34th to 39th of Fall, 512AV
"There are a hundred of you. There are seventeen of us. Some of you may be thinkin' that means you can rush us an' run. You would be wrong. My boys'll slaughter anyone I point them at... or just 'cause they're bored. Do not give us an excuse. But more importantly... we are in the Sea of Grass. And we shall not be on the roads. I am your only chance to leave it safely."
They watched the human hold up a piece of paper, smiling thinly as he did.
"This is a safe route through the Sea of Grass, given to me by a Webber. How d'you think we came across your little caravan in the first place, eh?"
Then he shrugged and pocketed the paper, really playing into his role, smile smiling into sadism as he crossed his arms.
"But, perhaps you think you stand a better chance. Against the lions, and glassbeaks, and wolves, and serpents, and raiders, and sink holes, and... well... think I've made my point."
Razkar stood behind Manfred as he made his speech to their new property. Well, Haev's property, technically, but they weren't at Rattling Chains yet. The remaining sellswords are in a loose ring around the mess of chained slaves in the middle of them, weapons still in hand, eyes watchful.
Burned Man and Razkar flanked Manfred. Razkar guessed because they looked the most intimidating. Well, whatever worked...
Manfred turned to Burned Man and said, "The bodies been stripped?"
The sellsword nodded and thumbed over his shoulder to the trio of mercenaries now weighted down with rucksacks.
"Enough food to last until we get home, if we ration it."
"Weapons?"
"Just what we could carry. Swords, axes, bows, the usual."
"Money?"
Burned Man made a face and shrugged. Oddly enough, Razkar understood the cynical gesture. Weapons and food were one thing, mainly because the looting sellsword couldn't really hide them. But could you trust one to turn over every miza once he finished riffling a body? Of course not.
"A handful of gold, some silver, mostly copper." He handed over a bag to Manfred. "Who knows, eh?"
"Indeed..."
Then his gaze went to the Myrian. He was still coated with blood and showed no desire to wash it off. Four fresh scalps were tucked into his loincloth, still dripping and livid redish-pink. Yellow muscles clung to some of them. A kukri was stuffed down it, too, but he overlooked that. The savage had earned it.
He looked up and into his eyes, above a crimson-coated mouth.
"You be trusted to control yourself around 'em on the way home?" Fury erupted briefly in the savage's eyes, like a lightning strike on a far off horizon. He put a hand up. "Had to ask, mate."
"I be fine."
"OK... time to get moving."
All was movement, and Razkar was part of it. The sellswords cajoled and threatened and pushed and prodded the slaves to their feet. Manfred consulted his infallible parchment, looked to the sun for a bearing and directions... then pointed outwards at the endless grass.
"Follow."
Everyone did. The procession of slaves trudged behind him, all bound together with clanking metal. Razkar smirked to himself as he walked to the right of them. Even if they did want to run, how far would they get, all chained together? The mercenaries around them would not care to kill a few just to make a point. Unarmed, with their kin and children to worry about, and then, even if they did escape, trapped on the most hostile grasslands in their world...
They would behave, Razkar thought, as he walked with ax and gladius in hand. And if not, well... he still had a job to do.
The grasslands swallowed them without so much as a belch. Three dozen bodies, already stiffening, were left behind. Weapons gone. Horses milling around confused, or long since bolted. Flies already arriving in droves, word spreading fast about the massive new buffet opening. The mud was turgid with red, blackening, hardening as it coagulated. Limbs were strewn, and some of the bodies had scalps missing.
One had both legs missing. Razkar was not one to waste free meat.
Barely half an hour had passed since Provedan's sellswords fell upon the caravan. Now it was over. The message had been sent.
"There are a hundred of you. There are seventeen of us. Some of you may be thinkin' that means you can rush us an' run. You would be wrong. My boys'll slaughter anyone I point them at... or just 'cause they're bored. Do not give us an excuse. But more importantly... we are in the Sea of Grass. And we shall not be on the roads. I am your only chance to leave it safely."
They watched the human hold up a piece of paper, smiling thinly as he did.
"This is a safe route through the Sea of Grass, given to me by a Webber. How d'you think we came across your little caravan in the first place, eh?"
Then he shrugged and pocketed the paper, really playing into his role, smile smiling into sadism as he crossed his arms.
"But, perhaps you think you stand a better chance. Against the lions, and glassbeaks, and wolves, and serpents, and raiders, and sink holes, and... well... think I've made my point."
Razkar stood behind Manfred as he made his speech to their new property. Well, Haev's property, technically, but they weren't at Rattling Chains yet. The remaining sellswords are in a loose ring around the mess of chained slaves in the middle of them, weapons still in hand, eyes watchful.
Burned Man and Razkar flanked Manfred. Razkar guessed because they looked the most intimidating. Well, whatever worked...
Manfred turned to Burned Man and said, "The bodies been stripped?"
The sellsword nodded and thumbed over his shoulder to the trio of mercenaries now weighted down with rucksacks.
"Enough food to last until we get home, if we ration it."
"Weapons?"
"Just what we could carry. Swords, axes, bows, the usual."
"Money?"
Burned Man made a face and shrugged. Oddly enough, Razkar understood the cynical gesture. Weapons and food were one thing, mainly because the looting sellsword couldn't really hide them. But could you trust one to turn over every miza once he finished riffling a body? Of course not.
"A handful of gold, some silver, mostly copper." He handed over a bag to Manfred. "Who knows, eh?"
"Indeed..."
Then his gaze went to the Myrian. He was still coated with blood and showed no desire to wash it off. Four fresh scalps were tucked into his loincloth, still dripping and livid redish-pink. Yellow muscles clung to some of them. A kukri was stuffed down it, too, but he overlooked that. The savage had earned it.
He looked up and into his eyes, above a crimson-coated mouth.
"You be trusted to control yourself around 'em on the way home?" Fury erupted briefly in the savage's eyes, like a lightning strike on a far off horizon. He put a hand up. "Had to ask, mate."
"I be fine."
"OK... time to get moving."
All was movement, and Razkar was part of it. The sellswords cajoled and threatened and pushed and prodded the slaves to their feet. Manfred consulted his infallible parchment, looked to the sun for a bearing and directions... then pointed outwards at the endless grass.
"Follow."
Everyone did. The procession of slaves trudged behind him, all bound together with clanking metal. Razkar smirked to himself as he walked to the right of them. Even if they did want to run, how far would they get, all chained together? The mercenaries around them would not care to kill a few just to make a point. Unarmed, with their kin and children to worry about, and then, even if they did escape, trapped on the most hostile grasslands in their world...
They would behave, Razkar thought, as he walked with ax and gladius in hand. And if not, well... he still had a job to do.
The grasslands swallowed them without so much as a belch. Three dozen bodies, already stiffening, were left behind. Weapons gone. Horses milling around confused, or long since bolted. Flies already arriving in droves, word spreading fast about the massive new buffet opening. The mud was turgid with red, blackening, hardening as it coagulated. Limbs were strewn, and some of the bodies had scalps missing.
One had both legs missing. Razkar was not one to waste free meat.
Barely half an hour had passed since Provedan's sellswords fell upon the caravan. Now it was over. The message had been sent.