granddad got sick, right before she herself had gotten ill and slipped into a coma. She'd never seen her Granddad again...
With a deep, aching sigh she said, "Aye, I'll get 'im. Where's 'e live...?"
* * *
Some time later, she was pounding her fist on the door of a house in the poorer part of town. No one was answering, and it had just started to rain. "Oy, ain't nobody 'ome, o' what?" she shouted through the door. "C'mon, open 'er up! It's gettin' cold out 'ere!" The day had been hot, but the rainy night was starting to bring a chill.
"I'll warm ya up, Red..." a voice said from behind her. Tock turned around, wearing a glare and putting a hand on her dagger. She recognized the tone the stranger was using. She'd heard many such things in Sunberth, over the years. This was the first time she'd had this kind of encounter in Zeltiva, though.
There were four men. All bigger than her, and quite dangerous looking. They'd have fit in quite well in the streets of Sunberth. One of them was even
missing an ear.
"What's wrong, Red," the big, earless man asked. "Don't recognize me?" Her eyes narrowed. She recognized that voice, and not just because of the crude tone. But it
couldn't be. Four years later... though Sunberth wasn't that far from Zeltiva. Tock had taken a roundabout route to get here, spending time in Mura, Syliras, and Ravok before finally coming here. But surely people came straight from Sunberth to Zeltiva all the time...
"Petch off, Corwin," she told him,, pulling Grippy from his holster. "Ya don't know who yer messin' wit' now..." She wasn't the same scared little girl she'd been four years ago.
"Now 'at's no way ta treat an old friend, Min," he said with a sneer. Tock scowled at his use of her old name. Almost no one here in Zeltiva knew it.
She didn't care that there were four of them. She didn't care what they wanted from her (though the leering stares gave her a good idea what they had in mind). She didn't care what Corwin was doing in Zeltiva after all these years. She just pulled her dagger out.
And the four men pulled out blades and axes. Corwin sneered at her and said, "If ya don't fight, Min, I promise it won't 'urt as much. But I's takin' 'at kiss ya owes me..." He grabbed himself lewdly, indicating which part if himself he intended to 'kiss' her with.