Fall 35, 512 AV
He haunted the alleys with muscle memory, moving without knowing. The Pig’s Foot Tavern reared like a beast in frozen surprise, regarding him with rheumy recognition against the pallid sky. Once, he had smiled at the door, a ritual born of habit for a doe-eyed girl who lingered near the window. She’d been a tavern wench then, bound for Zeltiva. She sought opportunity, fat on with the stories of callous-skinned sailors and the blue of Zeltivan sails. She claimed to be from Syliras, a maiden fleeing arranged marriage to a knight whom she did not love. Once upon a time, he would have nodded with her, smiled where he was supposed to smile, frowned where he was supposed to frown. She smelled of the allies, her skin was smeared with dirt. She smiled with a missing tooth, misadventure with an abusive father. The girl had never seen Syliras, its soaring buttresses, the massive gate. She was born in Suberth and dreamed of being more than she was.
And every night he spoke to her, she ended the evening in the arms of Mok, cooing against hard muscles as Wrenmae kept the watch. Then, he did not hate her for it. It was enough to know that his power could claim her whenever he wanted. Back then, the unspent power made much of his inaction seem justified. The Sunberthians howled for mage-blood…there was a time when bodies swung from gallows every few days, a sign around their twisted neck. MAGE, painted in tar. Sunberth was never surprising, not if you understood the nature of fear.
Stepping through the doors, he took a seat at the bar. Soured hops, sweat, and dried blood filled the tavern with a caul of nostalgia. The bartender glanced at Wrenmae sidelong, cleaning out a mug and filling it with grog. He pushed the clay mug across the table to bounce off of Wrenmae’s elbow, nearly tipping. Catching it, Wren raised an eyebrow, but the barkeep was already stepping over, pausing only to fill another mug before coming to rest in front of the hypnotist.
“Been awhile, Wrenmae,” The bartender said with a notable drawl, “Took you for a dead man.”
“Do I look so bad?” Wren joked, shaking his head, “No, left the streets for a spell. I hear the Crimson Edge never came back.”
“Nope,” The bartender confirmed with a firm shake of his head, “Not a one. Word was you were running the gang before they vanished. Couldn’t keep them together?”
“My head wasn’t in it. Too few to hold the territory we had and most jumped ship.”
“Sailor phrase. Tried your luck in Zeltiva?”
“Picked it up off of that?”
“I’m in the business of knowing my customers. You learn a thing or two from guessing year by year.”
Wren nodded again, bathing the back of his throat in the watered grog. The bar stool next to him held vigil over a minor dent in the wood surface beside his perspiring drink. Once that dent had been a head, smashed down and cracking against the weight of the half-myrian above it. The blood had long since been cleaned, but a memorial of the violence remained. In a way, the Crimson Edge was as immortal to Sunberth as any of the other gangs. Those who had painted their symbols on sagging houses, left mars of once violence on the surface of the city…these men and women, though nameless in all but the most conflicted memory, retained a sense of belonging to a town that thrived off its lack of order.
“How long are you staying?”
“I’m not. I have a boat out on the morning tide tomorrow.”
“Back to Zeltiva?”
“Sahova.”
A pause. Looking over the table at him, the bartender frowned. “Not a place the living usually go.”
“Circumstances too tempting to pass.”
“Suite yourself. I’d leave sooner, rather than later. Word is the Daggerhands are looking for you.”
“I have no argument with the Dagger Hands, what does Robern want with me?”
In response, the bartender pointed toward the poster hanging near the door. Clustered there were a nest of old and torn paper, ink likenesses scrawled across them with neither care nor skill. One caught his eye. In what looked like tar, the name Wrenmae, was scribed under a poor interpretation of him.
The reward was not listed.
“I heard your boss crossed them. Daggerhands aren’t patient folk nor the forgiving type. They took your friend off the streets earlier, Mok, and I expect the next eyes to pass through my door to be looking for you.”
“What?” Wrenmae looked up sharply, nostalgia banished with the mention of a single syllable. “Mok?”
“Aye,” the bartender nodded gravely, “They took him some time ago, Robern’s called for the lot of you to be cleaned off the streets.”
“Where?”
Looking up from the bar, he nodded to the space behind Wren.
“I expect you’re about to find out.”
