60th Day of Fall
East Street
20th Bell
East Street
20th Bell
Freddy March was living proof that with some people, raising them up only lowered the tone. For everyone else.
Ever-flickering rodent eyes peered around at the world, quickly categorizing everyone they rested on as either food or threat. Long, thin fingers constantly smoothed his treasured silk waistcoat. Pink and gold and blue, he thought it made him look dapper. It didn't. A crumpled top hat crowned the ensemble, and this ludicrous item Freddy was aware of.
"Gives me a, y'know, distinctive look." He'd say to his cronies, meatheads who were unimaginative enough to think of Freddy as a criminal mastermind. "Ah... wadaya call it... signature. But with yer eyes. Once you've seen it, you remember me."
Which was certainly true. Razkar certainly did. One of his abiding memories of the previous night - save from the heady, almost narcotic high of beating a hulking human prizefighter into the sawdust-strewn floorboards - was that stupid hat bobbing up and down in the lantern-light, circling the roaring crowd with admirable efficiency, collecting bets, paying out, taking others, meeting, greeting, keeping the wheels moving.
The Knuckle Club. A grandiose name for a forgotten warehouse underneath East Street, but that was Freddy for you. A flair for the excessive, and just enough street smarts to make it work.
Now see Freddy step out into the air on the other side of the rundown tenement block his little concern was nestled under, drawing deep on an expensive Kenash cigar and exhaling the sweet smoke into the growing shadows. The usual detritus of East Street avoided him; he was paid up with the right people, and employed others to make life very uncomfortable for those who dared to pick his pocket.
Mister March smiled at the world in general. Good night, last night. The Myrian was a nice addition. Bastard was quick and dirty and seemed to be made of carved fucking oak. Poor Henry wouldn't be fighting for a while, that was for sure, but the crowd loved it.
"Touch of the exotic," he said to himself, savoring the word as he did any that seemed above his station, "That's what this place... needs..."
Two shadows detached themselves from the shadows to his right. Freddy's feet shuffled on the cobbles, rodent mind already planning two, no, three ways to run in case this turned physical. One of them was definitely a man; tall, lithe, moving like a predator with quick, easy steps, making a beeline for him in a way that instinctively made him nervous.
But the other... that gave him just enough pause to stay his feet. A color glowed and teased at him from the shadows, hard to pin down, so rare were street lamps in East Street. Freddy coughed sharply, twice, and two lumbering examples of what could broadly be described as "humanity" lurched from the doorway of the bakers, flanking their boss.
"Problem?"
"Dunno yet..."
Red. It looked like... red hair. Cascading over a pair of pale shoulders... framing a face as set and serious as the one beside her, but far more beautiful-
"Ah... The Myrian."
Razkar stopped in front of him, decked in his more... reluctant outfit. Breeches and a linen shirt covered his chest, but the weapons harness was more striking a fashion statement. His cloak rested on his shoulders, covering his arms, leaving to the human's imaginations what nasty, pointy horrors he had there.
Speaking of nasty, pointy horrors, the Myrian smiled.
"Thought you would remember."
"Up for another one?"
Razkar's grin widened a touch, the avarice in the fighting pit fixer's voice palpable. He might as well have licked his lips. His two dogs just eyed him with the latent aggression of dumb animals the world over, and were thus ignored.
"And you're, ah... friend?"
Ah. Not just avarice. Hope. Razkar kept his smile friendly enough and patted Edreina on the shoulder. Companionable, but not... intimate. But at least this was easier than that master-apprentice charade from before. It hadn't been an easy sell, getting him to take her to this nest of snakes, but she'd been insistent. Something about wanting to... "see the raw side of life".
Razkar wouldn't have described East Street as "raw"; "festering" was far more accurate. He'd even made that quip, and it hadn't dented her resolve. OK, fine, whatever, she was intractable, but she still needed a cover, an excuse... a role to play.
"This," he said in a level tone, face as straight and business-like as he could make it, "Is my manager, and-"
A pale hand whipped out and smacked his arm away from hr as if he was some lecherous drunk in the Stallion. Freddy blinked back his shock; the two grunts just exchanged a quizzical look. This was the guy that put Savage Henry on crutches?
Want to convince your audience of the unlikely? Make it unpredictable.
"She is, ah..." he said, trying to appear as sheepish as possible while Edreina did her ice queen thing next to him, "... a little upset that I... did not tell her about last night..."
OK, female. Time to sell it...