"Cheva's fuckin' cunt..."
Walden looked up sharply from his card game at his bodyguard's hushed, stunned words... and his eyes nearly popped out of his head when he saw the reason for them. The men around the table did the same and the whore busy working on the budding crime lord's crotch shrunk away as... it approached.
It looked human. Vaguely. Under the lashings of blood that had stiffened and hardened to black scabbing across his flesh; under the tattoos and the scars and the blood-smeared cloak... one could imagine it was once a man.
Then you looked in those black, cold eyes, and a Myrian looked back.
The rest of the tavern seemed to shrink away from him as he strode through the throng, but not a pint nor tankard ever left a hand. As he passed, a chorus of muttering grew louder and more distinct; even the scum that would butcher a man just to pass the time were disgusted by the dripping figure that approached their table...
... and stopped before Walden's two watch dogs. The same ones from before, only now they weren't trying to stare him down. They'd laughed when he'd said he'd go alone; scorned him for a fool and actually tried to convince Walden to forget about the savage, fuck him, he isn't coming back.
Now he was, and he help up something bloody, hairy... and with the tips of a pair of horns just visible on the flap of skin that was left.
"It's done." Razkar said, addressing the seated organ grinder, not the blocking monkeys in his path. "I want my gold."
Walden shook himself from the shock and got to his feet, remembering the plan. He picked up an unlit cheroot and stuck it in his mouth, until he heard that growling voice rasp out: "Why not here?"
"We'll, ah... do this outside. Lot of gold, lot of eyes. Better in the alley."
Trap.
The word snapped through his mind like an arrow through the still jungle. The Myrian blinked as he processed Walden's scowling face, senses heightening even as he watched the man, weighing him... and finally nodded.
What have you got to lose? Really?
Some small voice he couldn't quite make out told him he did have something, spurious and uncertain though it might be, but he ignored it. For two nights he'd slaughtered strangers in the Pit; he'd just done the same on the streets, and he was far from done and as of yet, no-one had yet killed him.
Would Walden be the one? His dogs? Some band of thugs outside? Razkar was a warrior; he wanted a death in battle, bested by someone more skilled, more cunning... not a knife in the back from a Sunberth rat... but that mattered less now.
He followed Walden outside, the two watch dogs behind him... at least until he just glanced over his shoulder, and they backed a few steps. Good. At least they were learning some healthy caution.
The alley was an alley like a billion in the multiverse. The requisite startled cat ran away with a yowl as the door clattered open and the cobbles shone like worthless diamonds thanks to the frost and Leth. The two mutts fanned out, checked the ends of the alley... then nodded to Walden, who walked out and stood by a barrel of burning garbage.
Razkar grimaced; Walden didn't. After a lifetime around shit, one learned to live next to it just fine.
"You sure you got the lot?"
"Twenty-three," Razkar replied blankly, hands idly tattooing a beat on the hilt of his gladius as Walden's eyes widened, "Including Cedric."
"Gods... don't bugger about, do you?"
"I wasn't paid to."
The human snorted with a smile and Razkar's hackles went up again. There was a... congeniality to the man he didn't trust. He smiled like a friend and tossed the clinking bag from hand to hand when he got it, voice light and airy... coaxing.
Ah. Of course.
"How would you like... thrice this amount... every season?"
"If I worked for you alone, yes?"
"Why not?" Walden tossed the bag over and Razkar's free hand snatched it out the air without even looking, stowing it away under his cloak... and fastening around his kukri as he did so. It wouldn't be long coming, now. "You butchered a whole gang in one night. By Syna's rise, the entire city will be abuzz with it. Nearly two-dozen, Myrian! What I could accomplish with one such as you in-"
"No."
There was no hesitation in his answer, and Walden's face fell. Razkar had learned to recognize that look: a barbarian who had finally met someone who didn't have a price. Nonetheless-
"Four times." Now the watchdogs turned and glared with indisguised anger, but the Myrian ignored them... and so did Walden. The pudgy racketeer held up his hand, fingers almost trembling. "Five times! That's a thousands mizas, just for-"
"I know what it is, and my answer is the same. I am not for retainer. I am for hire. Being tethered to some human like a bidden dog-" he paused just long enough to flash each of Walden's thugs a look "-is not for me. That is all I will say."
