71st day of Summer, 514 Jad left The Armored Scholar feeling fairly positive about things. It was not as if he'd expected to get the work done free of charge. One of the locations he'd visited on his list was home to a very short tempered old man. When Jad had sighed and begun his routine to expose the lie with which the man was attempting to claim Jad's ring, the man set his dog on him. He would not have believed the dog capable of dislodging so many of the scales from the sleeve of his armor with just its teeth. For what it was worth, the edges of the metal pieces lacerated the dog's mouth to a painful degree, as it snapped and tore to get through the leather undercasing. As angry as Jad was, it was only at the man, not the dog. Here was a faithful animal, acting only in support of the master who fed and cared for it. For all his cantankerousness towards Jad, the old bastard probably treated the dog with kindness. He'd had more than one chance to stab the dog with his dagger, but had ultimately tossed the weapon aside, crying out to the man to pull the animal back. The dog did not relent, and the man continued to watch, with his malicious smirk. Adding further goading to his dog to keep it up. Even when he got the dog down, he did not know what to do next. He was determined not to kill the animal, but neither could he let it up without it immediately resuming its attack. He asked the old man if he intended to force him to kill the dog. The man hissed his promise to have him jailed or exiled if he did. It was not that he believed the old man could make such a story sound plausible, as there were now a few faces peeping from behind shades. But it infuriated him that the man was apparently wiling to see his dog killed just to claim a ring. It was not a fancy ring. There were no jewels. Jad was not even certain that it was silver. It was a large block-lettered ring with nothing more than a single, capital "M". Two bands, one flush with the top of the letter, and one flush with the bottom, extended around to join in the back. There was a finger razor concealed in the vertex of the "M", which was the largest element in Jad's means of establishing if anyone actually KNEW the ring. So far, no one had guessed what was "special" about it. Jad could only assume that schemers like the old man figured there was something worth a lot of mizas about it. Finally, Jad did the only thing he could that would not have to kill the poor animal. he flung his left gauntlet off and replaced his now bare hand on the dog's neck. He could feel the muscular heaving of the animals struggle under its hide, and he began to feel a pulse. it did not matter that it was his own pulse he felt. He let the rhythm of it build in his hand's own sensations as it pressed against the dog. Just for a moment the dog's struggle stopped, then resumed with a yelp and a renewed frenzy, as the pulse sank beneath Jad's hand to take up rhythm in the dog's hide, and muscles. It all timed with Jad's own heartbeat as the dog's own force of energy began to flow with Jad's timing. He did not have to leech for more than a few seconds before the dog's cry became a howl of terror. Jad sat back, letting the dog scramble up to speed past the shocked old man and tear into the home behind him. Jad quickly grasped the mental sensation of water being splashed on himself, and put the newly amassed dog-djed into forming a shield corresponding to where it felt cold and wet. it did not matter how evenly or completely he formed it, as he was intent on dispelling it just as quickly. He hated doing what he had just been forced to do. The old man visibly blanched and shrank as Jad slowly rose to his feet, his eyes locked with burning fury on the old bastard. "You son of a bitch!...You BASTARD! You'd have let me kill that loyal animal just to make a play for a ring you know damned well does not belong to you!" His voice trembled slightly with anger and loathing. He took an instinctive step toward the man, his hands forming claws, gauntleted or not, his teeth grinding as he mouthed silent curses. The man stumbled and fell back, holding his arms up defensively before him. Jad was about to rebuke him with the disgust of how wretched it would make him feel to have learned that he WAS family to such a knave, but the man began croaking recriminations of his own. "Leecher! Wizard! Monster! Murderer!" "SILENCE!" Jad roared. He stood looming over the man, the dog whimpering from inside the home. It was an unfortunate choice of words for him to shout just then. He was not as familiar with the name the townspeople had applied to the perpetrator of a rash of recent killings as were the neighbors watching in hushed whispers. They stared in silent dread as the young man turned and walked back to pick up his tossed gauntlet. They wondered if this was the same man who had been rumored to have claimed to be this villain during an altercation on East Street the day before. As a means of saving some of the repair cost, Jad had given his gauntlet to the resident armor smith as a source of scales. The size, shape, warp and eyelet placing of each scale was consistent with the design of those used on his sleeves. Ultimately he would only pay for the time. And even that had been quite reasonable. Jad left The Armored Scholar later the same day that he had submitted the repair order, with his sleeve fully repaired. His gauntlet now only featured a rectangle of scale on the back of the left hand, and the cuff was now only leather. But it overlapped the end of the sleeve itself, so it only lacked the redundancy of double layered scales there. He could live with that. He did not observe the unfriendly eyes observing him as he walked down the street. |