Continued from Snake's Path On The Rocks and For Jenkins' Sake Timestamp: Not in the PC's storyline anymore (formerly Day 35 of Spring 514 AV) Location: The Velvet Curtain ... and so Chandray would play fiddle in The Velvet Curtain this evening. She hadn’t come there looking for work. She had been trying to find Stefan Teagan again. Her fellow musician and sometimes rapier fencing trainee had disappeared from the city. Although she had been asking around for him everywhere, she hadn’t found anybody who knew where he had gone. This evening she had finally overcome her doubts about visiting the city’s brothel and went to The Velvet Curtain to ask if they knew what had become of the bard. She felt responsible for searching for him. As she thought there was nobody else who would do it, she felt obliged to do it. It was the right thing to do when a friend, however different from her, had disappeared. To Chandray it was important to do the right thing. This was what made the world go round. So should she care what had happened to her brother bard ? The only possible answer was yes. Everything else would be a coward’s answer. And she was no coward. It was the right thing, and she was going to do it. Caring, loyalty and truth was what good people brought to the world. This was what kept her world together. Chandray feared the worst though. Maybe Stefan hadn’t listened to her advice about how it was dangerous to think everything easy and act rashly without thinking first. Maybe he’d paid no heed to how she’d told him caution was essential and his best bet was to stay away from danger. Perhaps he’d went to Coils alone and tried to backstab Rississarajor ... Chandray didn’t want to think of it, but it was impossible to avoid the thought. She hadn't been to Coils yet, but there would come a day ... He had wanted to backstab people. Chandray hadn't liked that. She had told him promises were made to be kept and deals were made to be respected. He hadn't liked that. And though Stefan and Chandray hadn’t parted as enemies, they had parted after a disagreement about what was right and wrong, that evening in the very first beginning of the spring. After this she hadn’t had any good opportunity to speak with Stefan again and then he’d disappeared. A young bard, still new to a city unknown to him, disappeared without a trace ... if she had been asking for a well-established riverian she might have found answers, but as it was, all she’d found was silence. He hadn’t been playing in lots of different places, like Chandray, but he was known in the taverns. When she described his looks, some of the proprietors remembered a man who had been singing lots of happy songs and flirted with the staff. She had been told he’d been seen in the company of a bunch of other young men who behaved exactly the same way. Irresponsible womanizers all of them, drunkards all of them, singing shanties all of them, each one of them looking to lay the whole world. “Well, you know, that kind of group of young men, none of them any better than another, and none of them worse, really... bunch of scoundrels, looking for only three single thing ya know, skirts, skirts and skirts. Like they were in a race and keeping track of how many they managed to catch in order to impress each other. And there sure seemed to be lots of interested skirts around, if you ask me, not that I can understand why a woman would feel interested in being just a tool in that kind of games, when there’s lots of way better men around...” At this point the akalak proprietor of The Blue Bull had given Chandray a gaze that had seemed to imply he considered himself to be one of those better options. This information hadn’t been useful. It wasn’t new to Chandray that Stefan’s lifestyle seemed wild and irresponsible, but in her case she’d had no problems getting him to “stay on the mat”. She’d seen the risks for trouble early, and she’d made him understand her superior skill at the rapier at once. He had seemed to respect her for this and for her competence as musician. Well. The man sure had made a pass or two, in a compulsive way, like it wasn’t possible for him to not do it, no matter how bleak the odds looked or how unwanted the attention might be. But for Chandray Evereene with her easygoing personality it had been easy case to just laugh it away, shrug it off as just a joke and go on. She was a reasonably experienced woman from the Suvan area and had received a great many passes in her life, most of them not asked for. That kind of thing just bounced off of her and came back like a cheery ripost, no more. Fencing, that kind of thing was just like fencing, fencing with words, minding her steps and her focus. It had never occurred to her to take his male over-eagerness to flirt as a personal insult. She simply hadn’t behaved like a silly chick, nor allowed him to even try to court her, or let herself be cornered by somebody who wasn’t dry behind the ears. Because Stefan hadn’t been dry behind his ears, in Chandray’s opinion. She was twentyseven and older than he had been. She had felt in command and Stefan had followed and done like she told him, as she thought of their short friendship. Had ... yes, had. She thought of him in past tense, as it had been impossible to find him, and she had come to the conclusion that he was ... gone. The girls at the Velvet Curtain didn’t know anything at all. But they needed a musician for the evening so she had been offered work if she wanted it. Chandray was a bit conflicted but wound up saying yes. It was already evening and she had no other job. She had the fiddle, and she needed the money. So the girls went to speak with the proprietor about it, while Chandray sat down and waited. Stefan had once suggested that she could come and play music with him at The Curtain. She thought he wouldn’t have minded that she would do it now, even if he wasn’t there anymore. She would play alone. And in worst case, if her worst fears were true, to his memory. |