50th of Winter, 513.
Continued from here.
"What do you mean, you don't know anything about them?" He couldn't believe his ears.. well, he didn't anyway. They didn't work, they were just pieces of clay molded into the shape of ears. But if they worked, and if he could believe what was coming into them, then he wouldn't anyway. These monks, they'd spent such a long time - as far as he knew, really - battling these cultists, they called them. Constantly trying to undermine them. Constantly being undermined. It was like a war, really. A very strange war, but that was what happened when two factions so deeply devoted to their own cause struck heads. Or that was what he thought. Or guessed. He didn't know if the cultists were actually devoted at all. He didn't even know if they were even cultists. Apparently nobody else did as well, in this damnable city. The monks that he found and talked to, questioned.. none of them had a clue. None of them really seemed to care, despite everything. Despite the murders, and the explosions, and the fire and the battles on the streets and this and that.
"Ah told yah, they wear red robes 'nd all that." Evidently, the monk he'd chosen really couldn't care less. Usually, that would make him move onto another and just stop wasting time. But this was the sixth monk he'd come to, and the sixth one that had apparently no interest, not even the slightest bit of curiosity for the people that were trying to kill him. Not even why they wanted all the monks gone. Why they wanted to burn down all their crops, destroy all their food, set the city on fire, blow them up.. the list just went on and on and on. For the squirrel, it just wasn't possible. Surely there'd be someone, he kept telling himself, surely there'll be someone that can tell me something, anything at all new about these cultists. Where they came from, who they are.. anything!
"I already know that they wear red robes.. everyone knows that they wear red robes. It's the one thing they know. Now, do you know anything else about them? Perhaps, who they worship? Why they want to kill you?"
"Nope." The monk seemed quite proud of the fact. And the squirrel gave up, and hopped down from his shoulder with a huff of exhaustion and pent-up rage. Better to release it on a cultist than a monk, his rational voice told him.. but that voice was far away, threatened by the howling winds of anger. For now, he vented it by stamping his feet on the ground, but all it earned him was a sympathetic, if pretty condescending look back by the monk busy stacking up food outside his shop around the Fourth Day Market. "Hey, don't you worry, little boy." That was the last straw.
He wanted to yell so much. But he reigned it in and managed to hold it. "I'm not a little boy. I'm a squirrel." He spoke through gritted teeth - or as gritted as they could get without simply squishing into each-other like the warm clay that they were, before he turned on his heels and scampered as quickly as his little legs would carry him down the cobblestone street and around the corner. Damn them all. No luck at all. No help at all. What kind of a city was this where they didn't allow anyone to help them, didn't have anyone help them, and yet they didn't even understand that they were in danger?
Just before he managed to make his way out of earshot of the monk, he heard the elderly man chuckle over his shoulder. "Sure you are, heh.. a talking squirrel. Children these days." Gods, he really wanted to punch something now. He really, really wanted to punch something.. heck, anything would do now.
Continued from here.
"What do you mean, you don't know anything about them?" He couldn't believe his ears.. well, he didn't anyway. They didn't work, they were just pieces of clay molded into the shape of ears. But if they worked, and if he could believe what was coming into them, then he wouldn't anyway. These monks, they'd spent such a long time - as far as he knew, really - battling these cultists, they called them. Constantly trying to undermine them. Constantly being undermined. It was like a war, really. A very strange war, but that was what happened when two factions so deeply devoted to their own cause struck heads. Or that was what he thought. Or guessed. He didn't know if the cultists were actually devoted at all. He didn't even know if they were even cultists. Apparently nobody else did as well, in this damnable city. The monks that he found and talked to, questioned.. none of them had a clue. None of them really seemed to care, despite everything. Despite the murders, and the explosions, and the fire and the battles on the streets and this and that.
"Ah told yah, they wear red robes 'nd all that." Evidently, the monk he'd chosen really couldn't care less. Usually, that would make him move onto another and just stop wasting time. But this was the sixth monk he'd come to, and the sixth one that had apparently no interest, not even the slightest bit of curiosity for the people that were trying to kill him. Not even why they wanted all the monks gone. Why they wanted to burn down all their crops, destroy all their food, set the city on fire, blow them up.. the list just went on and on and on. For the squirrel, it just wasn't possible. Surely there'd be someone, he kept telling himself, surely there'll be someone that can tell me something, anything at all new about these cultists. Where they came from, who they are.. anything!
"I already know that they wear red robes.. everyone knows that they wear red robes. It's the one thing they know. Now, do you know anything else about them? Perhaps, who they worship? Why they want to kill you?"
"Nope." The monk seemed quite proud of the fact. And the squirrel gave up, and hopped down from his shoulder with a huff of exhaustion and pent-up rage. Better to release it on a cultist than a monk, his rational voice told him.. but that voice was far away, threatened by the howling winds of anger. For now, he vented it by stamping his feet on the ground, but all it earned him was a sympathetic, if pretty condescending look back by the monk busy stacking up food outside his shop around the Fourth Day Market. "Hey, don't you worry, little boy." That was the last straw.
He wanted to yell so much. But he reigned it in and managed to hold it. "I'm not a little boy. I'm a squirrel." He spoke through gritted teeth - or as gritted as they could get without simply squishing into each-other like the warm clay that they were, before he turned on his heels and scampered as quickly as his little legs would carry him down the cobblestone street and around the corner. Damn them all. No luck at all. No help at all. What kind of a city was this where they didn't allow anyone to help them, didn't have anyone help them, and yet they didn't even understand that they were in danger?
Just before he managed to make his way out of earshot of the monk, he heard the elderly man chuckle over his shoulder. "Sure you are, heh.. a talking squirrel. Children these days." Gods, he really wanted to punch something now. He really, really wanted to punch something.. heck, anything would do now.