85th Day of Summer
The Docks
23rd Bell
The Docks
23rd Bell
He'd been here before. Looking out at a city cloaked in darkness yet lit at every corner and tower by torches, some small as his fit, some blazing as big as church bells. Of course, it was a different city. The Myrian reflected briefly that while both were cities, both had commerce and museums and culture, and even the architecture was similar in places, Riverfall and Syliras were worlds apart in so many ways.
He sighed, and it felt for a moment that his breath might fog. Summer was dying a slow death; humidity was lessening, not plummeting, and the cold winds from the north were coming in quick, half-prepared bursts, not great gales that were icy promises of freezing Winter. But even his dusky body, born and bred in stifling year-round humidity, knew change was coming.
Razkar shifted position slightly. The feeling... that was the same. Knowing things were going to change and evolve and move on. Not just scenery this time; he wasn't leaving Riverfall under a cloud, all but exiled by the Council as an outlaw, murderer and amoral mercenary. Quite the opposite: he was doing his job.
This time his job just happened to end in Zeltiva. And that, in its way, was just scenery, too.
The real meat of the issue rolled over in their bed, sleeping face turned to where he gazed up at the Stormhold. Razkar looked upon hr and his lips twisted into a disbelieving half-smile. Their bed. The term was in his mind without any hesitation. The ship itself was as much a home to him now as his lodgings in Taloba had been, and Ayatah's hut in-
The young male winced, eyes cast down and shoulders hunched as if some pain in his chest was burning through his breast. Goddess, he didn't need to be churning this over and over. What was the point? His path was set and he would walk it, but...
Gods, he was tired of these rampaging thoughts that yapped and clamored for his attention, somewhere between ecstatic hamsters and squealing children. All so insistent and unanswerable that finally his mind started to shut down. Thoughts and fears dulled and only one, grey truth remained.
What if I am making a huge mistake? What if I am harming one I... I...
Razkar sighed, and her eyes fluttered open. She saw him, arms crossed, eyes focused intently on nothing, future fears and past promises gnawing at one she thought indestructible.
He snorted. It was easier selling those petching weapons.
Seventy-five sunrises previously
The Great Bazaar
The Great Bazaar
"So... you found them?"
"Yes."
A brief pause that hinted the speaker thought he was having his leg pulled... no, apparently not. Well, fine, next question.
"In the middle of the Bronze Woods?"
"Yes."
"... and the horse?"
Nag whinnied from behind the stoic Myrian, as if to back up his story. Razkar himself just shrugged, as oblivious to the disbelieving questions from the merchant as he was to the rest of the swirling humanity carrying here and there around him and his steed, the vast patchwork of commerce, bartering, haggling, cheap trickery and expensive tastes that made up the Great Bazaar.
Ruprekt crossed his skinny arms over his chest and gave the Myrian his best skeptical eyebrow. It was a good eyebrow; oft-practiced, well-maintained and sharp, like the hundreds of steel and iron and bronze items hanging and scattered around him. Ruprekt was known as The Man To See in the Bazaar if you were talking weapons. Buying or selling. Sellswords, travelers, militia and even Knights came to him, and he'd been running this patch for years.
And he knew horseshit when it flew in his ears.
"Nothing else you want to tell me about them?"
"What you need to know?"
Now a scowl followed the eyebrow as Ruprekt upped his game. Razkar assumed he was having some kind of facial spasm and politely let him continue. Goddess, he hoped he wouldn't collapse; he had a busy day planned.
"Myrian... I don't mean to sully anyone's word," The human merchant began in a tone dripping with one who believes nothing his vocal chords produce prior to- "-but, I find it hard to believe that on a hunting trip, you just happened to come across a whole arsenal of weapons..."
He swept his arm down to take in the bedroll that Razkar had laid out for him. All neatly arrayed and cleaned, of course, the Myrian as fastidious about his martial tools as any warrior.
Two bastard swords, side by side, dwarfing the others swords on the mat. Three short swords that were like his gladius in some ways but not nearly as balanced, not as sharp and with different hilts. A heavy mace, two handed and with a spiked ball at the end of it. A crossbow that the jungle-dweller seemed disdainful of for some reason and a cutlass that made him smile, though Ruprekt couldn't guess why.
Maybe it reminds him of someone?
The weapons merchant shook his head and got it back in the game, arm jerking back up to take the grey-and-black dappled equine patiently waiting behind his master.
"... and a horse?!"
Razkar blinked, and gave nothing away. Not that Ruprekt could tell, anyway. How did one even begin to read that kind of visage? A face like a hawk, angular and focused intently on whatever those black eyes gazed upon. The human had haggled and browbeaten some tough cookies in his time - those more likely to use his wares tend to make good customers, after all - but he couldn't look into those pitch orbs for too long.
All he saw was his own face, and for some reason, it only reminded him just how weak he looked sometimes...
Not to mention the piercings, bone shards shoved through tanned skin. Scars that curled and slashed at odd points on his face, one of them nearly encircling his eye. And the inkwork, that damn tattoo that... that he was sure was staring at him-
"Have seen more strange things than bunch of swords on horse."
Ruprekt shook his head again. "Without an owner?"