Walden stood there and Razkar watched his face lit by the flickering torches, making it look even more like it was sliding back and forth between outrage and disbelief. The Myrian wondered when it had last been that a man had turned down a thousand-
"Two thousand." Walden choked out, glint behind his eye like a man about to spring. "My brains, your steel, we'll carve out enough to make a fortune, and empire in this town. That's more than-"
"You're a middle-ranker with delusions of grandeur, human." Razkar said, and even the watchdogs' jaws clicked open in shock. Walden looked about ready to faint. "You have the guile and the connections and the muscle to do very well for yourself, especially since the Daggerhands are gone. But your ambition far outstrips your real assets... and if you try to reach it, you will lose. I am done talking about this." He turned to go, leaving the red-faced human behind. "If you need me again, you-"
"Wait?!"
Something... wrong, about that. It didn't reek of the desperation that Razkar had been expecting. Instead, when he turned, he saw a cold calm in Walden's eyes that spoke of...
What is is? What does he know? What does he intend?
Even in his depression Razkar couldn't switch it off. That primal voice he'd heard before a thousand times: the voice that had kept him alive for years in the jungle, then for years again in the barbarian lands. Walden bit off the end of his cheroot with solemn slowness... then carefully lit it from a twig pulled from the fire... taking his time...
He's taking too long. Why?
His body tensed, almost twitched, and his eyes flashed around to see nothing but the deserted alleys and the rooftops above, chimneys steeped in shadows. The door behind him was closed still, and yet... and yet...
Something is coming.
Eyes that had lost all interest in Razkar save for a problem to be solved regarded him through the smoke and his watchdogs closed in at his sides.
"Well..." Walden said, knowing his man would be in position by now and awaiting the signal he was currently smoking. "... too bad for you, then."
Now put a quarrel through this savage bastard and let me get my gold back.
OOCAll credit to Noven for the twist!
Walden looked up sharply from his card game at his bodyguard's hushed, stunned words... and his eyes nearly popped out of his head when he saw the reason for them. The men around the table did the same and the whore busy working on the budding crime lord's crotch shrunk away as... it approached.
It looked human. Vaguely. Under the lashings of blood that had stiffened and hardened to black scabbing across his flesh; under the tattoos and the scars and the blood-smeared cloak... one could imagine it was once a man.
Then you looked in those black, cold eyes, and a Myrian looked back.
The rest of the tavern seemed to shrink away from him as he strode through the throng, but not a pint nor tankard ever left a hand. As he passed, a chorus of muttering grew louder and more distinct; even the scum that would butcher a man just to pass the time were disgusted by the dripping figure that approached their table...
... and stopped before Walden's two watch dogs. The same ones from before, only now they weren't trying to stare him down. They'd laughed when he'd said he'd go alone; scorned him for a fool and actually tried to convince Walden to forget about the savage, fuck him, he isn't coming back.
Now he was, and he help up something bloody, hairy... and with the tips of a pair of horns just visible on the flap of skin that was left.
"It's done." Razkar said, addressing the seated organ grinder, not the blocking monkeys in his path. "I want my gold."
Walden shook himself from the shock and got to his feet, remembering the plan. He picked up an unlit cheroot and stuck it in his mouth, until he heard that growling voice rasp out: "Why not here?"
"We'll, ah... do this outside. Lot of gold, lot of eyes. Better in the alley."
Trap.
The word snapped through his mind like an arrow through the still jungle. The Myrian blinked as he processed Walden's scowling face, senses heightening even as he watched the man, weighing him... and finally nodded.
What have you got to lose? Really?
Some small voice he couldn't quite make out told him he did have something, spurious and uncertain though it might be, but he ignored it. For two nights he'd slaughtered strangers in the Pit; he'd just done the same on the streets, and he was far from done and as of yet, no-one had yet killed him.
