Sunset Quarters -- Nathaniel Selfbled's apartment
1 Winter, 513 AV
1st Bell
"A thousand! What the petch are you thinking?!"
Prid grimaced. The two men had been negotiating for nearly a bell. At least, he figured they were men. It was difficult to tell strictly by the sound of their voices, and the thick blindfold over his eyes and heavy manacles on his hands ensured that the Jamoura wouldn't get to see anything until he was bid to do so. Besides that, the slaver had draped some cloth over his head and body, muffling the voices to begin with, as well as hiding him from general view.
"Shush", beckoned the second voice vehemently. "What I'm thinkin' is that I could ship this thing off to Ravok and get twice that amount!" The first man scoffed and started to say something, but was cut off. "I'm doing you a favor stoppin' in here, cousin. The other guys just wanted to go on. Less risky business in Ravok."
There was a pause, and Prid shuffled his feet. It'd been a long walk from the boat to wherever they were now and, judging by the excessive number of left turns they'd taken, the slavers had either been lost or trying to disorient him.
The two continued, now in hushed whispers. "I won't take him higher than seven hundred," stated the first voice matter-of-factly. "That's final."
"Eight hundred," countered the slaver. Then the first man must've given him a vicious look, because he amended himself with far less confidence. "Seven twenty-five..."
Prid didn't know what to think. He'd been enveloped in the bright side of humanity only days ago. Now it seemed he was subjected to one of its darkest aspects. But this whole slavery ordeal hadn't been too awful so far, and Prid had the distinct feeling that he was getting off easy. Oftentimes on the ship, the other captives were starved or whipped, taken above deck and returning with bloodied back or hairless heads. Prid had experienced none of that, either because he was relatively relaxed about the whole thing or because the crew members were simply too wary of their "great beast".
The first voice returned, almost to cheerily for Prid to believe. "Righty then! You've got a deal, cousin." There was the sound of movement, the scooting of furniture, and the clank of metal on metal as the buyer fetched the coins. Someone grunted in exertion, and a dull thud echoed off the walls.
"There we are. Seven-hundred and twenty five gold-rimmed mizas."
The second man hesitated. "Yer gonna get robbed, keeping all yer money in one place like that."
"Ha! Looks like you're the one robbed, man. Imagine! You let this big brute go for such a measly amount! Do I get to keep the shackles too or what?" He laughed outright, kicking over what must've been the sack of mizas.
Metal scraped as the slaver drew a blade. "How's about I just take the money and the beastie then, eh?"
"Oh puh-lease," the buyer scoffed. "You think you can just waltz in here and kill your favorite cousin? Need I remind you exactly how I've managed to stay alive here all these years while you keep prancing off to the safety of your beloved Ravok?"
"Yeah yeah, talk all ya want. I don't see any help comin' yer way."
"You wouldn't, would you?"
"Eh, what's that s'posed to me--"
"Settle down." Prid figured it was about time for him to interject. If not to simply keep the two from killing each other, than to at least move the conversation along. Whether his rest came here or if he was taken back to the ship didn't matter much to him. "All of your talking is fine, but I would like to sit. And to see."
1 Winter, 513 AV
1st Bell
"A thousand! What the petch are you thinking?!"
Prid grimaced. The two men had been negotiating for nearly a bell. At least, he figured they were men. It was difficult to tell strictly by the sound of their voices, and the thick blindfold over his eyes and heavy manacles on his hands ensured that the Jamoura wouldn't get to see anything until he was bid to do so. Besides that, the slaver had draped some cloth over his head and body, muffling the voices to begin with, as well as hiding him from general view.
"Shush", beckoned the second voice vehemently. "What I'm thinkin' is that I could ship this thing off to Ravok and get twice that amount!" The first man scoffed and started to say something, but was cut off. "I'm doing you a favor stoppin' in here, cousin. The other guys just wanted to go on. Less risky business in Ravok."
There was a pause, and Prid shuffled his feet. It'd been a long walk from the boat to wherever they were now and, judging by the excessive number of left turns they'd taken, the slavers had either been lost or trying to disorient him.
The two continued, now in hushed whispers. "I won't take him higher than seven hundred," stated the first voice matter-of-factly. "That's final."
"Eight hundred," countered the slaver. Then the first man must've given him a vicious look, because he amended himself with far less confidence. "Seven twenty-five..."
Prid didn't know what to think. He'd been enveloped in the bright side of humanity only days ago. Now it seemed he was subjected to one of its darkest aspects. But this whole slavery ordeal hadn't been too awful so far, and Prid had the distinct feeling that he was getting off easy. Oftentimes on the ship, the other captives were starved or whipped, taken above deck and returning with bloodied back or hairless heads. Prid had experienced none of that, either because he was relatively relaxed about the whole thing or because the crew members were simply too wary of their "great beast".
The first voice returned, almost to cheerily for Prid to believe. "Righty then! You've got a deal, cousin." There was the sound of movement, the scooting of furniture, and the clank of metal on metal as the buyer fetched the coins. Someone grunted in exertion, and a dull thud echoed off the walls.
"There we are. Seven-hundred and twenty five gold-rimmed mizas."
The second man hesitated. "Yer gonna get robbed, keeping all yer money in one place like that."
"Ha! Looks like you're the one robbed, man. Imagine! You let this big brute go for such a measly amount! Do I get to keep the shackles too or what?" He laughed outright, kicking over what must've been the sack of mizas.
Metal scraped as the slaver drew a blade. "How's about I just take the money and the beastie then, eh?"
"Oh puh-lease," the buyer scoffed. "You think you can just waltz in here and kill your favorite cousin? Need I remind you exactly how I've managed to stay alive here all these years while you keep prancing off to the safety of your beloved Ravok?"
"Yeah yeah, talk all ya want. I don't see any help comin' yer way."
"You wouldn't, would you?"
"Eh, what's that s'posed to me--"
"Settle down." Prid figured it was about time for him to interject. If not to simply keep the two from killing each other, than to at least move the conversation along. Whether his rest came here or if he was taken back to the ship didn't matter much to him. "All of your talking is fine, but I would like to sit. And to see."