"I am owner."
"Really?"
"Yes."
"... I don't suppose you kept a receipt when you bought them, did you?"
Razkar gave a tiny, polite smile that bordered on sarcastic, but was firmly held back from that particular limelight. He needed the human, for now.
"No. Not come with note, either."
Ruprekt's hand reached up to scratch behind his thick black hair as his grimaced. They were good quality weapons, he had to admit. Nothing overly special, but they were eight items less for him to purchase from elsewhere and, well... he knew he'd get a good price. The Myrian had somply come to his stall, waited his turn and unfurled the bedroll under his arm with a flourish.
"How much you give for all?"
That was all he'd said, and he repeated those words once he'd finished his explanation. Ruprekt snorted at that idea. Explanation? Of what, exactly? How did one explain a blatant lie, anyway? But this one... he wouldn't break. Ruprekt only had to look over his bare chest, festooned with blades and leather and more ink and more scars...
Heard about this one. "The Myrian". That's all they call him. Don't suppose there's two of him, after all.
"Well..." he said eventually, and Razkar's lips quirked, but he didn't show any of his satisfaction. He was dealing with a merchant, and a barbarian. The man would attempt to swindle him as a matter of course. "... you understand that for weapons you just 'found', the price won't be as high as new ones."
"How much?"
"Well... all told... twenty mizas."
Razkar snorted softly, eyebrows rising softly and a look on his face that said he may be a savage, but who the petch did Ruprekt think he was fooling with that?
"I think sixty gold be more... accurate."
"Big word... but a big price, I think. Call it thirty and we're good."
"Call it forty and we better."
Ruprekt lipped his lips and made a clucking noise in the back of his throat with his tongue and gods, hy did they have to play so with the fucking savage? Razkar knew that in Riverfall, triple figures would be tossed at him for this haul. But in Syliras? Here he had to... make do.
Avaricious eyes snapped to the other weapon on Razkar's belt. Well, one of them, anyway. The gladius and the hand ax, even Ruprekt could see they weren't for sale. Bone hilts and runes etched in blood... no, a savage like this would sooner cut off a limb.
But there was another blade there. Shorter, maybe a foot long at the blade with a hilt perhaps a third that. Inlaid with... was that gold filigree? It looked like it, and Razkar felt a bubble of bile rumble in his stomach as he saw a familiar gleam enter the merchant's eyes.
"Well... we could call it... fifty-five, if you threw in that little sticker you've-"
"No." Razkar said shortly, and wrapped his hand around the hilt of the wakizashi to drive the point home. "That is gift for other."
"Oh, I see, I see..." Disappointment flared, replaced the greed and Razkar would rather have seen that leaden emotion that avarice. "In that case... forty. For the lot. And the bedroll."
Razkar nodded his head but didn't roll everything back up until the forty shiny discs were safe and secure in his purse. Then he took a hold of Nag and asked where the best place would be to get rid of the bloody thing.
Present Day
11th Bell
11th Bell
Windmount and Dyers couldn't be more different, and not just because only the former was open to the sky. As Razkar journeyed from the Docks, then into the Stormhold proper and walked through the Dyers District, he could feel the age of the fortress-city under his feet. It wasn't just the vibrations from the Great Bazaar that ticked the feet through his sandals, either.
It was the stones they waked on. Only in Taloba had he seen older, their colors bleached by age, cracks made lifetimes before filled with mud and dust and garbage, cracked again by freezing and heating as the seasons changed. The buildings were built close together, nearly on top of each other, speaking to the warrior of history passing by and crushing the old, replacing it with the new... only for that to turn decrepit and find itself, completely without warning, the object of some enterprising young architect who really needed that lot.
Razkar shook his head. He really was taking this philosophy nonsense too far. Edreina did enjoy talking with him so, but these... suppositions? They were starting to distract him, and now he was waxing lyrical about fucking cobblestones.
"S'what happens when you let a female in," he muttered to himself, blinking back the approaching light, two bells under the endless roof of the Stormhold enough to make any man a mole, "One moment you're yer own man, beholden to none, and the next? Poetic and flowery and getting teary over a street."
The Myrian chuckled and a passing fishwife gave him a queer look. He mentally shrugged: he'd had worse. Besides, nothing would move the smile from his face now that he-
-stepped out into the Windmount Districts, and acre upon acre of green fields greeted him. A half-dozen or so buildings marred the landscape, true, but after an hour feeling like a rat in a turgid, stinking labyrinth of sweaty humans... that was almost like stepping back into the jungle.
Razkar chuckled like a boy as he bent down... and felt the tickle of hundreds of blades of grass on the palm of his hand. He tore a handful free and lifted it to his face... closed his eyes and smelled life and dirt and horse shit and... he smiled.
Better than sweat and quiet desperation... fuck, I'm doing it again!
The Myrian began to stride over to the main building, where he could already hear the multitude of neighing horses and see the lithe, muscled bipeds grazing peacefully below them.
He wondered if Serena had been able to sell his horse...
Receipt40GM from the same of all Razkar's Looted Weapons (see his CS), except for the Wakizashi (25% of the what the Price List quotes, according to Perplexity's grading