14th of Fall, 512AV
The horseman did not spur his mount. Instead the two beings ambled up the road north of Riverfall, the towering city with its gleaming marble falling behind them mile by mile. Neither looked back; both were too fixed on what lay ahead of them. And around them.
The Sea of Grass rose up like a carpet jungle on either side of the road, grasses taller than a man and thicker than the teeth on a fine comb obscuring vision past a few feet into the mass of foliage. The rider gripped his horse's rein with one hand, but kept his dominant one on the gladius at his belt. A rough-looking cloak covered his body, pulled tight against the decreasing temperature which was dropping day by day in a steady attempt to test his endurance.
It would have to try harder; Myrians did not break easily.
No noise from them save the steady clop-clop-clop of unshod feet over the ground. The "road" was not the stone and cobblestone affair of the city; merely hacked out of the grass at one point long ago and covered with gravel to stop it returning. Now so much of it had been flung to one side or washed away that the bare dirt was starting to show, wagon ruts gouged deep into the earth. But the ground is long-dead. Nothing would grow on it.
Birds twittered and called in the air. Other creatures barked and hissed, but for the moment did not go near the road. They knew, in that animal way, that the road meant men, and men meant iron and fire and pain. They left it alone... mostly.
The rider's ears pricked up. He could hear a new sound on the wind. Metal striking metal, but softly, as if wind chimes. He watched as the tree in the distance got closer and closer, coming into sharper relief. Had he not known otherwise, he would have thought there were willow wisps and dead branches hanging off it.
When he got closer, however...
A myriad of metal bondage hung from the limbs of the dead tree. Manacles and chains of all kind, most so old they were rusted dead and creaked as they swung in the breeze. Whenever the wind picked up they clashed into each other, sending up a sound like a hundred mournful bells.
Razkar looked at the fork in the road. One path was broader, better-tended, heading north-east deeper into the Sea. The other was narrower, tufts of yellowing grass poking up through the ground, leading towards a clump of trees that looked small from here but was probably a minor forest.
Smoke rose in thin wisps from deep inside it.
The Myrian smiled. He was on the right trail.
Since he talk with Kevlar at the Blue Bull, he had asked further questions, these ones more furtively. He knew that slavery was a sensitive subject for the Akalaks, and much as he respected their martial prowess, he despised their hypocrisy regarding it. There was a river of indentured servants flooding into their city, mostly female, and they had the gall to either ignore that fact or pretend they were above the morality of clapping another being in chains and bending them to their will.
Razkar did not understand it. Strength dictated morality, and the Akalaks were strong. So why hide your actions?
But he was not trying to find a philosophical argument in his questioning. The name Haev Provedan was promising, but only the first step he had to take. To actually find the man...
It took him several days, but eventually he got the rough directions. Rough, because they were so simple.Less than an hour riding north of Riverfall, turning down the right road at the Chained Tree, as one man called it, and then continue. That was it.
The Myrian steered his horse down the overgrown road and Mrrko began to clop-clop-clop as before, steady and certain and passive as always. Razkar kept one eye on the ground, wary of serpents or holes, but mostly he scanned the grass and growing number of trees around him.
Then, at the edge of the copse, his nostrils tingled. Tobacco. Sweat. Oil, the kind used on weapons. Stale beer and dried blood.
He smiled thinly and continued into the forest, road weaving and winding as it led ever inwards. Crunches and scrapes that could only be footfalls prickled at his ears from either side of the road now. He was not alone, and he got the impression he was being carefully watched as he approached the domain of Riverfall's slaver king.
Chimes later, he could hear more noise. Voices, so many and so far they were garbled, but growing in distinction. The smell of smoke and burning wood, the source of the wisps he had seen before, now curling and rising thicker and blacker than before. Even, if he looked carefully, the faint outlines of tents beyond the treeline...
"Halt."
He obeyed, much as it galled him to be spoken to so roughly. But, he reminded himself, he was not in Riverfall anymore. This was Provedan's domain, and his rule was law here, not the Council's. And as the figures emerged behind trees to stand around him, he saw that hired blades were his enforcement of choice.
Perfect.
Five of them. Only two wore matching armor, and cheaply made for the lot of them. Swords for most, a crossbow for one, a spear held by a taller man. All human... perhaps a couple were Dryska, by their skin tone and hair. The Myrian held up a placating hand and waited for the voice to speak again.
"What brings you here?"
"I look for Provedan." He directed those words to the man in the center, before Mrrko, a hard-faced man with a rough beard and the letters "T" and "R" branded above his eyebrows. "Want to work for him."
The leader glanced at the tattoos, the facial piercings, and most importantly, the weapons piled onto the strange foreigner, and cocked an eyebrow.
"Not a trader, huh?"
"No. Mercenary."
The leader chuckled, showing a mouth missing many teeth.
"Proper word for a savage, friend. Most here just call us "sellswords"."
Razkar shrugged, not looking to be dragged into some verbal sparring contest. He slid off his horse and stood before the man, careful to keep his hands in sight at all times.
"Not matter what word, thing is same. Fight for money. I fight for money. I was said to Provedan paid. Needed men. So I come."
He waited. He wanted to order these thugs to take him to their master and stop wasting his time. The sun is already high, obvious even through the sparse trees over them now, and he does not want to take that road back to Riverfall at dark. Not alone. So he waited, eyes cool and steady, Mrrko snuffling gently behind him.
Eventually, the leader jerks his head behind him, towards the camp.
"Follow us."
