48th Day of Winter
The Seaside Market
14th Bell
The Seaside Market
14th Bell
"You can tell hard times in these lands: when stalls selling silks and jewels are bare of customers, but food and firewood can't be sold fast enough, or for more."
"Woh'wuzzat?"
Razkar blinked a few times at... yes, that was definitely Common. I can tell when you've learned a language, too, he thought as he regarded the human with a scruffy black beard and sores on his hands, as opposed to taking one for granted.
"Talking about the weather." He said mildly, looking around at the white carpet that covered all, from the slush-filled sewers to roof tiles turned grey with soot on snow. "Probably get worse, I think?"
He laughed and the human laughed a second later, and for too long. The Myrian had grown used to that. The fear and the eagerness to please that went with it; a talisman that the weak or foolish seemed to clutch to.
Make it laugh, make it feel clever, and it won't hurt you... but try using it to get a discount.
"How much for all?"
He gestured to the bundle of logs and Maere made a show of adding it up. Razkar could have rolled his eyes: the trader probably knew the cost of every twig, the profit for every log and yet still he played this game. He named a figure. Ten days ago, it would have been half that. Maybe a third. But that was before the heavens opened and the rain came in frozen sheets of ice, choking and burying Sunberth.
Killing the crops, the livestock, the homeless that Razkar just stepped over or around like stiff, blue logs. Now and then he saw teams of robed monks or bored/concerned citizens gather up a bushel and take them to the endlessly-smoking mountain outside of town. The vast burning heap that cast a pall over a town already in the gods' shadows.
"Done."
Razkar paid and tied the bundle securely together, then started back towards the Sunset Quarter. Extortion or not, he and his lover would need the heat. Already there were vacant rooms in the Slum area, caused by the renters simply freezing in their beds. Razkar had seem a handful brought out, blankets and bedding stuck to them, availing them nothing.
Not me. Not Edreina. Not if I have to bleed my heat across her...
Still, he hoped it wouldn't come to that, and desperate as the citizens were becoming, they gave The Dock Wolf a wide berth. Face shadowed by his scalp-hewn cloak, Razkar's eyes glittered but he did not smile. It was an old joke; barely amusing. He'd slaughtered a handful of men less than ten chimes after stepping off the Calypso into Sunberth.
He needed the city to understand he spoke the language. Fluently.
The young male's mind turned from those thoughts as he gathered his cloak around him tighter, edges whipping around his knees, clutching the bundle of firewood with one hand and his satchel of food with another. Bread, cheese, eggs, smoked meat... enough for them to stay in their lodgings and scorn the outside world until Syna returned.
Razkar moved swiftly through the drifts, half-blinded by the cloak and the howling wind racing and nipping at his face. But who would face him? Who would dare? Who would be so bold or mad?
Wrong questions. Right question:
Who would be hungry enough?