Season of Winter, Day 31, AV 512
The Bronze Woods
Where there is gold, there is blood. Whether it is gold made by honest hands working themselves to the bone to make ends meet, or by the bloodied sword taking the spoils of conquest from the broken bodies of an adversary. Or, by theft, usury, and robbery. But it is all the same, isn't it? A bandit may kill for coin, but a merchant may achieve the same goal without loss of life. Does that make them any less wicked? You can kill and rob a man once, but you can cheat him again and again, can't you?
It was that kind of thinking that made John not mind the slaughter. He didn't mind anyways, of course, but that was how he justified it. That was how he convinced the poor fools who aided him to waylay the small caravan that now lay in ruins on the road coming from Sunberth. It was a small procession, one wagon and a few horsemen for guards. The group had ambushed the caravan, killing the guards and the driver, taking their ill-gotten gains to Syliras to be sold. Amongst the many illicit things that tend to come from Sunberth, the rag tag group that John had pulled together found many things that could be bartered and sold in a legitimate market. John Godfrey had split the goods equally amongst his men, and bid them take it to market, then meet again at a later date to divide the coin equally.
“It'll just be easier this way,” He told them, “Easier to count, and divide, you know?” He said, blowing smoke as he drew on the pipe he smoked after the bloodshed. The poor fools went along with it. The drugs were not sold, of course, John kept them for himself after telling the group they were worthless. The wretches would have been caught, and then all the money would be gone as the Knights began to ask where the drugs came from. Then the whole operation would just go up in smoke as the Sunberth caravan's ruins were traced and John Godfrey and his men were discovered to be those guilty of the murder, and theft.
“We'll meet in the Bronze Woods in three days,” John told them, his three stooges, his three henchmen, “Three days, and be there, or I'll find you. I'll find you, and you'll wish you'd never left Syliras.”
So, here, on the agreed date, the three men came and waited for John Godfrey, the man who had turned them to banditry. Of course, the prospect of gold was on everyone's minds, and the subject quickly turned to the haul they would divide.
“How much do you reckon?” One man asked his fellow, a tall lad. He was young and tall with no beard.
“I had to carry mine in a large bag,” he said, “and it's rather heavy. Heavier than any coin bag I've carried before. How about you?” Both men looked to the third, who held up a bag even larger that jingled with coin.
“I must have a silver tongue,” he said grinning. He was short and fat, and walked with a limp slowly as a cripple. He carried a spear for a walking stick, and surely that was what helped him survive the attack on the caravan, “I've never seen so much gold in me life!”
They laughed like fools, excited and happy. They could be wealthy after this. These men were poor, workers who slaved away for others praying to be able to keep a roof over their heads. They were no fighters, but simple men. Good men. Men who greeted the sun and fought to make their way. Men who resorted to banditry to provide for themselves and their loved ones. Not for malice, like John Godfrey.
John Godfrey knew this, and he watched them. He lurked nearby, watching. He had picked these men specifically for this reason. They wouldn't think things most bandits would think of. Things like “One less hand means the others fill more.” One less share to be shared.
John saw they had brought the money, and grinned a wicked grin, a grin that would sour milk. They wouldn't know what hit them. He rose up and walked towards them, holding his arms out in greeting.
“Greetings friends!” He called to them, “Fortune finds us today!”
The bandits came to greet him, and as they came to him, thinking themselves safe from harm, John struck like a viper. He snatched a knife from the belt of the tall beardless lad who came to embrace him, and drove it into his guts, up under his ribs up to the hilt. Blood poured out over his hands and the lad fell backwards, gripping the knife in shock and surprise that it had happened. John drew them in with promises of riches and happiness, not knives.
The second man recoiled, stepping backwards as John drew his bastard sword. The short fat man came to his feet with his spear, and tried to skewer John before he could kill any more, but found his spear kicked to the side, and a sword ripping through his neck and throat, spraying his life blood to the grass.
The third man tripped, and fell on his haunches, holding his hands up to beg for mercy like it would work. In a mighty downward chop, the poor man's head was split in two. The limp body fell backwards on now bloody grass. The tall lad still twitched and groaned, clutching the knife in his bloody hands. The wound would not likely be fatal. But that's not what John wanted. John wanted no witnesses. So, he plunged the sword through the man's neck, watching the blood come from the lad's mouth and throat. He left the sword as he went to collect the gold they had brought, singing a song quietly to himself as he picked up the bags of coin, and whatever else might be valuable they have on their person.
“Gold and blood, blood and gold,
Silver and sword, sword is sold,
Money is merry, merry is me,
Made myself wealthy, the bandits three,”
He ended the verse with a laugh, opening the bag in his hand to see the shine in the sunlight. He bent low to gather another bag of gold, taking his time. He figured himself alone in the mountains that day. There was no reason for him to be tracked, everything had been done in a way that could not be followed, as far as he knew. But he never figured he may be found by happenstance. He hummed the tune to himself, laughing occasionally. He was oblivious, and vulnerable. He didn't expect a thing to go wrong. A single. Damn. Thing.