Razkar does.
The horseman did not spur his mount. Instead the two beings ambled up the road north of Riverfall, the towering city with its gleaming marble falling behind them mile by mile. Neither looked back; both were too fixed on what lay ahead of them. And around them.
The Sea of Grass rose up like a carpet jungle on either side of the road, grasses taller than a man and thicker than the teeth on a fine comb obscuring vision past a few feet into the mass of foliage. The rider gripped his horse's rein with one hand, but kept his dominant one on the gladius at his belt. A rough-looking cloak covered his body, pulled tight against the decreasing temperature which was dropping day by day in a steady attempt to test his endurance.
It would have to try harder; Myrians did not break easily.
No noise from them save the steady clop-clop-clop of unshod feet over the ground. The "road" was not the stone and cobblestone affair of the city; merely hacked out of the grass at one point long ago and covered with gravel to stop it returning. Now so much of it had been flung to one side or washed away that the bare dirt was starting to show, wagon ruts gouged deep into the earth. But the ground is long-dead. Nothing would grow on it.
Birds twittered and called in the air. Other creatures barked and hissed, but for the moment did not go near the road. They knew, in that animal way, that the road meant men, and men meant iron and fire and pain. They left it alone... mostly.
The rider's ears pricked up. He could hear a new sound on the wind. Metal striking metal, but softly, as if wind chimes. He watched as the tree in the distance got closer and closer, coming into sharper relief. Had he not known otherwise, he would have thought there were willow wisps and dead branches hanging off it.
When he got closer, however...
A myriad of metal bondage hung from the limbs of the dead tree. Manacles and chains of all kind, most so old they were rusted dead and creaked as they swung in the breeze. Whenever the wind picked up they clashed into each other, sending up a sound like a hundred mournful bells.
Razkar looked at the fork in the road. One path was broader, better-tended, heading north-east deeper into the Sea. The other was narrower, tufts of yellowing grass poking up through the ground, leading towards a clump of trees that looked small from here but was probably a minor forest.
Smoke rose in thin wisps from deep inside it.
The Myrian smiled. He was on the right trail.
Since he talk with Kevlar at the Blue Bull, he had asked further questions, these ones more furtively. He knew that slavery was a sensitive subject for the Akalaks, and much as he respected their martial prowess, he despised their hypocrisy regarding it. There was a river of indentured servants flooding into their city, mostly female, and they had the gall to either ignore that fact or pretend they were above the morality of clapping another being in chains and bending them to their will.
Razkar did not understand it. Strength dictated morality, and the Akalaks were strong. So why hide your actions?
But he was not trying to find a philosophical argument in his questioning. The name Haev Provedan was promising, but only the first step he had to take. To actually find the man...
It took him several days, but eventually he got the rough directions. Rough, because they were so simple.Less than an hour riding north of Riverfall, turning down the right road at the Chained Tree, as one man called it, and then continue. That was it.
The Myrian steered his horse down the overgrown road and Mrrko began to clop-clop-clop as before, steady and certain and passive as always. Razkar kept one eye on the ground, wary of serpents or holes, but mostly he scanned the grass and growing number of trees around him.
Then, at the edge of the copse, his nostrils tingled. Tobacco. Sweat. Oil, the kind used on weapons. Stale beer and dried blood.
He smiled thinly and continued into the forest, road weaving and winding as it led ever inwards. Crunches and scrapes that could only be footfalls prickled at his ears from either side of the road now. He was not alone, and he got the impression he was being carefully watched as he approached the domain of Riverfall's slaver king.
Chimes later, he could hear more noise. Voices, so many and so far they were garbled, but growing in distinction. The smell of smoke and burning wood, the source of the wisps he had seen before, now curling and rising thicker and blacker than before. Even, if he looked carefully, the faint outlines of tents beyond the treeline...
"Halt."
He obeyed, much as it galled him to be spoken to so roughly. But, he reminded himself, he was not in Riverfall anymore. This was Provedan's domain, and his rule was law here, not the Council's. And as the figures emerged behind trees to stand around him, he saw that hired blades were his enforcement of choice.
Perfect.
Five of them. Only two wore matching armor, and cheaply made for the lot of them. Swords for most, a crossbow for one, a spear held by a taller man. All human... perhaps a couple were Dryska, by their skin tone and hair. The Myrian held up a placating hand and waited for the voice to speak again.
"What brings you here?"
"I look for Provedan." He directed those words to the man in the center, before Mrrko, a hard-faced man with a rough beard and the letters "T" and "R" branded above his eyebrows. "Want to work for him."
The leader glanced at the tattoos, the facial piercings, and most importantly, the weapons piled onto the strange foreigner, and cocked an eyebrow.
"Not a trader, huh?"
"No. Mercenary."
The leader chuckled, showing a mouth missing many teeth.
"Proper word for a savage, friend. Most here just call us "sellswords"."
Razkar shrugged, not looking to be dragged into some verbal sparring contest. He slid off his horse and stood before the man, careful to keep his hands in sight at all times.
"Not matter what word, thing is same. Fight for money. I fight for money. I was said to Provedan paid. Needed men. So I come."
He waited. He wanted to order these thugs to take him to their master and stop wasting his time. The sun is already high, obvious even through the sparse trees over them now, and he does not want to take that road back to Riverfall at dark. Not alone. So he waited, eyes cool and steady, Mrrko snuffling gently behind him.
Eventually, the leader jerks his head behind him, towards the camp.
"Follow us."
Razkar does.