Day 86, Season of Summer, 513 AV
The evening was drawing a bit close but in spite of all her running as a courier and in spite of her exercise still Kit's legs were restless. The demanded motion and movement, and Kit indulged them in a small way. She took a long, meandering walk around Ravok's waterways, ignoring Ravosalas in favor of ways she could simply walk. She shrugged her way through the dying crowds, made her way here and there. Kit turned down a corner, passed next to a man with brown hair and did not look back.
She felt a hand close on her forearm, tug her closer. "You!" A voice said, and Kit turned to see that it belonged to the brown-haired man. There was nothing worth speaking of his face beside his smile, long and twisted and full of pleasure. "Where are your papers, eh?"
"You ain't Styfe," Kit hissed, trying to pull away. Failing. She kicked him in the shins, once, twice . . . He drove his fist into her chest, blew all the air out of her, left her falling to her knees and gasping. Kit heard the stomping of heavy boots, turned and saw a member of the Ebonstryfe marching toward them, eyes hard and face harder.
He stopped in front of them, but before the Stryfe could open his mouth Smily had pulled an official-looking paper. "Citizen here. She," he nodded toward Kit. "Is not."
The stryfe raised an eyebrow. "That so?" He turned toward Kit and let the question sit, giving her the chance to deny it. But if she did, Kit knew he would fast find out that she was lying.
"No," she said, and the Ebonstryfe had already started turning away. "But I work for the Nitrozians!"
"Oh?" He raised an eyebrow. "Got proof?" She had none. The Stryfe shrugged. "Don't make too much noise," he said, and Kit felt as though she had swallowed a heavy rock.
She tried to pull away, but he was bigger and strong and knew what he was doing. While she was still winded he got behind her, put his arm around her neck, backed away from the main canal while she squirmed in his arms. "Let me go shykestain, LET ME—"
There was an impact against the side of her head, sudden and hard, and she lay dazed. "Oh yes, there's a fire in this one!" She felt a pressure against the back of her head, a sound . . . a kiss? "But we're a little in the open, aren't we, little whore?" He whispered, like a lover might. He grabbed her face, tried to turn it up to face him. "I'll show you—" Kit bit down on the side of his hand, hard. It was hairy, and tasted of worksweat and filth. He only chuckled. "That's right, just like that. Just remember to save some for the petch."
The Ravokians looked in her direction, one and all. Most of their faces were neutral, some were smiling, and some were so deliberately looking anywhere and everywhere else that they might have been staring. One even whistled. Smiley laughed and waved cheerfully as he dragged her back, back out of the canal into an alleyway, turned a corner. Out of sight.