Would Walden be the one? His dogs? Some band of thugs outside? Razkar was a warrior; he wanted a death in battle, bested by someone more skilled, more cunning... not a knife in the back from a Sunberth rat... but that mattered less now.
He followed Walden outside, the two watch dogs behind him... at least until he just glanced over his shoulder, and they backed a few steps. Good. At least they were learning some healthy caution.
The alley was an alley like a billion in the multiverse. The requisite startled cat ran away with a yowl as the door clattered open and the cobbles shone like worthless diamonds thanks to the frost and Leth. The two mutts fanned out, checked the ends of the alley... then nodded to Walden, who walked out and stood by a barrel of burning garbage.
Razkar grimaced; Walden didn't. After a lifetime around shit, one learned to live next to it just fine.
"You sure you got the lot?"
"Twenty-three," Razkar replied blankly, hands idly tattooing a beat on the hilt of his gladius as Walden's eyes widened, "Including Cedric."
"Gods... don't bugger about, do you?"
"I wasn't paid to."
The human snorted with a smile and Razkar's hackles went up again. There was a... congeniality to the man he didn't trust. He smiled like a friend and tossed the clinking bag from hand to hand when he got it, voice light and airy... coaxing.
Ah. Of course.
"How would you like... thrice this amount... every season?"
"If I worked for you alone, yes?"
"Why not?" Walden tossed the bag over and Razkar's free hand snatched it out the air without even looking, stowing it away under his cloak... and fastening around his kukri as he did so. It wouldn't be long coming, now. "You butchered a whole gang in one night. By Syna's rise, the entire city will be abuzz with it. Nearly two-dozen, Myrian! What I could accomplish with one such as you in-"
"No."
There was no hesitation in his answer, and Walden's face fell. Razkar had learned to recognize that look: a barbarian who had finally met someone who didn't have a price. Nonetheless-
"Four times." Now the watchdogs turned and glared with indisguised anger, but the Myrian ignored them... and so did Walden. The pudgy racketeer held up his hand, fingers almost trembling. "Five times! That's a thousands mizas, just for-"
"I know what it is, and my answer is the same. I am not for retainer. I am for hire. Being tethered to some human like a bidden dog-" he paused just long enough to flash each of Walden's thugs a look "-is not for me. That is all I will say."
Walden stood there and Razkar watched his face lit by the flickering torches, making it look even more like it was sliding back and forth between outrage and disbelief. The Myrian wondered when it had last been that a man had turned down a thousand-
"Two thousand." Walden choked out, glint behind his eye like a man about to spring. "My brains, your steel, we'll carve out enough to make a fortune, and empire in this town. That's more than-"
"You're a middle-ranker with delusions of grandeur, human." Razkar said, and even the watchdogs' jaws clicked open in shock. Walden looked about ready to faint. "You have the guile and the connections and the muscle to do very well for yourself, especially since the Daggerhands are gone. But your ambition far outstrips your real assets... and if you try to reach it, you will lose. I am done talking about this." He turned to go, leaving the red-faced human behind. "If you need me again, you-"
"Wait?!"
Something... wrong, about that. It didn't reek of the desperation that Razkar had been expecting. Instead, when he turned, he saw a cold calm in Walden's eyes that spoke of...
What is is? What does he know? What does he intend?
Even in his depression Razkar couldn't switch it off. That primal voice he'd heard before a thousand times: the voice that had kept him alive for years in the jungle, then for years again in the barbarian lands. Walden bit off the end of his cheroot with solemn slowness... then carefully lit it from a twig pulled from the fire... taking his time...
He's taking too long. Why?
His body tensed, almost twitched, and his eyes flashed around to see nothing but the deserted alleys and the rooftops above, chimneys steeped in shadows. The door behind him was closed still, and yet... and yet...
Something is coming.
Eyes that had lost all interest in Razkar save for a problem to be solved regarded him through the smoke and his watchdogs closed in at his sides.
"Well..." Walden said, knowing his man would be in position by now and awaiting the signal he was currently smoking. "... too bad for you, then."
Now put a quarrel through this savage bastard and let me get my gold back.
OOCAll credit to Noven for the twist!