He haunted the alleys with muscle memory, moving without knowing. The Pig’s Foot Tavern reared like a beast in frozen surprise, regarding him with rheumy recognition against the pallid sky. Once, he had smiled at the door, a ritual born of habit for a doe-eyed girl who lingered near the window. She’d been a tavern wench then, bound for Zeltiva. She sought opportunity, fat on with the stories of callous-skinned sailors and the blue of Zeltivan sails. She claimed to be from Syliras, a maiden fleeing arranged marriage to a knight whom she did not love. Once upon a time, he would have nodded with her, smiled where he was supposed to smile, frowned where he was supposed to frown. She smelled of the allies, her skin was smeared with dirt. She smiled with a missing tooth, misadventure with an abusive father. The girl had never seen Syliras, its soaring buttresses, the massive gate. She was born in Suberth and dreamed of being more than she was.
And every night he spoke to her, she ended the evening in the arms of Mok, cooing against hard muscles as Wrenmae kept the watch. Then, he did not hate her for it. It was enough to know that his power could claim her whenever he wanted. Back then, the unspent power made much of his inaction seem justified. The Sunberthians howled for mage-blood…there was a time when bodies swung from gallows every few days, a sign around their twisted neck. MAGE, painted in tar. Sunberth was never surprising, not if you understood the nature of fear.
Stepping through the doors, he took a seat at the bar. Soured hops, sweat, and dried blood filled the tavern with a caul of nostalgia. The bartender glanced at Wrenmae sidelong, cleaning out a mug and filling it with grog. He pushed the clay mug across the table to bounce off of Wrenmae’s elbow, nearly tipping. Catching it, Wren raised an eyebrow, but the barkeep was already stepping over, pausing only to fill another mug before coming to rest in front of the hypnotist.
“Been awhile, Wrenmae,” The bartender said with a notable drawl, “Took you for a dead man.”
“Do I look so bad?” Wren joked, shaking his head, “No, left the streets for a spell. I hear the Crimson Edge never came back.”
“Nope,” The bartender confirmed with a firm shake of his head, “Not a one. Word was you were running the gang before they vanished. Couldn’t keep them together?”
“My head wasn’t in it. Too few to hold the territory we had and most jumped ship.”
“Sailor phrase. Tried your luck in Zeltiva?”
“Picked it up off of that?”
“I’m in the business of knowing my customers. You learn a thing or two from guessing year by year.”
Wren nodded again, bathing the back of his throat in the watered grog. The bar stool next to him held vigil over a minor dent in the wood surface beside his perspiring drink. Once that dent had been a head, smashed down and cracking against the weight of the half-myrian above it. The blood had long since been cleaned, but a memorial of the violence remained. In a way, the Crimson Edge was as immortal to Sunberth as any of the other gangs. Those who had painted their symbols on sagging houses, left mars of once violence on the surface of the city…these men and women, though nameless in all but the most conflicted memory, retained a sense of belonging to a town that thrived off its lack of order.
“How long are you staying?”
“I’m not. I have a boat out on the morning tide tomorrow.”
“Back to Zeltiva?”
“Sahova.”
A pause. Looking over the table at him, the bartender frowned. “Not a place the living usually go.”
“Circumstances too tempting to pass.”
“Suite yourself. I’d leave sooner, rather than later. Word is the Daggerhands are looking for you.”
“I have no argument with the Dagger Hands, what does Robern want with me?”
In response, the bartender pointed toward the poster hanging near the door. Clustered there were a nest of old and torn paper, ink likenesses scrawled across them with neither care nor skill. One caught his eye. In what looked like tar, the name Wrenmae, was scribed under a poor interpretation of him.
The reward was not listed.
“I heard your boss crossed them. Daggerhands aren’t patient folk nor the forgiving type. They took your friend off the streets earlier, Mok, and I expect the next eyes to pass through my door to be looking for you.”
“What?” Wrenmae looked up sharply, nostalgia banished with the mention of a single syllable. “Mok?”
“Aye,” the bartender nodded gravely, “They took him some time ago, Robern’s called for the lot of you to be cleaned off the streets.”
“Where?”
Looking up from the bar, he nodded to the space behind Wren.
“I expect you’re about to find out.”